PARENTS from a second Scottish council will have to prove their children are baptised Catholics in future if they want to attend a popular denominational school.

Inverclyde Council is considering a shake-up of the rules on school entry to protect places for Catholic families who want to attend Notre Dame High School, in Greenock.

The move follows an increasing number of placing requests to attend the school from outside the catchment which cannot all be accommodated.

A council paper on the proposed changes states that in future priority access will be given to pupils "who can demonstrate an affinity with the religious ethos of the school and can provide documentary evidence of this in the form of a certificate of baptism into

The changes are part of a wider reform of school entry policy in Inverclyde which will also see children who have attended feeder primary schools for the longest time given priority when applying to an associated secondary school.

A council spokesman said: "It is important that we hear the views of parents and young people about criteria in place when examining placing requests and in the exceptional circumstances where a school is at capacity. I would urge parents and carers to review the proposal and to let the council know their views on this consultation."

In August East Renfrewshire Council announced a consultation on a similar proposal to deal with overcrowding at St Ninian's High School, in Giffnock, on the outskirts of Glasgow.

St Ninian's regularly comes top of the school league tables and is a magnet for Catholic families as well as those of others faiths or no faith.

However, new housing developments and an increase in families moving to the area has meant the school is now oversubscribed with local children with the situation estimated to get worse.