Diversity, Choice, and Selection in England and Wales
- 1 April 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Educational Administration Quarterly
- Vol. 33 (2) , 158-169
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0013161x97033002004
Abstract
Over the last decade, England and Wales have experienced a variety of changes in education policy that have been introduced and justified in terms of developing a greater diversity of schools from which families can choose. These changes include: the development of City Technology Colleges from 1986, the introduction of grant-maintained schools in 1988, the encouragement of "specialist schools" in 1993, and the 1993 Act's even greater emphasis on choice and diversity with technology colleges and new forms of sponsored, grant-maintained schools. This article explores the changing ways in which the concept of diversity has been used, and argues that it has been appropriated by the political Right to develop and deepen a policy of selection and elitism. Rather than being associated with issues of equity, in England and Wales, the concept has become linked with a discourse that favours selectivity and privilege.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diversity and Choice in School Education: an alternative viewOxford Review of Education, 1996
- A Return to Selection?Westminster Studies in Education, 1994
- Parents’ Individualist and Collectivist Strategies at the City Technology College, KingshurstInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 1991
- Choice of School at the First City Technology CollegeEducational Studies, 1991