The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Appeal to scrap Higher exams amid Covid chaos

Teachers leader fears pupils under extreme pressure

- CHERYL PEEBLES

Next year’s Higher exams should be scrapped now to prevent children from harming themselves, says a teachers leader.

Seamus Searson said teenagers were already under greater pressure than normal due to the coronaviru­s and classroom disruption was hitting disadvanta­ged pupils the hardest.

The general secretary of the Scottish Secondary Teachers’ Associatio­n has urged Education Secretary John Swinney to call off the 2021 sitting. National 5 exams have already been cancelled and campaigner­s want Higher and Advanced Highers to be based on teacher estimates, as they were this year.

Mr Searson said there was a risk of children who have been self- isolating becoming disillusio­ned over lost work.

“At the moment we don’t think the exams are going to give people a fair chance because of Covid,” he said.

“We don’t want any youngster to take it too much to heart and do something silly to themselves. If they get stressed and depressed, they could do something sad.”

A final decision on this issue is due in February but the Scottish Government’s Covid-19 education recovery group is expected to discuss it this week.

Ateachers leader has warned that exam pressure during the pandemic could have tragic consequenc­es.

Calling for cancellati­on of next year’s Higher and Advanced Higher exams, Seamus Searson said he feared extreme stress could tip struggling teenagers over the edge.

The general secretary of the Scottish Secondary Teachers’ Associatio­n urged Education Secretary John Swinney to make a decision now to call off the 2021 sitting to avoid disadvanta­ge to some youngsters.

He said: “We would urge the minister to make the decision this week rather than wait until February.”

Next year’s National 5 exams have already been cancelled and pressure is mounting for next May’s Higher and Advanced Higher exams to be called off too, with grades based on teacher estimates instead, as they were this year.

With thousands of pupils across Scotland having lost class time to self-isolate, Mr Searson said youngsters were under greater pressure than normal and that disadvanta­ged pupils could be hit the hardest.

He said: “If we carry on with exams, the chances are the more advantaged children will do well because they are probably in the areas where people haven’t been isolating.

“Take an independen­t school, for example, the class sizes are far smaller and therefore the chance of transmissi­on is reduced compared to a big secondary school in Glasgow where you are bursting at the seams.”

Using teacher assessment , he said , “youngsters will get what their teachers believe they are able to get”.

He said: “We need to make sure everyone has a fair chance, and at the moment we don’t think the exams are going to give people a fair chance because of Covid.

“Our worry is that divide is actually getting wider.

“The downside is you get children disillusio­ned, thinking ‘I’ve lost so many weeks, I can’t catch up, what’s the point?’ That is a worry.

“We don’ t want any youngster to take it too much to heart and do something silly to themselves. If they get stressed and depressed, they could do something sad.”

Union members, he said, had already voiced worries for children who normally perform well but were not coping well with the circumstan­ces they were in.

Teachers, he said, were also spending time focusing on exams which may not happen.

He said: “If we move to teacher assessment, it means we are not preparing for exams and the youngsters will be taught probably right up to the end of May.”

Mr Searson sa id proposals for extending the school holiday by a week, from December 18 to January 11, to act as a ‘ break’ around relaxation of restrictio­ns at Christmas would also take pressure off youngsters.

Dundee, Angus and Perth and Kinross schools are due to break off on December 23 and return on January 7, with Fife schools closing on December 22 andre opening on January 6.

A survey by the National Parent Forum of Scotland found half of parents who responded wanted all exams cancelled, with three- quarters believing their child’s learning has been significan­tly disrupted.

A final decision on whether the sitting will definitely go ahead is due in February but the Scottish Government said it would be taken sooner if the evidence points to it.

The Scottish Government’s Covid-19 education recovery group is expected to discuss the issue this week.

At her daily briefing yesterday, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said a decision was yet to be made on school holidays.

 ??  ?? FEARS: Seamus Searson, general secretary of the Scottish Secondary Teachers’ Associatio­n, wants next year’s Higher exams cancelled.
FEARS: Seamus Searson, general secretary of the Scottish Secondary Teachers’ Associatio­n, wants next year’s Higher exams cancelled.

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