Britain's strictest headteacher says school shunned by middle class despite students achieving highest grades

By GB News (World News) | Created at 2026-06-17 13:50:52 | Updated at 2026-06-22 13:14:42 4 days ago

Katharine Birbalsingh, Britain's strictest headmistress of Michaela Community School in Brent, has expressed frustration middle-class families refuse to send their children to her institution despite its exceptional academic performance.

"The middle classes don't send their children here... We don't have any," the 52-year-old confirmed.


"They wouldn't want their children mixing with our children. They don't have the right accents or come from the right families."

The non-selective state school, located near Wembley Park station in London, achieved remarkable results last year, with more than 40 per cent of pupils obtaining five or more grade 9s at GCSE. At least 36 per cent of students receive free school meals and many speak English as a second language.

Ms Birbalsingh described England as "a class-ridden society" and called the middle-class avoidance of her school "snobbery".

The school operates a rigorous discipline system where pupils receive demerits for minor infractions such as slouching or gazing out of windows. Two demerits result in a detention.

New students undergo a week-long "boot camp" to learn the rules upon arrival. An ex-serviceman recently informed pupils Michaela was stricter than the army.

Year 8 students acting as tour guides explained their acceptance of the regime. "Strictness is good for us. There's no bullying," one said, contrasting it with their primary school where "classes were disrupted and someone was always being picked on".

Katharine Birbalsingh

Katharine Birbalsingh has said her school has been shunned by the middle class

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Children walk through corridors in silence and form orderly lines when bells ring. Despite the demanding environment, the 744-pupil school is oversubscribed, with students acknowledging adapting to the discipline becomes easier after initial detentions.

The school receives approximately £7,000 per pupil annually, compared with around £35,000 at private institutions. This financial disparity means Michaela lacks a sports hall and playing fields, with physical education limited to the first two years.

"I wish we had playing fields. Sport would very much feed into our ethos of teamwork. But financially my hands are tied," Ms Birbalsingh said.

Around a third of the teaching staff are Oxbridge graduates who remain at the school for years because they can transform lives in this environment. Ms Birbalsingh acknowledged new teachers initially resist issuing detentions but come to understand the necessity.

Michaela Community School

Michaela Community School has achieved outstanding grades in recent years

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"Once they realise that for these kids to compete with the best they need to be held to account for their behaviour so they can do well, they get it," she explained to The Times

Birbalsingh maintains mobile phones are "breaking their brains" and identifies phone usage as the biggest issue affecting students. Those in lower academic sets are consistently the heaviest users of social media, she observed.

Her journey began in 2010 when she addressed the Conservative Party conference in Birmingham, declaring "black children underachieve because of what the well-meaning liberal does to them". The speech cost her job and brought death threats.

She founded Michaela four years later to demonstrate her educational philosophy. Birbalsingh remains critical of what she terms "gentle parenting whisperers" who encourage adults to soothe rather than reprimand children.

"You need to learn there are consequences to your behaviour," she said, warning lacking parental boundaries can prove "catastrophic" for disadvantaged children.

Ms Birbalsingh established Michaela to prove children from disadvantaged backgrounds can compete with privately educated pupils. The school now attracts more than 1,000 visitors annually seeking to learn from its methods, including delegations from Australia and prestigious institutions such as Eton and St Paul's.

A life-size cutout of Russell Crowe as Maximus from Gladiator stands behind her desk, and she recites the character's battle speech to senior staff at their daily 7am meetings. "I hold the line all the time," she said/ "Because if you don't, gradually things unravel.

"It takes people like me to fight back for them and say I am going to make a success of these children. And I believe I am making a difference."

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