Ofsted inspectors can downgrade schools for allowing staff and pupils
to wear a face veil if it is a "barrier from learning", its chief
inspector has announced.
Sir Michael Wilshaw has written to all inspectors instructing them to
mark down institutions "if they judge the wearing of the veil is acting
as a barrier to learning and to positive social interaction".
Under the new policy,
schools will be judged "inadequate" if wearing a
face veil on the part of pupils or staff is seen to be "hindering
communication and effective teaching".
The Ofsted chief said he was concerned some heads were "coming under
pressure" to relax a ban on veils. He said he wanted to reassure schools
which ban or restrict veils they "can rely on my full backing for the
stance they are taking".
"I am determined to ensure that discrimination, including on the
grounds of gender, has no place in our classrooms," Wilshaw said in a
statement.
"We want our schools, whether faith schools or non-faith schools, to
prepare their pupils equally for life in 21st century Britain. We need
to be confident our children's education and future prospects are not
being harmed in any way."
The announcement came after the education secretary Nicky Morgan said
it was up to schools to decide on uniform policies. However Ofsted's
policy, which seemed to go further than Morgan's comments last week,
received "full support" from the department for education.
A spokesperson for the Muslim Council of Britain said "accommodation" was needed over wearing the veil.
"It is a shame that the niqab - the full face veil that a minority of
Muslim women wear - has become a polarising issue when it need not be."
Dr Sheik Howjat Ramzy, director of Iqra Institute in Oxford and
former head of an Islamic school, went further and said the move was
"unjust" and "picking on Muslims in particular".
"I believe he's totally wrong and this is totally unjust. Ofsted is
picking on faith schools, specially Muslim schools. There is nothing
wrong with wearing the head veil," he said in a media report.
"Not many pupils wear the veil. The veil doesn't make pupils
intelligent or not. It gives them their identity and some security.
Pupils have the right to wear the veil if they go to Islamic schools.
That is no problem."
Ofsted's latest controversial announcement comes amid an ongoing
debate over whether it should be allowed to inspect out-of-school
educational settings. A new policy from the education department would
allow inspectors into any institution educating children for more than
6-8 hours a week.
However many MPs and church leaders have expressed concern this would
mean churches and youth groups could face Ofsted inspections.
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