Become a Member
Analysis

The fight between Ofsted and Charedi schools will go to the wire

Simon Rocker analyses the battle of wills between the education watchdog and faith schools

July 10, 2018 08:41
Rabbi Pinter, principal of Yesodey Hatorah Senior Girls' School
2 min read

Ofsted’s damning report into the Yesodey Hatorah Senior Girls School in Hackney has only inflamed the  conflict between Charedi communities and the educational establishment.

Even before last month’s verdict on the school, rabbis were warning that strictly Orthodox Jews may be unable to remain in the UK unless there is a change in attitude towards their schools.

Behind the alarmist rhetoric, however, the question remains: is there scope for compromise?

The main flashpoint is the application of the “British values” agenda, which was introduced to counter religious extremism. According to official guidelines for independent schools, the required teaching of respect and tolerance for others must “pay regard” to the characteristics of people protected under equality law, such as race, religion, gender, disability, age and - controversially for the Charedi community - sexual orientation and gender reassignment.