A Muslim school for girls in Oxford may be forced to close because it cannot afford to stay open.
The Iqra Girls' School needed to raise £2m by the end of July to buy the building it currently rents.
Hanna Khan, 16, said its closure would be the end of her education because she does not want to attend mixed classes.
The school is in talks with the council to become voluntary-aided, meaning its governing body would decide admissions but it would be state-funded.
About 20% of English state schools are voluntary-aided, with links to the Church of England or the Roman Catholic Church.
If worse comes to worse, I'll have to send my daughter home to Pakistan, which I don't want to
Khalid Khan
Parent
Hanna, who wants to become a doctor or a vet, said: "If I didn't have this school, then that is really it for me. "It's this school or nothing for me. That would be the end of my education."
Parents said they were looking at other options for their daughters, including schooling them at home, or sending them abroad.
"I am really worried, I don't know yet," parent Anwar Hussain said about his daughter.
"Maybe she goes to a new boarding school, or maybe I'll send her to Bangladesh, I don't know."
Another parent, Khalid Khan, said: "If worse comes to worse, I'll have to send my daughter home to Pakistan, which I don't want to."
The Iqra Girls' School was set up in 2003 after the closure of the last all-girls state school in Oxford.
It provides national curriculum subjects as well as Islamic studies within an Islamic environment.
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