Charlotte Church defends homeschooling decision as she speaks out on why she pulled children from mainstream schools
WATCH HERE: Campaign for Real Education, Chair and Former Head Teacher, reacts to new government plans to stop schools from sending suspended pupils home
|GB News

The singer has stood by her decision to keep her children out of mainstream schooling
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Charlotte Church defended her approach to educating her children outside the traditional school system during a Friday morning television appearance.
The 40-year-old singer, who operates a spiritual retreat in rural Wales, spoke with presenters Ranvir Singh and Paul Brand on Good Morning Britain about her educational philosophy.
"I really believe in a different, more progressive way of educating," she told viewers.
Ms Church criticised conventional schooling as failing to accommodate individual needs, describing it as "a lot of round pegs, square holes."

Ms Church doesn't often post her children over her social media page
|She questioned why education remains so uniform, asking: "Why is it so one size fits all?"
The singer also highlighted challenges facing neurodivergent children within mainstream institutions.
Ms Church has three children from two relationships. Her eldest daughter, Ruby, 18, and son Dexter, 17, are from her relationship with former rugby player Gavin Henson, which ended in 2010.
Her youngest child, six-year-old Frida, is with her current partner, Jonathan Powell, whom she began dating in 2010.

The star has been passionate about homeschooling since her oldest children were seven and eight
|ITV
The singer first disclosed her homeschooling arrangements back in 2016, when Ruby and Dexter were eight and seven, respectively.
Mr Powell plays an active role in their education, providing singing lessons and reading to the children nightly.
Ms Church has emphasised that teaching responsibilities are shared among several people, including a professional teacher named Dawn and an assistant called Leanne.
Ms Church revealed she has been collaborating with travel company Intrepid Travel on research examining parental attitudes towards education.

The singer also set up a fee-free private school which consists of 20 pupils
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According to the findings, growing numbers of parents are exploring alternatives to conventional schooling, including worldschooling, homeschooling, and flexischooling.
The singer suggested that mainstream education struggles to provide individualised support for every young person due to its scale.
"It's very different for the juggernaut, which is the mainstream education, to be able to be more sort of granular in its help in every individual young person," she explained.
Ms Church also questioned the underlying philosophy of current educational approaches, asking why the system remains so homogeneous.

She claimed the mainstream schooling system is underfunded
|Ms Church's educational vision extends beyond her own household through the Awen Project, a democratic education community she established.
The initiative, which remains operational today, functions from temporary structures situated within ancient woodland in South Wales.
In 2019, Church successfully obtained permission to convert her £2.5 million property into a fee-free private school accommodating 20 pupils, with herself serving as music teacher.
The democratic model gives students significant influence over their learning environment, including decisions about school rules, lesson delivery methods, meal choices, and transportation arrangements.
Ms Church previously expressed concern that mainstream education suffers from insufficient funding and overcrowding, leaving teachers under considerable strain.
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