Amanda Spielman, the head of the inspection service Ofsted, has reiterated her call for new laws to crack down on unregistered yeshivot in her annual report.
Although the first successful prosecution of an unregulated educational setting, a Muslim learning centre, took place earlier this year, Ofsted’s chief inspector Amanda Spielman said the current law was still too weak to close down institutions or prosecute those running them.
Some unregulated faith settings “such as yeshivas and madrasas”, she said, were providing religious instructions for five and sometimes six days a week “from early in the morning to late into the evening”.
In these cases, Mrs Spielman said, it was “perverse that the narrower the curriculum provision, the safer such a setting is from prosecution.