The feud between Erdogan and Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in the United States, has exposed divisions in the Turkish strongman's traditional religiously conservative power base.
Erdogan, who has dominated Turkish politics for 11 years, faces a key test in local elections next March with his image bruised by mass street protests that erupted against his government in June.
Differences between the Islamist leaning Erdogan and Gulen, who remains a highly influential figure on the Turkish domestic scene, have long been simmering.
The premier said he wanted to abolish an "illegal" and unfair education system which he charged turned children into "competition horses", and denied his government was targeting anyone in particular.
"Those who benefit from these courses are the kids of rich families in big cities," said Erdogan, who himself hails from humble roots and has tried to burnish an image as a man of the people during his term in office.
It has also sown dissent within Erdogan's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), with one lawmaker facing expulsion for breaking ranks.
"What crime have we committed to justify being closed," demanded a front-page headline in the Zaman newspaper, mouthpiece for the Gulen movement.
Gulen himself reportedly likening the government action to the coups staged by the powerful military which considers itself the guardians of the secular state.
Gulen, 72, has been living in exile in the United States since 1999 to escape charges of plotting against the secular state in Turkey.
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