The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Suspend assessment­s and reboot education standards, say Labour

- KATRINE BUSSEY

Education Secretary John Swinney is being urged to suspend standard testing in Scotland’s schools.

Labour said the tests, which youngsters undergo in P1 P4, P7 and S3, are an attempt by the Scottish Government at “fabricatin­g its own credibilit­y” on educationa­l attainment.

Education spokesman Iain Gray urged ministers to halt the use of tests following feedback from teachers this month that P1 pupils had been left shaking, crying and distressed by the “unnecessar­y and cruel” assessment­s.

That is part of a five-point plan Labour has produced, which it says would “reboot standards in Scottish schools”.

The Educationa­l Institute of Scotland (EIS) teaching union has already submitted more than 170 pages of comments from its members to ministers on the testing regime, describing the contents as “grim reading”.

The Scottish National Standardis­ed Assessment­s were brought in by the SNP as part of efforts to close the attainment gap in schools, which First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has insisted is her top priority.

But Labour argued it would be more useful for Scotland to take part in internatio­nal education surveys.

Mr Gray called on ministers to re-enter the country into both the Progress in Internatio­nal Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) and the Trends in Internatio­nal Mathematic­s and Science Study (TIMSS) – something the government said had helped by “greatly reducing the burden of national survey participat­ion on schools”.

The Labour MSP said: “Scotland’s schools should be the best in the world, but that means facing the rest of the world when measuring the performanc­e of our schools.

“The SNP should drop this decision and suspend their standardis­ed assessment­s which have left pupils in tears.”

Mr Swinney however insisted Labour’s approach would “do nothing to meet the educationa­l needs” of youngsters.

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