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'Trojan Horse': Three Birmingham schools in special measures 'Trojan Horse': Three Birmingham schools in special measures
(35 minutes later)
An educational trust at the centre of the "Trojan Horse" controversy has confirmed its three schools have been placed in special measures.An educational trust at the centre of the "Trojan Horse" controversy has confirmed its three schools have been placed in special measures.
Park View Academy, Golden Hillocks and Nansen Primary, all in Birmingham and run by the Park View Educational Trust, were recently inspected by Ofsted.Park View Academy, Golden Hillocks and Nansen Primary, all in Birmingham and run by the Park View Educational Trust, were recently inspected by Ofsted.
A leaked draft report says the trust runs schools that have "taken the Islamic focus too far". The trust said it "wholeheartedly disputed" the watchdog's findings and accused it of "looking for extremism".
Ofsted is to reveal the results of 21 school inspections later.Ofsted is to reveal the results of 21 school inspections later.
Earlier, a leaked draft on the trust from the Education Funding Agency said some parts of the school curriculum are "restricted to a conservative Islamic perspective".Earlier, a leaked draft on the trust from the Education Funding Agency said some parts of the school curriculum are "restricted to a conservative Islamic perspective".
'Beacon of hope' 'Climate of suspicion'
It found that girls and boys had been segregated in some classes.It found that girls and boys had been segregated in some classes.
Meanwhile, Park View School's leaked Ofsted report found it had not done enough to keep students safe from extremism.
The trust has been caught up in the so-called Trojan Horse claims that a group of hardline Muslims have been trying to take over schools in Birmingham.The trust has been caught up in the so-called Trojan Horse claims that a group of hardline Muslims have been trying to take over schools in Birmingham.
A draft Ofsted report into Golden Hillock Secondary School, in Small Heath, leaked to the BBC on Thursday, accused the school of not doing enough to protect pupils from being exposed to extremism.A draft Ofsted report into Golden Hillock Secondary School, in Small Heath, leaked to the BBC on Thursday, accused the school of not doing enough to protect pupils from being exposed to extremism.
Lee Donaghy, assistant principal at Park View, said that claim "simply wasn't true". Vice chair of Park View Educational Trust Dave Hughes said it "wholeheartedly disputed" Ofsted's findings and accused inspectors of operating in a "climate of suspicion".
"For the community in which you now stand, as visitors covering our story, our school stands for a beacon of hope against isolation, poverty, drugs, crime and - yes - potential extremism. "Ofsted inspectors came to our school looking for extremism, looking for segregation, looking for proof that our children have religion forced upon them as part of a religious plot," he said.
"Park View is part of the solution, not part of the problem. "The Ofsted reports find no evidence of this, because this is categorically not what is happening at our schools.
"It is a beacon like no other in this area. A school which achieves what many thought impossible: poor, inner-city, Muslim children achieving as well as any children anywhere. And now that beacon risks being extinguished." "Our schools do not tolerate extremism of any kind," he added.
Lee Donaghy, assistant principal at Park View, said Ofsted's claim the school did not encourage social cohesion "simply wasn't true".
"For the community in which you now stand, as visitors covering our story, our school stands for a beacon of hope against isolation, poverty, drugs, crime and - yes - potential extremism," he said.
Arshad Malik, whose son, Imran, is in Year 9 at Park View School, said he had read the Ofsted report and he believed its findings were "alien" to his child's experience.
"‎Inspectors came with loaded questions," he said.
"This issue is a political football.
"People... are trying to use this school to push their own agendas."
He said parents would like to invite Education Secretary Michael Gove to the school for an open meeting about Ofsted's findings to discuss the evidence found to support them.