Postby papinian » Sun Aug 26, 2012 7:29 pm
I have mixed views on the south London Jewish school. I am a supporter of faith schools. I think there have been many good faith school initiatives in south London. One example is St Cyprian's Greek Orthodox Primary School in Thornton Heath which gives an opportunity for the Greek and Greek Cypriot community in south London to have a school where their religion and Greek language is taught. To me, this isn't a lot different from the role the Ecole de Wix has for French speakers in Clapham.
Any new state primary school will absorb pupils that would otherwise have gone to other state or private primary schools. Assuming that the large majority of those pupils would have been going to state primary schools, places in those other state primary schools are available for other parents.
However, I am concerned by the response from Mumptious above. A poster asked a legitimate question as to whether, as regards the 50% community places, siblings of existing pupils will have priority over all others and, if so, doesn't this mean that the faith percentage will become a lot higher than 50% as siblings of pupils admitted on the faith basis will take up a portion of the 50% community places, even over non-faith applicants who live nearer the school. Rather than explain how this will work, or set out the detailed admissions rules, Mumptious asked that "we try to avoid speculating on what people believe will or will not happen with admissions". Well, if the admissions criteria were set out then we wouldn't need to speculate would we? And why aren't the admissions criteria set out on the website that Mumptious linked to?
Where I am from in Dublin, many non-Jewish children attend the only Jewish school, which is accepted by the Jewish community as otherwise they would not have the numbers to keep it open. That fosters a very open and tolerant atmosphere. I would encourage Mumptious and those involved in the south London Jewish school to look at this and other models for Jewish schools as some of those in north London have had some rather distasteful practices to say the least - one having been condemned by the courts as practising racial discrimination.