The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Former first minister’s warning to Sturgeon to ‘get it fixed or go’

- DOUGLAS BARRIE

A former first minister of Scotland has issued a stark warning to Nicola Sturgeon and John Swinney over the exam results chaos, saying “get it fixed or go”.

Lord McConnell said the fiasco which saw 124,564 pupils’ results downgraded is “not good enough for Scotland”.

The system, produced by the Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority (SQA) and approved by the Scottish Government when this year’s exams were cancelled, saw 26.2% of grades changed during the moderation process based on criteria including schools’ historical performanc­es.

Education Secretary Mr Swinney is now facing calls to resign, with Scottish Labour planning to table a motion of no confidence in him at Holyrood.

Writing in The Sunday Times, Lord McConnell reflected on the lessons learned from the year 2000 when the wrong – or no – results were received by 20,000 school and college students across Scotland.

He was appointed education minister later that year, and said he “knew that I would have to resign if we did not succeed” in “fixing this mess” for the 2001 results.

In the article, Lord McConnell, who became first minister in November 2001, wrote: “Lessons learnt, honesty, good judgment and hard work had turned it around... Yet, 20 years on, thousands of young dreams have been shattered again.

“In 2000, the chaos was indiscrimi­nate. It affected students no matter their postcode – but in 2020 it is targeted.”

He called for First Minister Ms Sturgeon and her deputy Mr Swinney to “announce an immediate and urgent review” of results in the next 48 hours, with a task force appointed.

Lord McConnell added: “For the first minister and education secretary to have accepted these grades and to defend them because children in these schools have always done worse is breathtaki­ng.”

He added: “Put the teachers and pupils at the centre of the system.”

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