Schools: 'promote race relations or close'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/08/nschools08.xml
Schools with large numbers of white pupils may be taken over or closed
if they fail to promote race relations and links between different
religious groups, according to Government guidance.
Those in rural areas or leafy suburbs should be twinned with
ethnically mixed schools in the inner city, it suggests.
Christian faith schools should strike up partnerships with Muslim and
Jewish institutions, while other community schools should organise
more trips to churches, mosques and synagogues. In a move designed to
stop children drifting toward extremism, all schools will have a legal
duty from September to break down barriers and promote "community
cohesion".
Jim Knight, the schools minister, said yesterday the rules would be
enforced by Ofsted, which has the power to sack the governing body or
recommend closure if schools fail to comply.
The Commission for Racial Equality has warned that Britain's
segregated schools are "a ticking time bomb waiting to explode".
The new guidance said: "Every school - whatever its intake and
wherever it is located - is responsible for educating children and
young people who will live and work in a country which is diverse in
terms of culture, faith, ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds.
"The staff and pupil populations of some schools reflect this
diversity, allowing pupils to mix with those from different
backgrounds.
"Others do not, and need to make links with other schools and
organisations in order to give their pupils the opportunity to mix
with and learn with, from and about those from different backgrounds."
According to latest figures, about one in eight children in English
schools now speak English as a second language and numbers have soared
over the past 10 years.
But ministers are concerned some schools are still being monopolised
by single racial or religious groups, acting as a breeding ground for
extremism.
One in 20 primary schools have no ethnic minority pupils and 323
schools have more than half of pupils from Bangladeshi or Pakistani
backgrounds.
Draft guidance, which is out to consultation before becoming law later
this year, recommends field trips with a racial or faith angle, and
inviting religious leaders to schools.
Speaking at the National Association of Head Teachers' annual
conference in Bournemouth yesterday, Mr Knight said: "I am quite keen
on faith-based schools twinning with those of other faiths or within
the network of schools within their community and talking to other
schools about their faith."
The law will be equally binding on schools with predominately Asian
populations and those with large numbers of white children.
John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and
College Leaders, said: "In many troubled communities schools are
already the only institutions promoting community cohesion."
Mick Brookes, general secretary of the National Association of Head
Teachers, said: "It is yet another unnecessary Government initiative."
David Willetts, the Tory education spokesman, said: "The Government
should be leaving head teachers to do their jobs."
date: Fri, 11 May 2007 01:34:26 +0100
author: Steve Greene lid
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