Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.

The impact of performance funding on community college student outcomes is a contested issue. Performance funding policies in most U.S. states involve too small a proportion of funding to change college behavior. English further education colleges are similar to U.S. community colleges. 1992 policy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ozan Jaquette
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2006-09-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/95
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spelling doaj-98ac2508c12a4b2ba443939bff0b12a42020-11-25T03:21:41ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412006-09-011424Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.Ozan JaquetteThe impact of performance funding on community college student outcomes is a contested issue. Performance funding policies in most U.S. states involve too small a proportion of funding to change college behavior. English further education colleges are similar to U.S. community colleges. 1992 policy reforms in England centralized policy control, and implemented a per-pupil funding formula; 10% of all funding is based on student success but other components of the funding formula pay colleges more money for enrolling disadvantaged students. This research uses five years of student level data to test the impact of these policies. Overall student success rates rose by 10% during the five-year period, with the largest gains made by ethnic minorities, adult basic education students, and students from disadvantaged neighborhoods. Although the English system depends on regulatory agencies that do not exist in the U.S., the major assertion of this research is that market-based funding policies˜if properly designed˜can promote equity in educational achievement. http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/95accountabilityperformance funding, performance accountability, student success, community colleges.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ozan Jaquette
spellingShingle Ozan Jaquette
Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
Education Policy Analysis Archives
accountability
performance funding, performance accountability, student success, community colleges.
author_facet Ozan Jaquette
author_sort Ozan Jaquette
title Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
title_short Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
title_full Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
title_fullStr Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
title_full_unstemmed Funding for Performance and Equity: Student Success in English Further Education Colleges.
title_sort funding for performance and equity: student success in english further education colleges.
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2006-09-01
description The impact of performance funding on community college student outcomes is a contested issue. Performance funding policies in most U.S. states involve too small a proportion of funding to change college behavior. English further education colleges are similar to U.S. community colleges. 1992 policy reforms in England centralized policy control, and implemented a per-pupil funding formula; 10% of all funding is based on student success but other components of the funding formula pay colleges more money for enrolling disadvantaged students. This research uses five years of student level data to test the impact of these policies. Overall student success rates rose by 10% during the five-year period, with the largest gains made by ethnic minorities, adult basic education students, and students from disadvantaged neighborhoods. Although the English system depends on regulatory agencies that do not exist in the U.S., the major assertion of this research is that market-based funding policies˜if properly designed˜can promote equity in educational achievement.
topic accountability
performance funding, performance accountability, student success, community colleges.
url http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/95
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