Schools should be banned from operating their own admissions systems if the new admissions code fails to reduce segregation, according to the Institute for Public Policy Research.
The research Fair choice: choosing a better admissions system says that unless the new admissions code leads to “significant reductions” in segregation by income and ability, local education authorities should take over the role.
Academies, foundation schools, trust schools and faith schools have no reason to be their own admissions authorities other than to select students by ability, the report, due to be published next month, will argue.
It will cite research that shows faith schools, which are their own admissions authorities, are 10 times more likely to be highly unrepresentative of their surrounding area than those where the LEA is responsible for the role. And non religious schools, which are their own admissions authorities, are six times more likely to be highly unrepresentative.
Call for new school admissions policy by thinktank
February 26, 2007 in Children
More from Community Care
Related articles:
Job of the week
Employer Profiles
Workforce Insights
The family safeguarding approach: 5 years on
Harnessing social work values to shape your career pathway
Would you move from the city to work in a more rural setting?
Webinar: building a practice framework with the influence of practitioner voice
‘They don’t have to retell their story’: building long-lasting relationships with children and young people
Workforce Insights – showcasing a selection of the sector’s top recruiters
Comments are closed.