The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife pupils below CfE levels across the board

Annual figures make grim reading for kingdom schools

- Craig smiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

New statistics reveal the percentage of Fife pupils achieving the expected level in reading, writing, numeracy and listening and talking has fallen below the national average across the board.

The annual Achievemen­t of Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) Levels Return includes data on all primary 1, primary 4, primary 7 and secondary 3 pupils in publicly funded mainstream schools, and all pupils based in publicly funded special schools/units.

And it makes grim reading for Fife schools in particular, with the region’s statistics below average at all stages compared with a mixed picture in Dundee, Perth and Angus.

The figures have also highlighte­d how the gap in performanc­e between pupils from deprived and affluent areas widens throughout primary school, with a higher proportion of those living in the wealthiest areas achieving the expected CfE level.

Peter McNaughton, head of education in Fife, said: “In Fife, we took the view some years ago that we needed to have a system that supported the monitoring and tracking of pupil attainment.

“In implementi­ng our system we recognised the national guidance, at the time, on assessment.

“Our resultant system supported teaching staff in tracking the pace of learning for every learner through each level of Curriculum for Excellence.

“Following new changed guidance, published by the Scottish Government in June 2016, a national system for the collection of pupil attainment data was introduced. The result of this is a necessary and significan­t change in our approaches to assessment in Fife and to the system that our schools use.

“In short, until this year, we recorded the level within which a child was working.

“The new, national, approach asks us to record the child’s ‘level achieved’. These are two very different things.

“These changes have resulted in difference­s at school-level and now authority-level in terms of percentage­s of cohorts of children who have actually achieved a level.

“The published levels of achievemen­t for Fife schools reflect the above changes.”

Angus is above average at every stage in reading, writing and listening/talking, while Perth is underperfo­rming at secondary level but above average at primary in reading, writing, listening/ talking and numeracy.

It was a mixed picture for Dundee in relation to listening/talking, while the city is below average at all primary stages and above average at secondary in reading and writing.

It was, however, below average at all stages in relation to numeracy.

Deputy First Minister John Swinney described education as the Scottish Government’s “number one priority” and said it was investing heavily to ensure every child in Scotland has an equal chance to realise their full potential.

The new, national, approach asksusto record the child’s ‘level achieved’. These are two very different things. PETER MCNAUGHTON HEAD OF EDUCATION

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Depute First Minister John Swinney says education is the “number one priority”.
Picture: PA. Depute First Minister John Swinney says education is the “number one priority”.

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