Polarisation of high-performing and low-performing secondary schools in Victoria, Australia: an analysis of causal complexities

被引:4
|
作者
Bandaranayake, Bandara [1 ]
机构
[1] Dept Educ & Training, Level 1,2 Treasury Pl, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia
来源
AUSTRALIAN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER | 2016年 / 43卷 / 05期
关键词
Educational inequality; Cultural capital; Educational outcomes; Qualitative comparative analysis; Victoria; SEGREGATION; INEQUALITY; LATINO; WHITE;
D O I
10.1007/s13384-016-0213-8
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Applying qualitative comparative analysis (QCA), this study explores the configurations of conditions that contribute to the polarisation of high-performing and low-performing secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. It is argued that the success and failure of schools can be understood in terms of causal complexity, where one or several configurations of conditions can cause a given outcome. The study identifies that there is no single condition alone that produces high or low performance. However, the study does reveal the existence of multiple configurations or causal relations that tend to produce school success or school failure. Relative to the dataset considered in this study, three configurations related to success and almost twice that many configurations underpinning failure are identified. The polarisation of the high-performing and low-performing schools and persistent inequality are complex phenomena. This study presents QCA as a useful and alternative methodology for researchers to uncover such complex phenomena over and above large-scale quantitative and classical analysis.
引用
收藏
页码:587 / 606
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Salient characteristics of high-performing Turkish elementary schools
    Kondakci, Yasar
    Sivri, Hakan
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION, 2014, 52 (02) : 254 - +
  • [32] Comparing the Low- and High-Performing Schools based on the TIMSS in the United States
    Ceylan, Eren
    Akerson, Valarie
    EGITIM VE BILIM-EDUCATION AND SCIENCE, 2014, 39 (173): : 299 - 309
  • [33] Nonacademic Effects of Homework in Privileged, High-Performing High Schools
    Galloway, Mollie
    Conner, Jerusha
    Pope, Denise
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL EDUCATION, 2013, 81 (04): : 490 - 510
  • [34] Instructional leadership in centralised systems: evidence from Greek high-performing secondary schools
    Kaparou, Maria
    Bush, Tony
    SCHOOL LEADERSHIP & MANAGEMENT, 2015, 35 (03) : 321 - 345
  • [35] Responding to external accountability in high-performing, high-capacity public secondary schools in Chile
    Montecinos, Carmen
    Cortez, Monica
    Zett, Isabel
    Chavez, Sofia
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 2023, 58 (01) : 36 - 50
  • [36] Reading fluency as a predictor of reading proficiency in low-performing, high-poverty schools
    Baker, Scott K.
    Smolkowski, Keith
    Katz, Rachell
    Fien, Hank
    Seeley, John R.
    Kame'enui, Edward J.
    Beck, Carrie Thomas
    SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2008, 37 (01) : 18 - 37
  • [37] Explaining the short careers of high-achieving teachers in schools with low-performing students
    Boyd, D
    Lankford, H
    Loeb, S
    Wyckoff, J
    AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2005, 95 (02): : 166 - 171
  • [39] State Strategies to Improve Low-Performing Schools: California's High Priority Schools Grant Program
    Timar, Thomas B.
    Chyu, Kris Kim
    TEACHERS COLLEGE RECORD, 2010, 112 (07): : 1897 - 1936
  • [40] Leading Out from Low-Performing Schools: The Urban Principal Experience
    Orr, Margaret Terry
    Byrne-Jimenez, Monica
    McFarlane, Peter
    Brown, Barbara
    LEADERSHIP AND POLICY IN SCHOOLS, 2005, 4 (01) : 23 - 54