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Accord: we want to broaden education

September 4, 2008 09:27

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

2 min read

Rabbi Jonathan Romain was this week at pains to point out that the new Accord campaign, which he chairs, is not against the existence of faith schools.
Its aim was to bring religious schools under greater state control, he explained at the new group's London launch on Monday.

"Faith schools are here to stay," he said. "Parents do have a freedom of choice. We want to recognise that right to choose. What we are particularly concerned with is the quality of those faith schools... and some of the malpractices, or less than positive practices, that are allowed to go unregulated."

Accord wants to abolish the right of faith schools to choose their pupils or staff on the basis of faith. It also believes they should teach a national religious education curriculum covering faiths other than their own and offer "inclusive" assemblies rather than compulsory acts of worship.

Last week, Accord supporter Rabbi David Goldberg said that "faith schools... do not help integration".
Faith schools are currently exempt from new religious-discrimination law by being permitted to give priority to children - and in many cases, staff - from their own faith community. But Evan Harris, Liberal Democrat MP, welcoming the launch of Accord, said that the joint parliamentary committee on human rights believes that some of these exemptions contradict the European Convention on Human Rights.

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