The Madrid regional education department, which funds the privately run Juan Pablo II Catholic school , said inspectors will be dispatched to the school to investigate claims of sexual discrimination.
The school is part of the Educatio Servanda chain of institutions, and is one of 18 government-subsidized private schoolsin the Madrid region that segregates the sexes.
Claims made on Cadena SER radio station include the fact that the school offered boys-only trips to the Santiago Bernabéu stadium while the girls outing was a visit to a soup kitchen for the poor.
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It was also claimed that a lunchtime crochet class was offered exclusively for girls. The school could face fines if it is found that it breached the regulation that boys and girls must be given the same opportunities at school.
Juan Carlos Corvera, chairman of the foundation that oversees the Juan Pablo II and other Catholic schools, denied allegations of sexism in education. “Every pupil, according to his or her taste, chooses which activity they prefer,” he said.
It isn’t the first time the school has come under the spotlight.Last year the school principal, Carlos Martínez, was fined by Madrid’s education department for sending out a letter to parents attacking a law that obliges schools to discuss the issues of gender identity in the classroom.
In the letter he compared recent legislation guaranteeing the rights of the capital’s LGBT community with “fanatical terrorism.”
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