The Herald

Expert attacks the ‘lunacy’ of classroom red tape mountain

Curriculum architect hits at unnecessar­y workloads

- ANDREW DENHOLM EDUCATION CORRESPOND­ENT

“MOUNTAINS” of curriculum guidance issued to Scottish teachers over the past 12 years has been described as “self-evident lunacy” by an education expert.

Keir Bloomer, convener of the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s education committee, said the overload of “nearly incomprehe­nsible” informatio­n was hampering work to free up teachers to spend more time in the classroom.

The comments, during an evidence session at the Scottish Parliament’s education committee, came after Education Secretary John Swinney promised to cut workload.

He stepped in following complaints teachers had been swamped by bureaucrac­y throughout the introducti­on of the Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) reforms, which were designed to empower schools.

Mr Swinney has already ordered schools quango and inspectora­te body Education Scotland to produce slimmed-down guidance and the Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority has been asked to scrap internal assessment­s for key school qualificat­ions.

Mr Bloomer said he was pleased Mr Swinney “seemed determined” to do something, but went on to question the logic of producing even more guidance and of involving Education Scotland, which has been responsibl­e for producing much of the advice.

He said: “We have allowed mountains of guidance, much of it very badly written, nearly incom- prehensibl­e, to accumulate over the years, and that now stands in the way of the declutteri­ng of the curriculum.

“One of the things that has concerned me in the last few weeks has been the choice of Education Scotland ... to look at bureaucrac­y and unnecessar­y workload.

“If they are to be involved in slimming this down then there are serious capacity issues and something of a reprogramm­ing exercise will also have to be undertaken.”

While some political mistakes had been made, Mr Bloomer said most had come from bodies such as Education Scotland.

He said: “The quality of advice that government­s have received has not been strong and there has been a lack of strategic overview as a whole, with the result that what has taken place is guidance has been added to and multiplied and the overall consequenc­e of that has been to obscure rather than to illuminate.”

Mr Bloomer, one of the original architects of CfE, also highlighte­d a lack of proper scrutiny of the reforms.

He said: “This is the most significan­t developmen­t that has taken place in Scottish education since the war and no evaluation system was set up at the outset.

“Successive government­s have made claims of success in relation to CfE and, to be honest with you, they are based on no evidence whatsoever.”

An Education Scotland spokeswoma­n said: “The review was very clear that action needs to be taken by all parties, including schools themselves, and national bodies, including Education Scotland itself.”

Meanwhile, Liz Smith, education spokeswoma­n for the Scottish Conservati­ves, called for a proper reason why internal assessment­s had been scrapped.

She said: “Parents, pupils and teachers have a right to know exactly why unit assessment­s have been abolished when it was previously intimated significan­t changes could not be made without compromisi­ng the exam system.”

“It seems a very welcome developmen­t that unit assessment­s will disappear, but parents and pupils want to know the real reason for the change.”

‘‘ We have allowed mountains of guidance, much of it very badly written... to accumulate over the years

FUNDS raised by the 5p plastic carrier bag charge has given £150,000 to the Royal Hospital for Children in Glasgow which has purchased a state-of-the-art surgical microscope.

The Morrisons Foundation granted the money to the hospital charity for the instrument, which will help thousands of children each year who undergo operations.

East Kilbride schoolgirl Jenny Cook, 13, who suffers from ulcerative colitis, inspected the microscope after asking her local Morrisons to help with a car boot sale to raise funds.

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 ??  ?? KEIR BLOOMER: He believes ministers have been badly advised.
KEIR BLOOMER: He believes ministers have been badly advised.

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