How many schools in the UK are faith schools?

How many schools in the UK are faith schools?

At the start of January 2017, there were 6,814 state-funded faith schools in England, making up 37 per cent of all state primary schools (6,177) and 19 per cent (637) of all secondaries.

How many faith schools are there in the UK 2019?

However, 51 of the 553 non-selective faith secondary schools are at least as socially selective as the median grammar school – almost 1 in 10 of such schools.

What are faith schools in the UK and what do they teach?

Faith schools offer an education based on one particular religion. In the UK they must teach at least the National Curriculum but they can choose whatever religious studies they teach. The term is most commonly applied to state funded Faith Schools, where it is sometimes contentious.

How many schools are faith schools?

19% of secondary schools are faith-based. 16% religiously select to some degree, with 72% of all places at faith secondaries – equivalent to 13% of places at all secondaries – being subject to religious admissions criteria.

Who are faith schools run by?

State-funded faith schools are usually voluntary aided (VA) or voluntary controlled (VC) schools. This means that they get some of their funding from a religious organisation, which also usually owns the school buildings and the land.

How many primary schools are COFE?

One in four primary schools and one in 16 secondary schools in England are Church of England schools. There are more than 4,700 of these establishments, where around one million pupils are educated. While some of these schools are converter academies, 500 are independent schools that run with a Church of England ethos.

How are faith schools different?

Faith schools have to follow the national curriculum, but they can choose what they teach in religious studies. Faith schools may have different admissions criteria and staffing policies to state schools, although anyone can apply for a place.

What is difference between academy and school?

A school is administered by local government, whereas an academy is directly under the control of central government. Both are publicly funded, but the way in which they receive and manage their funds are very different. An academy is registered as both a charity and a limited company.

Who funded faith schools in England?

The Government funds many different types of ‘faith school’ – i.e. schools which are designated as having a faith character. Currently, around one third of state-funded schools in England have a faith designation.

How many faith schools are there in the UK?

In 2017 (according to Department for Education figures collected in the 2017 school census) the number of state funded mainstream primary faith schools in England was 6,177 representing 36.8% of total primaries. The number of secondary faith schools was 627 amounting to 18.4% of the total.

What are ‘faith schools’?

Around a third of all state-funded schools in England and Wales are schools ‘with a religious character’ – the legal term for ‘faith schools’, as they are known in England and Wales, or denominational schools, as they are known in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Are Church of England schools moving away from faith-based entry tests?

In 2017, we published No Room at the Inn demonstrating that, contrary to the claim that Church of England schools are moving away from faith-based entry tests, some 69% of Church of England secondaries have policies that religiously discriminate in their admission arrangements to some extent.

Why are faith schools so controversial?

Faith school populations are often far from representative of their local communities – for example, they admit far fewer children eligible for free school meals. Employment: Faith schools are also allowed to discriminate to varying extents in their recruitment and employment policies.