Parents urged to boycott schools' requests for non-white pupils to prove they're not asylum seekers
Campaigners warn new government guidelines to access information on pupils' nationalities risks the open discrimination of non-white British pupils
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Parents are being urged to boycott a request to disclose their children's country of birth to schools amid fears it could be used by the Home Office for immigration enforcement.
More than 20 organisations and representatives have backed a campaign calling on Education Secretary Justine Greening to abandon plans to collect the data on every child aged two to 19 in England.
The campaign comes in response to fears the information, which will go into the national pupil database, could then be accessed by immigration officials, in effect, turning school administrators “into border guards”.
The letter states: “Without assurances to the contrary, our grave concern is that the new data collected will be shared with the Home Office and therefore potentially used for immigration enforcement purposes.
”We have already seen data sharing between the Home Office and other departments increase since the Government announced its commitment to creating a 'hostile environment' for undocumented migrants.
“Such measures deter vulnerable children and families from accessing essential services, exercising their human rights, and participating on an equal basis in our communities.”
Under the new expanded census, schools are, for the first time, asking parents to say which country their child was born in.
Disclosure is not compulsory, but a report last week found many schools were misinterpreting government guidance and demanding copies of non-white British pupils' passports to determine whether or not they were asylum seekers.
Gracie Mae Bradley, from Against Borders for Children, which is leading the campaign to have the policy overturned, branded the new government guidance “risky and unnecessary”.
She said: “School should be a place where all children are treated equally.
”In the context of a 'hostile environment' in which employers, landlords and even healthcare workers are being turned into border guards, we believe this new requirement could be used to add school administrators to the list.
“We are also deeply concerned that this data will be made available, without time limit, much more widely outside the schools system, which cannot be acceptable.
”Over the coming weeks we expect the organisations opposing this divisive approach to be joined by many more and for parents and schools to join the boycott and protect young people from this dangerous threat to their privacy.“
The Home Office and police already have access to information on the National Pupil Database, but campaigners warn that most parents and school staff do not know about plans for new census information on birthplace to be added to the accessible database.
The data is also accessible to third parties.
A Department for Education spokeswoman said: ”Collecting this data will help ensure our children receive the best possible education.
“It will be used to help us better understand how children with, for example, English as an additional language, perform in terms of their broader education, and to assess and monitor the scale and impact immigration may be having on the schools sector.
”Data on pupils' country of birth, nationality and level of English proficiency is collected through the school census in line with the national population census. These data items will not be passed to the Home Office. They are solely for internal Department for Education use for analysis, statistics and research.“
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