Church of England to take over thousands of state schools where Bishops will be able to appoint governors

Education Secretary Michael Gove agrees deal with the Church

Non-faith and community schools to join CofE academy chains

Church will not be allowed to change admissions policy or RE lessons



Move criticised be secular groups who fear 'religionisation' of schools



Gove wants Church to 'rediscover educational mission of Victorian times'

Changes: Education Secretary Michael Gove said the Church of England will help raise educational standards in Britain's schools

The Church of England could be given the power to run thousands of secular state schools after agreeing a landmark deal with the Department of Education.

The Church will be forced to preserve the character of non-faith schools and community schools joining a Church of England academy chain would not have to change its admissions policy, religious education lessons or employment terms for teachers, according to The Times newspaper.

Bishops will also have the power to appoint governors at the schools.

But the move has been criticised by secular groups, who said the decision would irreversibly increase religious influence over state schools.

Keith Porteous Wood, of the National Secular Society, told The Times: 'This will surreptitiously bring the education system under religious control.



'It will lead to the further alienation of school children who are from non-religious or religiously unconcerned families.

'Despite now being the majority, they are becoming increasingly disadvantaged in admissions and by the growing religionisation of publicly-funded schools.

'Once schools have been taken over by religious interests, it will be almost impossible to ever bring them back under community control.'

Education Secretary Michael Gove praised the standards and popularity of church schools during a seminar at Lambeth Palace yesterday and urged a continuing partnership with the Church.

In a statement Mr Gove said: 'We would not have so many great state schools in this country without the Church of England.

'I know the Church does a wonderful job helping to raise educational standards and in providing a safe and loving environment for hundreds of thousands of children.

'However, there is much more we can do together. I want the Church to recover the spirit which infused its educational mission in Victorian times and support more new schools - especially academies and free schools - to bring educational excellence to the nation's poorest children.'

Approximately one million children currently attend Church of England schools.

Mission: The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby said the move would help the church 'transform every part of our society'

There are 4,484 Church of England primary and middle schools, a quarter of the total, and 193 secondary schools.

The Bishop of Oxford, the Right Rev John Pritchard, who leads education policy within the Church, believes small village primary schools will want to join academy trusts led by its schools to secure their future, and promised they would be 'safe with us', The Times said.

Bishop Pritchard said: 'This will be a way for them to have the security of a larger body with mutual support, with resources that are much more extensive.'

He added: 'Dioceses have the privilege and opportunity to put local church and local school into the same box, as it were, and say that's where the mission of the Church lies.'

The bishop said Mr Gove had set the Church a challenge to 'raise our game', which 'echoes our own determination to make a real step change in the way we serve our communities, working to the highest standards'.

Bishop Pritchard said: 'I think people may not realise the significance of what looks like a small technical change but actually allows the mutual support, the drawing together of resources, experiments in collaboration.

'It allows a whole lot more and it will enhance the educational experience of millions of children.'

The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, said the vision for church schools would 'continue our mission of transforming every part of our society'.

'It is obviously true that good schools help produce an educated workforce,' the Archbishop said.

'But the Christian vision is a far greater one. It is about setting a framework for children as they learn, which enables them to be confident when faced with the vast challenges that our rapidly changing culture brings to us.'

Secular groups have expressed concern about the extent of religious influence the move would allow.

Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain, chairman of the Accord Coalition, which campaigns for admissions and recruitment in state schools to be free from religious discrimination, said: 'Despite the positive aspects of church schools, those that select pupils on the basis of their faith are not only guilty of discrimination, but also help to fragment society.

'A tolerant pluralist society can only be created by having tolerant pluralist schools where children of all backgrounds grow up and interact together.