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Item Details
Title: EDUCATION WITHOUT THE STATE
By: James Tooley
Format: Paperback

List price: £12.00


We currently do not stock this item, please contact the publisher directly for further information.

ISBN 10: 025536380X
ISBN 13: 9780255363808
Publisher: INSTITUTE OF ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
Pub. date: 19 May, 1996
Series: Studies in Education
Pages: 116
Synopsis: Functional illiteracy, youth delinquency and lack of technological innovation all point to the failures of state schooling. They raise the question of why governments should be involved in education at all. One justification for state intervention in education is that, without it, there would not be educational opportunities for all. However, the great majority of people would not need state intervention for funding or provision of educational opportunities. Intervention would at most be required for a minority in need of financial support. This conclusion is supported by historical evidence from Victorian England and Wales, and from more recent experience around the world, of educational entrepreneurs stepping in to provide desired opportunities where state education is failing. A second justification offered is that equality of opportunity requires state intervention in education. When the record is examined, it is not clear that states anywhere have been able to provide equality. Strong theoretical arguments undermine the suggestion that they ever would.Moreover, arguments against 'markets' in schooling which purport to show how they increase inequality actually point to problems not with markets, but with state regulation and provision themselves. Many influential philosophers and economists agree that justice or fairness requires that everyone has adequate opportunities. But markets - with a funding safety-net - could provide adequate opportunities for all, and more effectively than further state intervention. A final justification is that state regulation of, inter alia, the curriculum is required. Lessons from the recent history of the national curriculum illustrate the general undesirability of government intervention in the curriculum. The problems of 'competing visions' and the 'knowledge problem' and considerations of the nature of education point to the folly of not leaving decisions to parents and young people themselves. If state intervention in education is not justified, except for a funding safety-net, how can we move towards markets in education? A simple proposal is put forward, linked to recent discussion of the learning society and lifelong learning accounts.Lowering the school leaving age to 14, and simultaneously giving young people two years' state funding for them to use in a Lifelong Individual Fund for Education (LIFE) would help liberate the educational demand side which, coupled with liberation of the supply side, would lead to an enlivening and nurturing of the enterprise of education.
Returns: Returnable
Some other items by this author:
BUCKINGHAM AT 25 (HB)
CRY FREEDOM
DISESTABLISHING THE SCHOOL (HB)
E. G. WEST
E. G. WEST
E. G. WEST (PB)
E.G. WEST (HB)
EDUCATION WITHOUT THE STATE (HB)
EDUCATION, WAR AND PEACE (PB)
EDUCATIONAL EQUALITY
EDUCATIONAL EQUALITY (PB)
FORBIDDEN (HB)
FROM VILLAGE SCHOOL TO GLOBAL BRAND
FROM VILLAGE SCHOOL TO GLOBAL BRAND (HB)
GOVERNMENT FAILURE (HB)
HIV AND AIDS IN SCHOOLS (HB)
HOW BRITISH SCHOOLS CAN ESCAPE FROM THE STATE
IMPRISONED IN INDIA (HB)
MARKET LED ALTERNATIVE FOR THE CURRICULUM (PB)
REALLY GOOD SCHOOLS (HB)
RECLAIMING EDUCATION
RECLAIMING EDUCATION (PB)
SHOULD THE PRIVATE SECTOR PROFIT FROM EDUCATION?
THE BEAUTIFUL TREE
THE BEAUTIFUL TREE (HB)
THE DEBATE ON HIGHER EDUCATION (PB)
THE GLOBAL EDUCATION INDUSTRY (HB)
THE MISEDUCATION OF WOMEN
THE MISEDUCATION OF WOMEN (HB)
THE MISEDUCATION OF WOMEN (PB)
THE MISEDUCATION OF WOMEN (PB)
WHAT AMERICA CAN LEARN FROM SCHOOL CHOICE IN OTHER COUNTRIES
WHAT AMERICA CAN LEARN FROM SCHOOL CHOICE IN OTHER COUNTRIES (HB)
WHY STATE PROVISION IS NOT NECESSARY TO ENSURE EQUALITY OF EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY



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