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Government to lift cap on faith school places

Government to launch a consultation on lifting the 50% cap alongside proposals on opening special faith-based academies. 

Faith schools in England will no longer have to offer up to half of their places to children who don't belong to their religion, under changes to state school admissions rules announced by the government.

Currently, new faith schools can only fill a maximum of 50% of their places using faith-based admissions criteria, but the change announced by the education secretary, Gillian Keegan, will allow them to turn away other children.

The consultation opened by the government on Wednesday would also allow churches and religious groups to open faith schools for children with special educational needs, which campaigners warned could raise ethical concerns.

Proposals to scrap the 50% cap which only applies when schools have more applicants than places are opposed by Rowan Williams, the former archbishop of Canterbury, and artists including Philip Pullman and Ian McEwan, on the grounds that it would be divisive and likely to penalise disadvantaged children by denying them access to local schools.