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Simon Rocker

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Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

Opinion

Why parents are on the warpath

The current pursuit of school places has turned more Jewish homes than ever into arenas of stress

July 8, 2010 10:18
3 min read

Getting your child into the right school can be a fraught business. Over the past few weeks, the JC has received a string of complaints from parents whose children have been denied a place at their local Jewish school.

Passions are running so high that one family whose child got into a school told me that the members of another family whose child was unsuccessful were not speaking to them.

On the bright side, the pressure on places at Jewish secondary schools in London has eased, largely owing to the opening this autumn of the Jewish Community Secondary School. There had been fears that, as a result of the JFS court case, children from non-religious families might struggle to meet the new entrance criteria for Jewish schools, which judges said must be based on practice, not parentage.

However, such is the availability of places that even Jewish children who "failed" the new faith test should have been able to find somewhere to take them. But there has been at least one casualty of the new entry system: 11-year-old Kayleigh Chapple, who was rejected by King David High School in Liverpool.