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LGBT teaching row: DfE 'pressured school' to halt lessons | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
The government put "extreme pressure" on a school to stop lessons on LGBT relationships, a chief executive said. | |
Hazel Pulley said Parkfield Community School suspended the teachings following "frantic phone calls" from the Department for Education (DfE). | |
"The DfE really wanted the protests to stop. They wanted it out of the press," said Ms Pulley, who is head of the trust which runs the school. | |
The DfE is "working intensively with the school and parents", it said. | The DfE is "working intensively with the school and parents", it said. |
Ms Pulley also urged new Prime Minister Boris Johnson to step in and make guidance on the issue for head teachers clearer or risk further divisions in communities. | |
Parkfield's No Outsiders equality programme, which encourages children to accept differences in religions, families and relationships, was suspended in March amid angry protests at the school gates. | |
Protesters stated the subject matter contradicted the Islamic faith and that primary-age children were too young to be aware of same-sex relationships. | Protesters stated the subject matter contradicted the Islamic faith and that primary-age children were too young to be aware of same-sex relationships. |
As tempers flared, Ms Pulley said she felt "extreme isolation" and was "totally on my own to deal with something that was coming at us with great force". | |
"We suspended the programme because we came under extreme pressure from the DfE," she told the BBC. | |
"It occurred on a Wednesday evening before the next protest that was planned for the Thursday morning. | |
"They wanted the protest to stop and I understand that but the school was doing nothing wrong. | |
"I don't think this had ever happened in schools in our country before where parents would stand outside a school and really shout using megaphones and keep children out. | "I don't think this had ever happened in schools in our country before where parents would stand outside a school and really shout using megaphones and keep children out. |
"It worried me because I felt that it was empowering parents to realise that if you shout and scream outside a school or [there's] something you don't agree with, you can stop it, but it also made it look like the school was doing something wrong, which it wasn't." | |
The BBC has seen a letter to Birmingham MP Jess Phillips in which Schools Minister Nick Gibb states: "I am clear that at no point did officials from the department pressure the school into pausing or stopping the No Outsiders programme." | |
The Department for Education said in a statement: "Any suggestion that the dispute should be kept out of the media was absolutely not an attempt to silence the school, but a bid to bring an end to protests, encourage consultation and ensure tensions weren't further inflamed by sensationalist coverage." | |
No Outsiders, which includes books about two male penguins that raise a chick together and a boy who likes to dress up like a mermaid, will be resurrected at the school in September. | No Outsiders, which includes books about two male penguins that raise a chick together and a boy who likes to dress up like a mermaid, will be resurrected at the school in September. |
Ms Pulley urged Mr Johnson to intervene in the continuing row, saying DfE guidance on how to teach equality issues was "too grey". | |
"Saying that the teaching or raising awareness of LGBT people is up to head teacher's autonomy is not acceptable," she said. | |
"If we don't get this sorted now this is going to grow and community cohesion will become more of a challenge - it's just going to get worse," Ms Pulley added. | |
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