Education and health feats are to be celebrated
Just recently, the Deputy First Minister announced the incredible achievement of more than 30 per cent of pupils leaving high school with five Highers or more for the first time in Scotland’s educational history.
Recent years have also seen record numbers of our young people leaving high school and going on to positive destinations, which includes the world of work, modern apprenticeships, or further and higher education.
Over the past two years, record numbers of Scots have also gone to university — with a rise of more than 10 per cent in those studying a full-time degree in the past decade.
The recent PISA (Programme for International Student Assessment) report found improvements overall for Scotland. The report, conducted by the OECD, measures the performance of 15-year-olds worldwide.
Scotland’s latest PISA score has shown an overall rise in performance, with maths and science scoring roughly the same as the OECD average and reading scoring well above.
Whilst many education specialists would caution against using PISA as an isolated indicator to educational performance, what these latest results do show is that, despite overall improvement, there remain some challenges in maths and science.
Although it is true to say that Scotland’s education system continues to outperform the majority of other UK nations.
The Scottish Government was re-elected in 2016 on a commitment to improve the opportunities and educational outcomes of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds. Part of this commitment has been through the Pupil Equity Fund, which empowers headteachers with additional spending in schools to help the educational outcomes of more disadvantaged young people. Schools in Stirling have seen £1.4 million in such funding each year for the past couple of years.
The outcome of which, as the latest PISA assessment has found, is that the attainment gap is closing in our schools, and just five OECD countries are ahead of Scotland in terms of their educational performance.
One of the generally accepted barometer tests on how well a health care service is doing is through the performance of accident and emergency departments.
Towards the end of last year, around 89.3 per cent of patients in Scotland were seen and resulted in subsequent admission, transfer or discharge within the four-hour target, out of a total of 25,289 within a week.
Of course, the Scottish Government’s target is 95 per cent. This is an ambitious target, purposefully so, and is therefore a very tough target to reach - and inevitably during winter, these numbers are under pressure.
The National Health Service has faced the longest period of austerity, imposed by the Tory government in Westminster, since it came into being more than 70 years ago.
Despite that, NHS Scotland has received record levels of funding from the SNP Government in Holyrood.
Last year, Finance Secretary Derek Mackay committed an aboveinflation increase in health funding. For NHS Forth Valley, this meant £20.2 million.
It’s an approach that has led to Scotland having the highest rate of patient satisfaction in the UK.
Scotland has more GPs (76 per 100,000 people) than the UK average (60), spends more per person than anywhere else in the UK (Scotland: £2,368, England: £2,184), and has more hospital beds, nurses and midwives per population too.
Perhaps its timely to remind ourselves of this: Scotland’s public services achieve so much, and there’s a lot to celebrate.