THE Keep St Joseph's in Milngavie campaign group (Letters, October 30) profess several aims and achievements of their school, such as delivering high-quality education, drawing on talents from across the community, ensuring children achieve their potential, etc.
All of it sounds very worthy, but I don't see how any of it requires the school to be Catholic in character. Nor do I see why Catholic children can't learn in non-denominational schools. Do they have educational needs which other children don't? Are Catholic children in non-denominational schools being deprived of a satisfactory education? I'd be more interested to learn why state-funded faith schools are considered necessary than read another formulaic puff-piece about a school's commitment to excellence and so on.
Robert Canning,
Vice-chair of The Scottish Secular Society, 58a Broughton Street, Edinburgh.
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