The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Steep drop in schools’ attainment levels, says expert.

Former head says least able pupils are being hardest hit

- GARETH MCPHERSON POLITICAL EDITOR gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

The decline in attainment at Scottish secondary schools over the last five years is the steepest since modern records began in 1965, says a Dundee professor.

Jim Scott said the impact of that is falling “most heavily on the least able”, adding pupils have not been given the education they were promised from the Curriculum for Excellence.

The former headteache­r in Fife and Perthshire said overall attainment at SCQF levels 3-5, which includes Nationals, has dropped between 2013-18 by more than a third (34%) – about half of which can be attributed to restricted subject choice.

Prof Scott said there had been “no such significan­t decline, particular­ly in such a short period”, in Scottish education “since ‘modern’ records began in 1965”.

The honorary professor at Dundee University said: “To this significan­t overall decline must be added the concern that the negative impact of CFE and ‘new’ National Qualificat­ions appears to have fallen most heavily on the least able and parts of the group of average ability.

“This is clearly not an outcome in line with the Scottish Government’s policy of improving equity and closing the poverty-related attainment gap.”

Since the National Qualificat­ions replaced Standard Grades five years ago the number of exam passes has dropped from 499,914 to 330,952.

The Scottish Government said comparison­s between 2013-18 must be treated with caution because of changes to formats.

Prof Scott’s research on the impact of CFE on enrolment and attainment also highlights how pupils face a “postcode lottery” on subject choice as schools offer fewer options.

His study showed students could take six subjects at S4 in Dundee and Angus, compared with seven in Perth and Kinross and between five and eight in Fife. Previously eight subjects was seen as the standard offer.

In a survey by Holyrood’s education committee last year about threequart­ers of schools said teacher shortages were a factor in reducing the number of subjects they can offer.

Prof Scott said he was part of the “sales force” for CFE and still believes it can be delivered. But he added: “It would be wise, however, for anyone connected with CFE to accept that five cohorts of learners have received far less than the benefits envisaged by Scottish education through CFE. This cannot continue unchanged.”

Deputy First Minister John Swinney said: “Our focus is on a young person’s achievemen­t at the end of their senior phase, not just within a single year, and the long-term trend shows a greater proportion of young people staying on at school beyond S4. Young people are gaining a broader range of qualificat­ions and the proportion of them leaving school with qualificat­ions has increased in recent years.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Since National Qualificat­ions replaced Standard Grades in schools five years ago the number of exam passes has fallen.
Picture: Getty. Since National Qualificat­ions replaced Standard Grades in schools five years ago the number of exam passes has fallen.

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