David Cameron has stated that he wants to send his daughter to a faith school rather than allow her to get "a bit lost" in a standard state primary.
|PIC1|The Conservative leader is preparing to reject at least 15 schools to send his daughter to a faith school, the Telegraph reports.
He is believed to be enrolling her in a Church of England primary school more than two miles away.
In an interview, the Mr Cameron said he was concerned that three-year-old Nancy would get "a bit lost" in some of the "enormous" state primaries near his west London home.
Mr Cameron insisted that a smaller state-funded church school would offer more "familiarity", as he insisted that he supported faith schools and made no apologies for identifying one for his daughter, who will not start for another 18 months.
"I'm quite a fan of faith schools and we're looking at a church school we're very keen on," Mr Cameron told BBC Radio 4's You and Yours programme, adding that he was a member of the "relevant faith".
"Maybe I'm being over precious and protective of my daughter, but you sort of feel that your small child is going to go into this enormous state primary school and may get a bit lost," he said. "I want parents to have a choice. In London you have a choice."
The school believed to have been earmarked by him has 200 pupils and is described by Ofsted, the education watchdog, as among the top five per cent nationally for results.
His other two sons and daughter have also attended faith schools.
related articles
Evangelical Alliance Welcomes David Cameron's Comments on Marriage
Evangelical Alliance Welcomes David Cameron's Comments on Marriage
Cameron Opposes Opt-Out for Church on Gay Adoption
Cameron Opposes Opt-Out for Church on Gay Adoption
News

Finnish church used AI to conduct a worship service but it didn't feel the same
From Gutenberg and his printing press to The Salvation Army and the first motion picture, the Church has a long tradition of using new technology to spread the Gospel. Now, a congregation in Finland has taken the next step on this journey, using AI tools to organise and conduct a worship service.

First complete Chinese translation of the Bible sells at auction for £56,000
The first complete Chinese version of the Bible has sold at auction for over £56,000

Canterbury Cathedral welcomes more modern-day pilgrims
Canterbury Cathedral is hoping to offer "sanctuary and hope" to modern day pilgrims

Should Christians be more critical of Israel?
Why do Christians support Israel and should there be limits to that support?