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New data has
revealed that faith schools account for a disproportionate percentage of the
country's best-performing primary schools.
The figures, released by the Department for Education, show that faith schools
have continued to out-perform more traditional primary schools in tests for the
core subjects.
Indeed, religious schools accounted for as many as six out of ten primary
schools where every pupil achieved the expected standard for English and maths
age 11 years.
What's more, faith schools continue to dominate at the top of the annual
national league tables for results in these tests, despite the fact that they
account front just a third of schools across the country.
"Every child must be challenged to achieve their best. These results show
that some children who were struggling at seven have made real progress by 11
and are now performing as well, or even better, than we expect," reflected
a spokesman for the Department for Education.
"However, there are still too many cases where the opposite is true. It is
unacceptable that children who made such bright starts to their school career
have fallen back into the pack."
He said, too, that exceptional teaching is often the difference between success
and failure, adding that recent changes are designed to achieve that ambition.
Faith schools are, of course, often subject to intense criticism because they
are perceived to attract a disproportionate amount of middle-class pupils, who
are shown to perform better in an academic context.
And the new data shows that some 896 primaries scored 100 per cent in the
measure of how many of their 11-year-olds reached Level 4, which is the
standard expected of their age group.
Of these, some 552 were faith schools, thereby accounting for nearly 62 per
cent of the total.