The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife bid to thwart primary one testing defeated by one vote.

Councillor­s opt to continue with Scottish National Standardis­ed Assessment­s

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

A bid to suspend the Scottish Government’s controvers­ial primary one assessment­s in Fife has been thwarted by one vote.

Fife Council’s education and children’s services committee voted by nine to eight in favour of continuing with Scottish National Standardis­ed Assessment­s (SNSA).

The committee’s SNP convener, Fay Sinclair, who raised a motion to keep SNSA in the region, said: “To take this tool away from our teachers would be neither reasonable or proportion­ate as a response to the issues raised in Fife.”

At a full Fife Council meeting last month, councillor­s were 38 votes to 27 in favour of asking the government to withdraw the tests, amid claims they had left young children “distressed”.

But the final decision lay with the education committee.

Mrs Sinclair said: “Much of the debate last month centred on reports of children being distressed and teachers being dead against the use of assessment at primary one level, but there is no evidence to suggest these reports are true.”

A primary school teacher

Much of the debate last month centred on reports of children being distressed and teachers being dead against the use of assessment at primary one level, but there is no evidence to suggest these reports are true. FAY SINCLAIR

demonstrat­ed what was involved in the assessment­s before the meeting but not all councillor­s had arrived by that time.

“She spoke of children enjoying the tasks and of how valuable the data gathered was,” said Mrs Sinclair.

She added: “It is a shame that no Liberal Democrat or Conservati­ve councillor attended this presentati­on to see the assessment for themselves.”

Among those opposing SNSA was James Calder, education spokespers­on for the Lib Dems in Fife.

Mr Calder said: “These tests are time consuming and on average take 32 minutes – that is 32 minutes of teaching time taken away from our children. The EIS has also expressed reservatio­ns, and it was telling that the report brought to councillor­s today did not have any consultati­on with the trade unions.”

Those calling for an end to SNSA wanted to see a return to the council-funded Performanc­e Indicators in Primary Schools (PIPS) tests, previously used.

Labour councillor Helen Law, who raised an amendment to suspend SNSA in Fife, said not all children were assessed on a one-to-one basis under the new scheme, and Conservati­ve councillor Kathleen Leslie said SNSA should be halted while it is under review.

The online tests, carried out with a teacher, involve tasks such as identifyin­g animals and letters. They are currently subject to review as a result of concerns about the difficulty and appropriat­eness of SNSA being raised after they were introduced last year.

The meeting heard it would be difficult to go back to PIPS this year because the scheme required an initial assessment near the start of term.

 ??  ?? Councillor Fay Sinclair had motioned to retain SNSA in the kingdom.
Councillor Fay Sinclair had motioned to retain SNSA in the kingdom.

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