Extended Education From an International Comparative Point of View 2019
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-658-27172-5_2
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(Mis)Trust and (Abuse of) Authority in Cambodian Education: Parallel Lessons in the Shadow

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Cited by 11 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…In particular, most teachers offer private tutoring classes to their students. These classes are considered necessary for the completion of the school curriculum; yet only a share of student can afford them resulting in increasing inequality (Bray et al, 2019;Marshall and Fukao, 2019). 4 We conducted surveys with 200 students and focus group discussions with 32 students in grade 8 and held interviews with teachers, parents, and education experts.…”
Section: Education In Cambodiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, most teachers offer private tutoring classes to their students. These classes are considered necessary for the completion of the school curriculum; yet only a share of student can afford them resulting in increasing inequality (Bray et al, 2019;Marshall and Fukao, 2019). 4 We conducted surveys with 200 students and focus group discussions with 32 students in grade 8 and held interviews with teachers, parents, and education experts.…”
Section: Education In Cambodiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A further recommendation for school leaders is to address ethical issues (which this study helped to uncover) in discussions with schoolteachers and other community members, and to ensure that paid extra lessons are indeed an optional extra and not essential for the completion of the core curriculum (Bray et al, 2019). Monitoring the impact of school-PT partnerships on student achievement (and achievement gaps), attitudes and other non-cognitive outcomes (e.g., through student questionnaires or tests) is desirable to evaluate the meaningfulness of the partnership.…”
Section: Schools and Teachers Working Together With Private Tutorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So far, the research of such school and PT partnerships has focused on the context either of developing countries with relatively low-quality schooling and low accountability, such as Myanmar, India or Cambodia (Bray et al, 2020(Bray et al, , 2019Ghosh & Bray, 2020), or of those on the other extreme, for example, Korea, Japan or Shanghai -China (Kim & Jung, 2019;Yamato & Zhang, 2017;Zhang & Bray, 2017). The present research thus complements these studies with findings from a context somewhere "in between" these two extremes, that is, the Czech Republic, a post-socialist country in the center of Europe, where students display a largely average level of achievement (e.g., OECD, 2016), where schools' accountability for students' results is relatively low and at the same time schools have considerable autonomy (Dvořák et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Data for grade 6 students were 10 percent higher than a 1999 study (Bray, 1999b) of 77 primary schools, and similar to a 2011 survey of eight primary schools in three locations (Dawson, 2011). Overall, private tutoring in Cambodia has been recognized by scholars as a leading cause of educational inequality in the post-1990 era (Bray, Liu, Zhang, & Kobakhidze, 2019). A closer look at the UNESCO reports between these two moments offers additional insight into why tutoring emerged in the first place, and challenges development efforts to recognize the complexity of partnerships and privatization in Cambodian education system (and beyond).…”
Section: Cambodia Post-1990: the Emergence Of Private Tutoringmentioning
confidence: 99%