The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Pressure on Education Secretary John Swinney to explain why pass rates in core subjects are falling.

MSPs demand to know what Holyrood is doing to reverse the drop

- STEFAN MORKIS smorkis@thecourier.co.uk

Education Secretary John Swinney has been urged to explain to MSPs what the Scottish Government is doing to reverse falling passes in core Higher subjects.

The Scottish Government was accused of trying to dodge scrutiny of the falling pass rates after it published analysis of 2019’s exam results at 8pm on Thursday.

It showed Scottish pupils achieved a total of 1,515 fewer pupils passed their Higher English exam – down 5.5% on 2018 and the lowest number since 2014.

Passes dropped by 8.8% – or 178 students – for those sitting Advanced Higher exams in the subject.

The Higher maths pass rate fell by 2.1% – the first decline since 2014 – while

Higher history pass rates were down by 14.6% overall and by 10% in A-C grades.

Advanced Higher maths passes rose 1.6% while total passes for science Highers were up 1.6%. The pass rate for Advanced Higher science subjects – not including human biology – fell by 14.1%, although there was a 13% reduction in those sitting the tests.

Mr Swinney denied suggestion­s ministers sought to “sneak out bad news” by releasing the analysis when they did.

The Scottish Liberal Democrats and the Scottish Greens called for the education secretary to answer questions at Holyrood.

Scottish Greens education spokesman Ross Greer said: “The education secretary has questions to answer on both the attempt to sneak this out late at night and on the report’s contents, which show the opposite of his claims that everything is fine with Scotland’s exam results.”

Liberal Democrat Beatrice Wishart added: “John Swinney should come to Parliament and explain. This has to be the first order of business on Tuesday.”

Scottish Labour’s education spokesman Iain Gray said: “This analysis, sneaked out late at night, shows that the problems are indeed real and that the SNP government must finally face up to them.”

Scottish Conservati­ve education spokesman Jamie Greene said: “The SNP’s record on schooling has always been poor but this latest episode leaves its reputation in tatters.”

Mr Swinney downplayed the report in an interview with Good Morning Scotland. He said: “Let us still remember that 75% was the pass rate in the Highers examinatio­ns. That represents still a very, very strong performanc­e by young people in Scotland. Yes, it’s a fall on the previous year, but it still represents a very strong performanc­e.

“It takes time to strengthen performanc­e within our education system.”

EIS teaching union general secretary Larry Flanagan said: “Focusing solely on Higher passes alone, for example, is an unhealthy and unhelpful fixation.”

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? The education secretary denied suggestion­s ministers sought to “sneak out bad news”.
Picture: Kim Cessford. The education secretary denied suggestion­s ministers sought to “sneak out bad news”.

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