News

Faith schools accused on employment


31.08.08

The Government is being urged to reform faith schools to ensure they cannot discriminate against pupils and teachers on religious grounds.

A coalition of academics, clergy, teaching unions and other leading public figures is calling for fairer admissions policies in faith schools and equal employment rights for staff, regardless of their beliefs. The coalition, named Accord, will be officially launched on Monday.

The call comes as new rules comes into force which allow voluntary controlled faith schools to reserve a headteacher's post for someone who is appointed specifically to teach religious education in line with the school's faith.

Jonathan Bartley, of the Christian think-tank Ekklesia and a member of the new coalition, said: "Reforming admissions policies would be a good place to start in stopping discrimination.

"There are faith schools that are 90% or even 100% funded by the tax payer and yet they only cater, or prioritise 5% of the population. Often faith schools take pupils only from their own faith or even from their own denomination within a faith."

He added that there were concerns around the new rules regarding recruitment of staff.

For schools to advertise for a someone of a particular faith means that "90% of the population have been ruled out straight away," Mr Bartley said.

He added: "If they can actually recruit from 100% rather than 10% of those available they will get a better calibre of teacher."

A coalition of religious figures representing more than 6,000 schools of various faiths refuted allegations that such schools are discriminatory or represent a divisive force within British society.

In a statement they said: faith schools deliver "excellent" academic results and instil a sense of social responsibility.

Link to: Digg Reddit Delicious Facebook

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 


Stakes mount for Brown's plan

The political battle of ideas is just beginning

Palace fury at artistic licence of a lewd kind

An unseemly royal row has broken out after an artist decided to depict The Queen and Prince Philip looking at pornography as part of a new exhibition

All stories


On This is London today

Don't miss...

  • Haringey protest

    The rotten borough of Haringey?

    The dreadful death of Baby P has brought the wrath of the nation down on one London locality, already notorious for Victoria Climbie. But a leading expert says there are hundreds of other children across London who could suffer the same tragic fate
  • Jonathan Ross

    Should Wossy return?

    As the BBC Trust reinstates Jonathan Ross, two writers give their fiercely contrasting views
  • Nick Griffin

    Now we know what little threat the BNP poses

    The most interesting thing about the leaked BNP list is how few members it has, particularly in London. But we must make sure it does not gain any capital from the resulting publicity

Pick of the blogs

Waugh
Paul Waugh - Politics
Stamp Duty receipts plunge

City Briefing

The latest top City stories and Market report emailed to you twice a day.

Read the latest bulletin

Mickey Clark

Podcasts

on the City Markets