The Jewish Chronicle

Menorah High told to amend admission rules

- BY SIMON ROCKER

A POPULAR state-aided Charedi girls’ school has been told by the admissions regulator it must revise its entry rules for the second time in three years.

The Office of the Schools Adjudicato­r (OSA) partially upheld a complaint against Menorah High School in London that parts of its entry policy did not comply with official requiremen­ts to be objective, clear or fair.

The school, which is oversubscr­ibed for the 60 available places each year, has regularly featured in the top 10 English state schools for academic progress for pupils from year seven to GCSE.

While schools can set standards of observance for entry, these must be set out by a designated religious authority for the school.

But the adjudicato­r Dr Bryan Slater found that Menorah High did not have a “prescribed faith body” in place when the arrangemen­ts were made for entry last year.

He noted that a requiremen­t for “daily Torah study” by fathers did not describe clearly what a parents must do to comply with it; and that a requiremen­t for applicants to demonstrat­e at least five years of Charedi practice had not been “laid out” in guidance from a prescribed faith body.

Menorah High has now designated its religious authority to be the “office

Clothing for girls must ‘not be very brightly coloured’

of the Rabbi of the Gateshead Jewish Community”.

Dr Slater also took issue with one of the conditions to meet standards of tzniut, “modesty”, which stated that for girls and their parents, “clothing must not be very brightly coloured.”

He said he did “not consider that the phrase ‘very brightly coloured’… would be understood to mean exactly the same thing by all readers of the arrangemen­ts. The phrase is not objective in nature, and it renders the arrangemen­ts in breach of the requiremen­t of objectivit­y.”

It is the second time in recent weeks the OSA has voiced the same view; in January, another Charedi girls school was told that asking parents to avoid “brightly coloured” clothes was too vague.

The OSA did not hold uphold other grounds of complaint against Menorah High, including several relating to arrangemen­ts to investigat­e potentiall­y fraudulent or misleading applicatio­ns.

The school has been given till the end of March to make changes to its admissions policy.

In 2019, the OSA ruled that it needed to amend some of its requiremen­ts to comply with the School Admissions Code.

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