Barriers restricting faith schools must be abolished, a leading education charity has said.
The New Schools Network (NSN), which helps establish free schools,
has said the cap on places allocated by religion should be relaxed to
release "significant untapped potential" among faith schools.
Under current rules, faith groups setting up free schools can only
give priority on the grounds of religion to 50 per cent of its places.
However NSN director, Nick Timothy, said the limits prevented
"high-calibre school providers creating the much needed places that
parents want".
The charity, which is partially funded by the Department for
Education (DfE), said faith-based schools were "more popular with
parents" and have a "proven track record of delivering high-quality
education".
However,
there are disproportionately fewer faith-based free schools
than other schools nationally with a faith ethos because of the cap, the
charity said.
Timothy, who is a former chief of staff to Theresa May, is a
long-standing advocate of the government's free school expansion
programme. As well as pointing to the quality of education, he said free
schools were "more likely to be ethnically diverse" in a bid to
pursuade the government to lift the restrictions.
Paul Barber, director of the Catholic Education Service, explained
the cap meant Catholic churches were unable to engage fully with opening
free schools.
"The cap prevents the Church meeting demands from Catholic parents
for Catholic places and could cause schools to turn Catholic families
away on the grounds that they are Catholics," he said.
"To do so contravenes not only Canon Law but also common sense."
Christine Blower, leader of the National Union of Teachers (NUT),
disagreed with NSN's proposal and said the cap "ensures at least half of
the free schools' intake is not restricted to a particular faith".
"Free schools are paid for by all taxpayers. It would be wrong to
exclude children local to the school where their parents wish them to
attend irrespective of their faith," she said.
A DfE spokesman also defended the cap. "The requirement for all
oversubscribed faith free schools to make at least 50 per cent of their
places available to those of another or no faith helps to tackle
segregation and ensures young people will experience the diversity of
religious beliefs that make up modern Britain," he said.
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