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FREE SCHOOLS

Free schools shun ‘bad pupils’ and ‘black music’

State-funded, privately-run free schools may be turning away students with less aptitude, in breach of the law, with an undercover TV show revealing one school principal condemning "black music" and back-to-front baseball caps.

Free schools shun 'bad pupils' and 'black music'
File photo: Drago Prvulovic/TT

Sveriges Television's (SVT) investigative news programme Uppdrag Granskning approached some 50 free schools, trying to gain entry for two children and recording the meetings with a hidden camera. The show found that an ambitious 12-year-old girl with good grades was considerably more welcome in many of free schools, while a twelve-year-old boy with bad grades was much less welcome.

For example, the girl was immediately granted a spot at Milstens School in the upmarket Täby suburb of Stockholm. But the principal of the same school, Karin Möller David, contacted the boy’s dad to say that they simply could not accept any more students at that time.

At 27 of about 50 schools the girl with good grades was either accepted or notified that her chances were good. Only half of the schools willing to accept the girl also welcomed the boy with bad grades.

News of the report had Education Minister Jan Björklund up in arms.

 "In plain Swedish, I’m furious," Björklund told news agency TT. "It is unacceptable to sort and sift through children and youth." 

The education act (skollagen) is "crystal clear", according to the education minister. Schools that choose not to accept select students break the law. The system has no loophole that could allow it, Björklund underscored.

"But I do think that one has to understand that for all schools, both communal and free, it’s much easier to handle motivated students. Of course more effort is required to take care of students with social problems and learning disabilities," he added.

Björklund said the only way for the Schools Inspectorate (Skolinspektionen) to unearth abuses came from parents and staff willing to report the problem.  While the education minister said he planned to ask the Inspectorate to set sail to an investigation, he said its methodology would be markedly different to that of the reporters at SVT. 

"A state agency cannot use hidden cameras or false identities. But they could follow up with actual students who apply to a school," he said.

When school principal Karin Möller David was confronted she was quick to admit her mistake.

"That was completely wrong of me. It was a bad decision and I am terribly sorry for it," she commented. 

The SVT team also took its hidden cameras to an employment interview for a music teacher position at a free school outside of Stockholm.

During the interview, the principal said that students with ADHD should be placed in a separate group in order to "protect the good students".

While the school planned on starting a new line of study in music, the principal made it clear that certain types of music were not welcome, as they could attract the wrong kind of students.

"Not that crap where they rap and go on about rape. You can’t say nigger anymore, but you know, that black music. I don’t want that in the school," the principal told the applicant. "Then we’ll get those people with baseball caps on backwards. No, they can go rap in Tensta and torch cars over there, but not here."

The principal has now resigned and sold the school licence to another operator.

Claes Nyberg, CEO of Friskolornas Riksförbund (Swedish Association of Independent Schools), said SVT’s program was too quick to jump to conclusions. He said the reporters did not follow through with the entire application process.

"There are just a few select schools that don’t give equal treatment," said Nyberg. "And if it is deliberate then of course it’s against the law and it’s unacceptable."

Nyberg said the principal who made racist and hateful comments did not belong in a Swedish school, but said he did not believe such behaviour was the norm.

"It’s a deviant example, which we all react strongly to."

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SCHOOLS

Denmark drops plans to slash subsidies for free schools

Denmark's new government has abandoned an attempt to cut 300m Danish kroner ($44m) from the annual subsidy given to privately-run schools in Denmark.

Denmark drops plans to slash subsidies for free schools
Children play at Taastrup Private School outside Copenhagen. Photo: Liselotte Sabroe/Ritzau Scanpix
The cuts would have meant about 3,000 kroner less per pupil going annually to the schools. 
 
The schools, which are privately run but subsidised by the state, include schools teaching in English, German and French, schools serving Jewish and Muslim minorities, and schools following different pedagogical ideas. 
 
“I was very worried yesterday, because it would have been a huge challenge for all the schools to lose five percent of their state subsidies,” said Peter Bendix Pedersen, Chairman of the Danish Free Schools Association. 
 
“If it's going to be a real possibility for everyone to send their children to a free school in Denmark, then the subsidy has to be high.” 
 
The ruling Social Democrats dropped the proposal after facing stiff opposition in budget negotiations on Monday evening, with both their allies the Social Liberal Party and the opposition Liberal Party opposing the plan. 
 
“The free schools and all the children and parents who use them can breathe a sigh of relief,” the Social Liberal Party's leader, Morten Østergaard told the Ritzau newswire on Monday night. 
 
“We have eliminated one of the cuts that to our great surprise found its way into the Social Democrats' budget proposals.”
 
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The government had proposed cutting the subsidy for free schools from 76 percent of the average cost of a pupil at a normal state-run school, to 71 percent, aiming to use the money to increase spending on state-run schools. 
 
“As we said before the election, we want to prioritise state schools,” Finance Minister Nicolai Wammen said as he announced the proposal. 
 
Pedersen said that if the cuts had gone ahead, schools would have had to either reduce the quality of the education they provide or increase fees for parents, with some smaller schools in rural areas probably forced to shut down. 
 
“Maybe the parents would have had to pay more for their school fees, and some parents wouldn't be able to pay more than now,” he said. 
 
Denmark pioneered free schools, with the system established more than 150 years ago with the 1855 Free Schools Act. 
 
Unlike in neighbouring Sweden, free schools must be non-profit institutions if they are to receive state subsidies. 
 
The number of free schools has increased in recent years, with parents frequently opening new a free school when the government shuts down small schools in rural areas.  
 
There are currently 550 free schools in the country with about 110,000 pupils. Approximately 18 percent of all primary school children currently attend a free school. 
 
 
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