College staff signing up to an antisemitism scholarship are now unlikely to visit synagogues or Jewish schools due to heightened security risks.
Enrolment opened this week for the Department for Education-funded course for school and college staff, with the first cohort expected to start in November.
But planned “domestic study visits” to learn about Judaism and the impact of antisemitism probably won’t go ahead, ex Labour MP Natascha Engel said.
Engel, founder of cross-party policy institute Palace Yard that will deliver the scholarship, said: “We don’t know whether we’ll be able to do that. It was in the original tender by the DfE, but that was before there were these very serious security problems.
“It’s not so easy now to go into a synagogue or a Jewish school, because the security is so massive. They’re literally under attack.”
The programme was created in response to teacher uncertainty about discussing the Israel-Palestine conflict with students following the October 7 terror attacks in 2023.
Conducted mostly online, it aims to educate up to 1,500 teachers and staff on real-life scenarios that could happen in an education setting.
Palace Yard won the £1.3 million contract to deliver the scholarship. Instead of visits, the institute may now stage conferences for course graduates at Jewish community centres in cities with large Jewish populations such as London, Manchester or Leeds, where strong security measures are already in place.
Palace Yard is working alongside the Union of Jewish Students, which runs university staff training, to deliver the scholarship programme to school and college support staff, designated safeguarding leads and those in charge of curriculum, HR and policy.
Engel, a former panel member of the all-party parliamentary group on antisemitism and a trustee of the Antisemitism Policy Trust, told FE Week it conducted a pilot involving antisemitism specialists and education staff. It subsequently shortened the course “significantly” due to teachers’ workloads.
Fatal terror attack
The Community Security Trust recorded 3,700 antisemitic incidents in the UK in 2025, a 4 per cent rise from the year before but 13 per cent lower than 2023.
The most serious incident of 2025 happened in October, when two men were killed at Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue in Manchester on Yom Kippur – the first fatal antisemitic terror attack since CST began recording incidents in 1984.
In April, two Jewish men were seriously injured in a stabbing in Golders Green, north London, which the Metropolitan Police declared a terrorist incident. A man was charged with attempted murder and is due to stand trial next year. The UK terror threat level was raised to severe days later.
In the same month, a review found a school, Bristol Brunel Academy, had postponed local Jewish MP Damien Egan’s visit due to safeguarding concerns amid planned pro-Palestine protests.
Although Engel has not gathered specific data on the prevalence of antisemitism in further education, she said staff had reported “uncertainties” in how to manage discussions relating to the conflict in Gaza.
“People are uncertain where something is a legitimate criticism of the Israeli government and what it’s doing in Gaza, versus something that is then antisemitic. Where that line is can be quite difficult to judge,” she said.
Former Ofsted and Department for Education boss David Bell is currently leading an independent review into how schools and colleges identify, respond to and prevent antisemitism. The review closed its call for evidence this week.
Palace Yard did not formally submit evidence but has shared its research with Bell, particularly around spikes in antisemitic incidents driven by events in the Middle East, and how education staff log antisemitic incidents.
Engel said: “There was an example of a schoolboy shouting out a really horrible antisemitic joke, and the teacher picked up the boy about the antisemitic joke, who then back-chatted her.
“He got punished for the back-chatting, not for the antisemitism, and it wasn’t logged as an antisemitic incident. I think that kind of thing is something that really needs looking at.”
Tackling microaggressions
The scholarship comprises four modules of around 30 minutes each. Staff can complete them online over the course of a year.
The modules walk staff through real-life situations, such as a scenario involving a pupil using antisemitic language in the playground.
“If the teacher doesn’t respond and lets it go, they might think it’s children bantering,” Engel said. “But equally, if they overreact and that student does not know what they are saying, over-punishing and calling that child a racist might entrench something that wasn’t there to begin with.”
The course will provide scenarios across all education settings, allowing teachers to transpose each incident to the age group they teach.
It will not deal with radicalisation or extremism, which colleges already address through the Prevent programme.
Instead, it will focus on microaggressions and microincivilities that can arise in the workplace or classroom.
It also features a module on online antisemitism, detailing how people use coded language such as “guice” (pronounced Jews) to evade social media content moderation, and material on Holocaust distortion and denial.
Following the course, participants will be invited to join an optional “action learning” network to share what they have learned.
Palace Yard is working with the Association of Colleges and its subcontractor the National Union of Students to promote the scholarship to support staff and curriculum and policy leads.
Of the 1,500 staff who will be offered scholarships, half will be from schools and colleges while the other half will be from universities.
The Department for Education said it expects at least 100 of the 750 participants from the schools and college group to be made up of college staff.