London’s Jewish state-aided secondary schools may have to find an additional 50 places in the next few years but demand is unlikely to be high enough to need a new school.
That is the conclusion of a report into school places published this week by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research and the Jewish Leadership Council’s education division, Partnerships for Jewish Schools.
Its author, L. Daniel Staetsky, said in practice this would mean existing schools being ready “to open an extra class, as and when required, rather than to open an entirely new school.”
JPR’s assessment was that “about 50 additional places will be required across the entire Jewish secondary school system in London”.