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Faith schools 'climbdown' denied | Faith schools 'climbdown' denied |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The education secretary has denied caving in after he scrapped plans to force new faith schools in England to raise intakes from other religions. | |
Under the plans, such schools would have had to give up to 25% of their places to those from outside the faith. | Under the plans, such schools would have had to give up to 25% of their places to those from outside the faith. |
Alan Johnson says a change is no longer needed after a "voluntary agreement" was reached with the Catholic Church as well as the Church of England. | Alan Johnson says a change is no longer needed after a "voluntary agreement" was reached with the Catholic Church as well as the Church of England. |
Opposition parties say it is a U-turn and admission policies will not change. | Opposition parties say it is a U-turn and admission policies will not change. |
They say there is no guarantee that pupils of other faiths will get places. | They say there is no guarantee that pupils of other faiths will get places. |
Leaders of the Catholic Church had expressed deep misgivings over the proposals, which were introduced in an amendment to the Education and Inspections Bill last week. | |
We've made enough progress through the voluntary route that we don't need the blunt instrument of legislation Alan JohnsonEducation secretary | |
The Catholic Church has now voluntarily joined the Church of England to agree that up to 25% of places should go to pupils from another faith or none, the education secretary said. | The Catholic Church has now voluntarily joined the Church of England to agree that up to 25% of places should go to pupils from another faith or none, the education secretary said. |
Mr Johnson said the change of direction had nothing to do with opposition from religious groups. | Mr Johnson said the change of direction had nothing to do with opposition from religious groups. |
The abandonment of the plans followed talks with representatives of all the UK's major religious groups. | The abandonment of the plans followed talks with representatives of all the UK's major religious groups. |
You should encourage schools to engage on the basis of social responsibility by opening up places... not by passing draconian laws Nick GibbShadow schools minister | |
There had been a "consensus amongst all faith groups" that "every school whether faith or non-faith should have a duty to promote community cohesion," said Mr Johnson. | There had been a "consensus amongst all faith groups" that "every school whether faith or non-faith should have a duty to promote community cohesion," said Mr Johnson. |
"We've made enough progress through the voluntary route that we don't need the blunt instrument of legislation," he said. | "We've made enough progress through the voluntary route that we don't need the blunt instrument of legislation," he said. |
Ofsted would inspect all schools on the community cohesion element, Mr Johnson said. | Ofsted would inspect all schools on the community cohesion element, Mr Johnson said. |
He added that some Muslim schools had said they wanted between 20% and 25% of pupils to be from outside of the faith, but very few people wanted to take them up. | He added that some Muslim schools had said they wanted between 20% and 25% of pupils to be from outside of the faith, but very few people wanted to take them up. |
The Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham, Vincent Nichols, welcomed the new "broad agreement", as did Canon John Hall, the Church of England's chief education officer. | The Catholic Archbishop of Birmingham, Vincent Nichols, welcomed the new "broad agreement", as did Canon John Hall, the Church of England's chief education officer. |
'Dog's dinner' | 'Dog's dinner' |
Shadow schools minister Nick Gibb welcomed the development, saying the Conservatives had always believed the faith school issue had been one "for schools themselves to decide". | |
ENGLAND'S FAITH SCHOOLS Church of England 4,646Roman Catholic 2,041Jewish 37Muslim 8Sikh 2 | ENGLAND'S FAITH SCHOOLS Church of England 4,646Roman Catholic 2,041Jewish 37Muslim 8Sikh 2 |
He said: "You should encourage schools to engage on the basis of social responsibility by opening up places, by involving themselves in the community. | |
"But not by passing draconian laws forcing schools to adopt a quota of pupils from non-faiths or from other faiths." | |
Liberal Democrat education spokeswoman Sarah Teather labelled the affair a "dog's dinner", saying ministers did not seem to know what the problem was that they were trying to solve. | |
"The government first of all announce there were going to be quotas and then they found out that in fact there was a huge backlash to that and they had to row back from it." | |
The National Secular Society argued that the latest development would not make any difference. | |
"The people who ought to be having a duty to promote community cohesion is the government itself and it's failing miserably," said the society's Keith Porteous-Wood. | |
Although the voluntary agreement does not affect Muslim schools, the Muslim Council of Britain welcomed the move. | |
The council's education spokesman, Tahir Allam, said he had argued against legislation, adding that the compromise was "a good position to be in". |