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Simon Rocker

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

Analysis

Are Charedi schools extremist?

November 24, 2016 23:14
Education Secretary Michael Gove during a visit to a Jewish school
2 min read

After the government's inquiry into alleged Islamist extremism in Birmingham schools, Jewish educators will be keeping a close watch on what Ofsted does next. Will the inspection service seek to counter religious sectarianism more widely?

The Birmingham investigation, it must be said, uncovered no evidence of children being exposed to political militancy - beyond the visit of one radical preacher with hardline religious views to one school. But it did conclude that there had been a concerted campaign to impose a conservative Islamic agenda on several secular academies with a predominantly Muslim intake.

Ofsted now wants to see schools promote "British values" and to strengthen requirements for academy schools in particular to have a balanced curriculum. But these measures would apply only in the state system, not the more loosely regulated independent sector, where the most traditional Jewish schools operate.

Independent schools must still be registered with the Department for Education to teach children aged 16 and below. Gradually, secular education authorities have woken up to the fact that large numbers of Charedi boys from the age of 13, particularly in Stamford Hill, are being taught in unregistered yeshivot rather than in schools. But the DfE is wary of trying to get yeshivot to register and fears too hard a crackdown might drive some institutions underground.