When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago

This article argues that Trinidad and Tobago has historically operated a system of open enrolment. Open access to schools by families may be rooted in the conflict between Church and State over schooling. The system is founded on the principle of the right of parents to choose schools for their children, first argued in the 18th century by the Church, and now included as a provision in the Trinidad and Tobago Republican Constitution. Choice of secondary school is operationalized by a system of rules for placement at eleven-plus. Parents are required to list their choice of schools and depending upon the candidates' score in the eleven-plus examination, test takers receive one of these choices or are assigned by the Ministry of Education. To study the system of secondary school choice in Trinidad and Tobago, information was gathered from the registration database of 11 eleven-plus examinations spanning the period 1995-2005. Student choices were analysed along with the demographic and geographic data. In the mixed method research design, data on the construction of school choice were also collected from focus groups and individual laddering interviews with both parents and children at four school sites. The integrated findings suggest that the choice-making process is complex, fluid, and dynamic, with multiple markets and different consumer types. Families made decisions in which children and even outsiders had considerable voice. Making choices involved a dual process of valorization and demonization of schools, but a tendency to reject some schools was predominant in many instances. The value placed on first choice "prestige" schools may be related to the consumer values of future economic success, safety of person, and assurance of stable personal development

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Main Authors: De Lisle, Jerome, Keller, Carol, Jules, Vena, Smith, Peter
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine 2009
Subjects:Secondary schools, School choice, Entrance examinations, Trinidad and Tobago,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6584
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-65842011-03-03T21:38:03Z When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago De Lisle, Jerome Keller, Carol Jules, Vena Smith, Peter Secondary schools School choice Entrance examinations Trinidad and Tobago This article argues that Trinidad and Tobago has historically operated a system of open enrolment. Open access to schools by families may be rooted in the conflict between Church and State over schooling. The system is founded on the principle of the right of parents to choose schools for their children, first argued in the 18th century by the Church, and now included as a provision in the Trinidad and Tobago Republican Constitution. Choice of secondary school is operationalized by a system of rules for placement at eleven-plus. Parents are required to list their choice of schools and depending upon the candidates' score in the eleven-plus examination, test takers receive one of these choices or are assigned by the Ministry of Education. To study the system of secondary school choice in Trinidad and Tobago, information was gathered from the registration database of 11 eleven-plus examinations spanning the period 1995-2005. Student choices were analysed along with the demographic and geographic data. In the mixed method research design, data on the construction of school choice were also collected from focus groups and individual laddering interviews with both parents and children at four school sites. The integrated findings suggest that the choice-making process is complex, fluid, and dynamic, with multiple markets and different consumer types. Families made decisions in which children and even outsiders had considerable voice. Making choices involved a dual process of valorization and demonization of schools, but a tendency to reject some schools was predominant in many instances. The value placed on first choice "prestige" schools may be related to the consumer values of future economic success, safety of person, and assurance of stable personal development 2010-04-14T17:43:14Z 2010-04-14T17:43:14Z 2009 Article De Lisle, J., Keller, C., Jules, V., and Smith, P. (2009). When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. Caribbean Curriculum, 16(1), 131-176 1017-5636 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6584 en application/pdf School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
institution UWI TT
collection DSpace
country Trinidad y Tobago
countrycode TT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
topic Secondary schools
School choice
Entrance examinations
Trinidad and Tobago
Secondary schools
School choice
Entrance examinations
Trinidad and Tobago
spellingShingle Secondary schools
School choice
Entrance examinations
Trinidad and Tobago
Secondary schools
School choice
Entrance examinations
Trinidad and Tobago
De Lisle, Jerome
Keller, Carol
Jules, Vena
Smith, Peter
When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
description This article argues that Trinidad and Tobago has historically operated a system of open enrolment. Open access to schools by families may be rooted in the conflict between Church and State over schooling. The system is founded on the principle of the right of parents to choose schools for their children, first argued in the 18th century by the Church, and now included as a provision in the Trinidad and Tobago Republican Constitution. Choice of secondary school is operationalized by a system of rules for placement at eleven-plus. Parents are required to list their choice of schools and depending upon the candidates' score in the eleven-plus examination, test takers receive one of these choices or are assigned by the Ministry of Education. To study the system of secondary school choice in Trinidad and Tobago, information was gathered from the registration database of 11 eleven-plus examinations spanning the period 1995-2005. Student choices were analysed along with the demographic and geographic data. In the mixed method research design, data on the construction of school choice were also collected from focus groups and individual laddering interviews with both parents and children at four school sites. The integrated findings suggest that the choice-making process is complex, fluid, and dynamic, with multiple markets and different consumer types. Families made decisions in which children and even outsiders had considerable voice. Making choices involved a dual process of valorization and demonization of schools, but a tendency to reject some schools was predominant in many instances. The value placed on first choice "prestige" schools may be related to the consumer values of future economic success, safety of person, and assurance of stable personal development
format Article
topic_facet Secondary schools
School choice
Entrance examinations
Trinidad and Tobago
author De Lisle, Jerome
Keller, Carol
Jules, Vena
Smith, Peter
author_facet De Lisle, Jerome
Keller, Carol
Jules, Vena
Smith, Peter
author_sort De Lisle, Jerome
title When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
title_short When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
title_full When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
title_fullStr When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
title_full_unstemmed When choosing might mean losing: A mixed method study of secondary school choice in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
title_sort when choosing might mean losing: a mixed method study of secondary school choice in the republic of trinidad and tobago
publisher School of Education, UWI, St. Augustine
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2139/6584
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