I'm not sure how you arrived at this bespoke objective, but setting that aside do you have evidence for these claims?livegreen wrote: If church schools, for example, practised what they preached they would have more poor pupils than surrounding schools. They do not and in fact nearly always have lower FSM than surrounding schools. Their selection criteria often puts off poorer families / less well educated families who can be unaware of criteria till too late. Is this what Jesus would have wanted?
could you provide a link to this study?Further to add to the point about faith schools doing better academically. A recent study by COE said all of its higher academic scores could be put solely down to fact they had less poorer pupils.
right...livegreen wrote:A simple search on Google
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/educa ... 73566.html
A better summary in the Guardian but cannot paste link - simply search "faith schools intake results"
Also Ofsted concluded in its report on Faith school that their perceived better results were attributable to their skewed intake.
Selective schools get better results than non selective schools is a fact and the reason Faith schools want to remain selective.
All of these reports are easy to find.
I'm yet to see the response of the Churches that they believe they are not selective....,
Dear Actuallyadad,actuallyadad wrote:Ok Chutneymaniac this has gone a bit weird and personal. I'm not engaging in a public debate with a stranger about my personal religious views. It's not about me "not caring about" a particular religion. This isn't the forum to deal with the merits of Catholicism or the ensuing arguments around contraceptives, gay marriage, female equality and how pedophile priests should be dealt with. And in any event, my kids are older and go to private schools. So it's not about me.
I'm just saying: I think in principle state school places, like other state resources (medical, welfare etc etc), should not be allocated based on religious belief. That is all!
Dear Actuallyadad,actuallyadad wrote:@Scottov this may be an emotive topic, but no need to be rude. People may have different views to you but please try and keep it civil
Dear livegreen,livegreen wrote:A simple search on Google
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/educa ... 73566.html
A better summary in the Guardian but cannot paste link - simply search "faith schools intake results"
Also Ofsted concluded in its report on Faith school that their perceived better results were attributable to their skewed intake.
Selective schools get better results than non selective schools is a fact and the reason Faith schools want to remain selective.
All of these reports are easy to find.
I'm yet to see the response of the Churches that they believe they are not selective....,
Dear Ippyevie,Ippyevie wrote:Just wow. I'm sitting on the fence here and have been considering going to masses for quite a while to get my child in a Catholic church nearby. We even consider converting. I have to say it's pretty daunting to say the least when I see the responses from Chutneymaniac and Scottov to a perfectly valid question that actuallyadad had posted.
Now so I really want to send my child to a place where a fair question can't even be raised without being verbally aggravated? Perhaps this topic is really too emotive.
I'm confused. Are you Catholic but just upping your practice, i.e. going to Mass or are you not Catholic at all. If you're not Catholic then you are welcome to attend Mass but that won't give your child any priority in being admitted to school. I don't think converting to Catholicism just to get your child admitted to a local school is a good idea - it's certainly not an easy option.Ippyevie wrote:I'm sitting on the fence here and have been considering going to masses for quite a while to get my child in a Catholic church nearby. We even consider converting.
Similarly, I have never heard of anything that is not expressly described as a voluntary contribution.Cloud wrote:I know three Catholic schools in this area well and I have NEVER heard of a compulsory or regular requirement to donate to a fund.
I'm Protestant. But I don't go to church every Sunday. I mean Protestant is also Chistian, no? Afterall, we worship the same God? What's the rule for Protestants? Some of the people I know who are not Catholics went to church to try to gain a place for a child in faith school though. And it worked.papinian wrote: I'm confused. Are you Catholic but just upping your practice, i.e. going to Mass or are you not Catholic at all. If you're not Catholic then you are welcome to attend Mass but that won't give your child any priority in being admitted to school. I don't think converting to Catholicism just to get your child admitted to a local school is a good idea - it's certainly not an easy option.
You're conflating faith schools and Catholic faith schools. Catholic schools give priority to Catholics ahead of other Christians. The usual priority is Catholic - Orthodox - Protestant. However, going to Mass as a Protestant won't get your child any higher priority than a Protestant who doesn't go to Mass. In fact, a Protestant who is a regular worshiper in a local Anglican / Methodist / Baptist / etc church may end up having a higher priority. In any case, most local Catholic schools don't even have enough places for the Catholics that apply, never mind anyone else.Ippyevie wrote:I'm Protestant. But I don't go to church every Sunday. I mean Protestant is also Chistian, no? Afterall, we worship the same God? What's the rule for Protestants? Some of the people I know who are not Catholics went to church to try to gain a place for a child in faith school though. And it worked.papinian wrote: I'm confused. Are you Catholic but just upping your practice, i.e. going to Mass or are you not Catholic at all. If you're not Catholic then you are welcome to attend Mass but that won't give your child any priority in being admitted to school. I don't think converting to Catholicism just to get your child admitted to a local school is a good idea - it's certainly not an easy option.