*
* * Return to Homepage * Home * Index * Help * Enquiries *
*
*
*
* Login
* Return to Homepage *
*
* * *
* CES
*
*
*
*
* Latest News
*
* August 2010
*
* July 2010
*
* June 2010
*
* May 2010
*
* April 2010
*
* March 2010
*
* February 2010
*
* January 2010
*
* December 2009
*
* November 2009
*
* October 2009
*
* September 2009
*
* August 2009
*
* July 2009
*
* June 2009
*
* May 2009
*
* April 2009
*
* March 2009
*
* February 2009
*
* January 2009
*
* December 2008
*
* November 2008
*
* October 2008
*
* September 2008
*
* August 2008
*
* July 2008
*
* June 2008
*
* May 2008
*
* April 2008
*
* March 2008
*
* February 2008
*
* January 2008
*
* December 2007
*
* November 2007
*
* October 2007
*
* September 2007
*
* August 2007
*
* July 2007
*
* June 2007
*
* May 2007
*
* April 2007
*
* March 2007
*
* February 2007
*
* January 2007
*
* December 2006
*
* November 2006
*
* October 2006
*
* September 2006
*
* August 2006
*
* July 2006
*
* June 2006
*
* May 2006
*
* Briefings
*
* Papal Visit
*
* Consultation Responses
*
* CESEW Parliamentary Reception 23 June 2009
*
* CESEW Parliamentary Reception 16 June 2008
*
* Visions for Leadership 31 March 2009
*
* Community cohesion conference for faith school specialist sports colleges (16th July 2008)
*
* National Catholic Education Conference, 8th-9th May 2007
*
* Media Monitoring Bulletins 2007-2008
*
*
* *
Back to news

Trevor Phillips: Catholic schools have better ethnic mix
*
Trevor Phillips, the Chairman of the Commission for Racial Equality, has acknowledged the ethnic diversity represented in many Catholic schools.

Speaking on 22nd September 2005, Mr. Phillips made a keynote speech entitled After 7/7; Sleep Walking to Segregation, to the Manchester Council for Community Relations. In this speech he said:

“Data from OFSTED shows that when we look at the ethnic mix of schools, Catholic schools tend to be far more mixed than local authority schools. A healthy mix might be a school with a proportion of ethnic minority pupils somewhere between 5% and 40% - where these children neither predominate, nor are they isolated.

Among state schools, about a quarter (25.6%) fall into this group. But amongst Catholic schools, a third (32.5%) would fit this description. So the passion being spent on arguments about whether we need more or fewer faith schools is, in my view, misspent. We really need to worry about whether we are heading for USA-style semi-voluntary segregation in the mainstream system. That would be a grim prospect."

The CES is delighted that Mr. Phillips has acknowledged the ethnic diversity in Catholic schools. Too often people forget that religion, culture and race are not the same things. The Catholic Church is truly Catholic in its universality and this is well demonstrated in the racial diversity of our communities and subsequently in our schools.

*
*
*
*
* *Website by Baigent *Terms & Conditions*Privacy Policy*Page Top *
*
*