The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Plea for parents to teach maths

EXCLUSIVE: John Swinney’s local school in teaching crisis

- Kieran andrews political editor

Education secretary John Swinney’s local high school has issued a crisis plea to parents asking them to help teach maths.

Blairgowri­e High head teacher Bev Leslie said the school is looking for “creative short-term measures” to cope with the chronic shortage.

In a letter seen by The Courier, she wrote: “Any parents with a maths or related degree who would be interested in supporting our pupils in the short-term, please contact either myself or (depute head) Mrs Hill.”

Perthshire North representa­tive Mr Swinney has recently come under fire at Holyrood, with a motion declaring the SNP administra­tion is “failing” pupils passed last week by MSPs.

A Perthshire school struck by a chronic staff shortage is asking parents to help teach maths just weeks before the start of exams key to the children’s future.

In a letter seen by The Courier, Blairgowri­e High School head teacher Bev Leslie said the combinatio­n of one teacher leaving for a new job in Fife and another being “absent from work” has led to the extreme solution being sought.

The revelation will cause discomfort for Perthshire North MSP John Swinney, the education secretary, particular­ly as it is his local high school.

The Deputy First Minister has come under fire for nationwide shortages and last month announced £3 million to train an extra 371 teachers next year.

During a recent Holyrood vote, where MSPs declared the SNP administra­tion is “failing” pupils, Labour claimed that teacher numbers have fallen by 4,000 since the SNP came to power in 2007.

Mrs Leslie wrote that interviews will take place to hire one teacher later this month, while another recruit is expected to arrive in August.

She added: “We have notified Perth and Kinross Council of these staffing difficulti­es and are working with them to find a solution. Any parents with a maths or related degree who would be interested in supporting our pupils in the short-term, please contact either myself or (depute head) Mrs Hill.

“This is a highly unusual request however I am sure you will appreciate, given the current circumstan­ces, we are looking at creative short-term measures.”

Murdo Fraser, Mid Scotland and Fife Conservati­ve MSP, urged Mr Swinney to “start taking some responsibi­lity ... starting with his local high school.”

He added: “Many pupils will be facing vital exams in a few weeks’ time without the support they need. It really is a sign of desperatio­n that the school is asking for parents to help oversee classes – on no level can this be satisfacto­ry.”

Pupils start sitting exams on May 2, according to the SQA’s website, with the first maths test taking place on May 5, less than eight weeks from today.

Bob Band, convener of Perth and Kinross Council’s lifelong learning committee, said the authority has asked Dundee and Angus councils if there are any supply teachers who are “not engaged” and who could be made available across the local border.

“What we are doing is prioritisi­ng all of the classes that are due to take SQA exams this year,” the SNP councillor said. “They are being prioritise­d with existing staff. It is extremely difficult.

“We have certain figures we have to maintain for the Scottish Government annual census. The difficulty is getting qualified staff.”

Councils have experience­d a shortage of supply teachers following a series of cuts that left many on a rate of just £78 a day for the first five days, regardless of experience. Under a deal struck two years ago, however, councils can pay supply teachers at the full daily rate from the first day of their work.

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “To give all our young people the best opportunit­y of success, we need to have the right number of skilled teachers in our schools. That is why the Scottish Government worked with local authoritie­s to increase teacher numbers this year, with an additional 253 teachers in Scottish classrooms, and are increasing student places for the sixth consecutiv­e year, particular­ly in the subjects where they are needed most.

“The Deputy First Minister has invited a number of new routes into teaching to be developed to increase the availabili­ty of quality teachers entering the profession more quickly.”

On no level can this be satisfacto­ry. MURDO FRASER MSP

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 ??  ?? From left: head teacher Bev Leslie, education secretary John Swinney and MSP Murdo Fraser.
From left: head teacher Bev Leslie, education secretary John Swinney and MSP Murdo Fraser.
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