Hundreds tell government to rethink faith-based school admissions

Posted: Thu, 20th May 2021

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More than 1,100 people have criticised religious discrimination in school admissions in response to a consultation on proposed changes to the admissions code in England.

The government recently proposed a series of changes which aimed to improve support for vulnerable children and has now published a summary of consultation responses.

It said 1,160 campaign responses had commented on the ability of schools with a religious character to admit children on the grounds of religion or belief.

That figure made up more than 90% of the responses to the consultation that came from individuals.

A "large number" of the responses raised concerns that faith schools can prioritise children based on faith background over looked after children who don't meet faith-based admissions criteria.

Vulnerable children are sometimes specifically disadvantaged by faith based admissions. Some Catholic schools, for example, prioritise "baptised Catholic children" over looked after children who aren't considered Catholic.

Government response

In response to the call, the government said it "remains committed in its support for church and other faith schools".

It also said it was "for the admission authority of individual faith schools to decide whether or not" to prioritise children based on faith.

Note

  • There were 1,277 responses to the consultation from individuals and 270 responses from organisations, including from local authorities, schools and academy trusts.

Tags: Faith schools, School admissions