Upsetting the parents

David Robertson / Premier Christianity  |  UK & Ireland
Date posted:  1 Dec 2017
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Parents at a Church of England primary school who complained about specific Christian teaching at the school alleging it was ‘extreme’, succeeded, in mid-October, in banning a Christian group who weren’t even responsible for the teaching they opposed.

The headteacher of St John’s Church of England primary school in Tunbridge Wells said Crossteach ‘do not deserve the tarnishing of their good name’. They had been working in the school for 16 years, but a small number of parents complained, forcing the head to reluctantly limit their involvement. They will continue to run an after-school club at the school. Schools consistently praise the organisation’s work.

Some parents at St John’s Church of England Primary School in Tunbridge Wells alleged that their children had been exposed to ‘upsetting’ beliefs, including those about marriage and life after death. Some of the claims from disgruntled parents were taken from assemblies which had nothing to do with Crossteach, or from events at local churches.

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