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- Baroness Tessa Blackstone, Minister for Education (1997-2001) and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Greenwich
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- Professor Colin Blakemore, Fellow of the Royal Society and former chief executive of the British Medical Research Council (MRC)
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- Reverend Jeremy Chadd, Vicar of St Chad’s Church, Sunderland, in the Diocese of Durham. Regional Tutor for Practical Theology in the North-East Oecumenical Course.
“The Church of England seems to me to delude itself, and to suffer from a dissonance between its words and its actions on church schools. We speak of serving the whole community, but actually serve our own interests. From within that church, I long for a more Christ-like engagement with education, in the service of all, and without a hidden agenda.”
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- Rev Marie Dove Methodist minister in West Yorkshire, former Religious Studies teacher
“I am convinced that the perceived privilege afforded to church goers together with the hypocrisy encouraged by those who make the required number of attendances at the Parish Church until admission is achieved, is damaging to community relationships and casts doubt on the integrity of religious faith.”
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“In my view, building new faith schools, of whatever religion, is the least helpful answer to tackling the challenges of multiculturalism in a modern, democratic society, or providing schoolchildren of diverse cultures with the most effective tools to enable them to become integrated citizens of their host country.”
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- Lord Graham of Edmonton, politician.
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- Professor A.C. Grayling, philosopher and author
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- Savitri Hensman, equalities adviser in the care sector. Writer on Christian social ethics and theology.
“Some in minority communities have not always been well served by ‘inclusive’ state schools. The answer however is to increase the quality of education for all in state-funded education, not an approach that ultimately further marginalises such communities.”
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- Sarah Hill, Global relief and development worker. Founder member of Accepting Evangelicals.
“Christians have nothing to fear from equality and justice in schooling, because those practices are at the heart of the Gospel message. My experience in Northern Ireland during the troubles convinced me just how vital integrated education is, if potentially destructive barriers between people and communities are going to be overcome.”
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- Theo Hobson, theologian, author and commentator
“The Church of England’s current educational policy is undermining its old claim to be the church of the entire community. It has to drop all selection on the basis of church attendance. Otherwise it remains a force for division not unity in the local community.”
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- Reverend Chris Howson, Anglican priest, Bradford
“I believe that all children should have equal access to the best quality education. Schools that select on the basis of belief and background in effect put up barriers to that.”
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- Sunny Hundal, journalist and blogger
“I oppose discrimination on the basis of religion and think every school should have a mix of students so people can come in contact with “other” students.”
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- Professor Steve Jones, University College London
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- Rev Richard Kirker, Prominent Christian campaigner for equal rights
“Faith schools have become a tarnished brand as within the majority of them stalks the unacceptable side of faith - unchecked homophobia. No public money should be used to condone covert discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation.”
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“I believe that one of the main functions of school is to place children outside the limited social and cultural context of home, and allow them to interact with other people whose experiences and values may be very different. As preparation for life, the benefit of this is self-evident. As preparation for functioning in a society like Britain, it is more important than ever before. While religious schools may provide a good level of academic education, their role in narrowing the social experience of their pupils is deeply troubling. Hence I’m supporting this much needed campaign in the name of an open educational system, free of discrimination and prejudice.”
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- Rev Iain McDonald, Minister of Southernhay United Reformed Church, Exeter
“In addition to the discrimination that is inevitably involved, the current system also encourages hypocrisy. There are those who attend church in order that their children qualify for admission to a particular school and never set foot in the church again after the children have been accepted.”
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- Fiona Millar, journalist and high-profile education campaigner
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“Every society needs to provide schools that educate all its future citizens to live together, understanding one another’s differences and building on what we all have in common. To set up schools that separate children according to the beliefs of their parents is to say “We are happy to live in a nation where people don’t speak to one another, a society that subsidises and encourages mutual fear and ignorance, a country where religious intolerance is more important than any other factor in education.” I don’t want to live in a society like that, and I don’t think most people do either. The only way education can be truly open to everyone is if it is secular, and if it’s accepted that religion has no special privileges there.”
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- Claire Rayner, journalist
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- Reverend Professor Christopher Rowland, Dean Ireland Professor of the Exegesis of Holy Scripture, University of Oxford
“Churches should be championing social justice and equality for all in education, not privileging their own.”
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- Polly Toynbee, President of the British Humanist Association and journalist
“Faith schools reduce all families’ choice of schools, cream off the best pupils, obliging the non-religious to cheat and pretend. They do have a special ethos: it’s called keeping out more of the free school meals children. They are a state sponsored way for churches to fill their empty pews with anxious new parents kneeling to Gods they don’t believe in.”
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