I think the problem with faith schools is that, although it might not occur in every one, it can occur - that being a view that one of the jobs of the school is to bring up the pupils to be of a specific religion.
And there are plenty of faith schools that still do that - effectively training the kids to be devout catholics etc as part of their mission. I think that is simply wrong. No school (certainly no state funded school) should ever consider that part of its mission is to ensure that their pupils develop a particular religious faith.
On one hand I am all for parents being able to send their children to schools that stand for their values they believe in. So Muslims should be able to send their children to schools that honour Mohammed and that tradition and Christians send their children to schools that teach their values about and around the teachings of Jesus.
I don't agree that the only schools that should be faith schools are private ones.
Firstly because only people with money are given a choice and secondly because private schools are not governed by the same rules and controls that a state school is.
Everyone should have access to a faith school for their children if they wish, not just the well off elite.
I think faith schools need to be state schools because they then have to follow the national curriculum ( if you look at the gov website on it, private schools don't have to)
The national curriculum acts as a form of control on what is taught.
The areas I think need looking at are the ones where they are not just teaching the values but insisting the child actually belongs to the religion.
All state schools should take a mix of religions and treat other religions with respect.
I used to enjoy assemblies on the whole, where the school got together at the start of the day to catch up on notices and relevant things and sometimes children joined in by playing instruments and singing together.
It gives the school day a structure.
The reason most don't now, has nothing to do with religion but the whole school won't fit because most schools are overcrowded.
I think there is a danger of unsuitable people teaching and it being excused because they are using religion as an excuse.
I think faith schools tolerate the wrong sort of people in control. They are sometimes not critical enough.
It's the same in churches though, I've noticed some very unsuitable people try and teach Sunday school lessons, and although many Christians do know really, they don't tend to be critical of fellow Christians.
I do think there are potential issues with faith schools but I do think they are important.
Some secular schools are dire, have lots of problems of their own, my two went to secular schools and I wasn't impressed by them,either really.
I don't feel the need to throw out faith schools because my experience wasn't that good.
I don't think my grown up children's experience in a secular school was that wonderful, it just didn't involve religion.
I think it's human nature that a small percentage of teachers are unsuitable, it's the children who see it.
The problem is that school itself teaches children what to think and believe, and some teachers do it in a way that upsets their pupils.
You can get a bigoted atheist just as easily as a bigoted Christian.
The problem then is you wind up with Muslim and Christian families feeling their child is being brainwashed into atheism.
A creeping atheism.
You need good regulated faith and secular schools that teach good values and inspires children to find out more, and about how others see the world.
I can understand why a religious person could see the move to all secular schools as being a move to influencing their child to reject a religious outlook or to break them away from their family or their community.
It's all a battle for children's minds, and the end product.
Children have minds of there own though.
I don't see trying to influence children into being non religious ( or keep it at home only/ private) is a positive step, anymore than teaching them being religious is the only way to be.
Both have their issues.
I think we need faith schools as state funded schools.
I'd never support a move to get rid of them because I think what passes for secularism in many cases is actually worse.
Parents should have a say in the type of school their child goes too, and I don't like the move by elements in our society to take away their choice and influence the minds of their children instead..