Educators are split over the government's proposed Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill, with some saying the move will improve fairness and accountability and others warning it could limit innovation in academy schools.
Opinion 1
Katharine Birbalsingh, headteacher of Michaela School in Wembley, north London, called it "absolutely appalling".
"I'm just really concerned because, at the moment, school leaders have the freedom to do various things that are right for their intake," she told Sky News.
"This bill will take those freedoms away."
Ms Birbalsingh, also known as 'Britain's strictest headteacher', added: "We got unlucky because we could have had Wes Streeting as education secretary, which would have been fine. Unfortunately, we got her [Bridget Phillipson].
"She [Ms Phillipson] is so arrogant. She's just marched in there and gone, 'I know what I'm doing, I'll just do what I want'."
Opinion 2
The founder of Oasis Academies, Steve Chalke, told Sky News: "We're excited about the changes because we feel that education has been in a very, very poor place for the last decade or more.
"Schools have been stripped of resources and there have been giant problems about the recruitment and retention of teachers.
"We feel that this important bill is beginning to address all of those issues."...
He added: "We at Oasis are excited about all of this, but that doesn't mean we don't have questions.
Hmm - one opinion sounds like the hard-nosed voice of experience, one sounds more... well more like jelly.
Opinion 1
Katharine Birbalsingh, headteacher of Michaela School in Wembley, north London, called it "absolutely appalling".
"I'm just really concerned because, at the moment, school leaders have the freedom to do various things that are right for their intake," she told Sky News.
"This bill will take those freedoms away."
Ms Birbalsingh, also known as 'Britain's strictest headteacher', added: "We got unlucky because we could have had Wes Streeting as education secretary, which would have been fine. Unfortunately, we got her [Bridget Phillipson].
"She [Ms Phillipson] is so arrogant. She's just marched in there and gone, 'I know what I'm doing, I'll just do what I want'."
Opinion 2
The founder of Oasis Academies, Steve Chalke, told Sky News: "We're excited about the changes because we feel that education has been in a very, very poor place for the last decade or more.
"Schools have been stripped of resources and there have been giant problems about the recruitment and retention of teachers.
"We feel that this important bill is beginning to address all of those issues."...
He added: "We at Oasis are excited about all of this, but that doesn't mean we don't have questions.