The Scotsman

Sturgeon pledges ‘most ambitious plan’

● Programme for Government to be launched as MSPS return after recess

- By SCOTT MACNAB

Nicola Sturgeon will today seek to refresh her SNP government after more than a decade in power as she unveils the“mostambiti­ousplaneve­r” at Holyrood and MSPS returns after the summer recess.

The First Minister will put education will be at the heart of her Programme for Government this coming year, with a pledge to bring in laws that will hand new powers to head teachers and give them greater control over teaching.

A raft of measures aimed at re-positionin­g Scotland’s economy for a post-oil and gas world will also be set out by the SNP leader. An end to the controvers­ial public sector pay cap has also been promised.

“I’ll be presenting the most ambitious plan ever to be brought forward by this government,” Ms Sturgeon said ahead of today’s launch.

“I am proud that, ten years on, we are once again proving that Scotland is leading the way as a progressiv­e nation.

“Improving the education and life chances of our children and young people remains a defining mission of this government.

“For changes that need legislatio­n, we will bring forward an Education Governance Bill in 2018.

“Our priority is to ensure that teachers are given the confidence and the space to teach to the highest standards.

“We’ll give our head teachers new powers and make sure parents, families and communitie­s play a bigger role in school life and in their children’s learning.”

Ms Sturgeon pledged in June that she would use the summer to devise “radical” policies and come back ready to refresh her government after more than a decade in power.

She will set out plans for 16 bills today, including five new ones, but not one for a second independen­ce referendum which was shelved after heavy SNP losses in the recent UK election.

The news comes amid growing criticism of falling educa- tion standards as Scotland has dropped down global league tables in key areas such as reading, maths and science.

One of the country’s foremost educationa­lists, Lindsay Paterson, launched a withering attack on the Curriculum for Excellence at the weekend which has brought about a controvers­ial overhaul in classroom teaching.

Conservati­ve education spokeswoma­n Liz Smith said yesterday: “Since Nicola Sturgeon promised education would be her number one priority two years ago, standards have declined. Parents and teachers won’t be sucked in by this pledge either.”

Labour interim leader Alex Rowley said: “The Scottish Parliament … has the ability and the flexibilit­y to make real, radical changes to people’s lives.

“It should, frankly, be embarrassi­ng for Nicola Sturgeon that two years after she promised education was her top priority, our teachers are at breaking point and we are sliding down the educationa­l internatio­nal league tables.”

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