The Scotsman

Swinney ‘presiding over education omnishambl­es’

Education Secretary under fire after U-turn on key reform

- By TOM PETERKIN Political Editor

John Swinney has been accused of presiding over an education “omnishambl­es” afterhecli­mbeddownon­akey flagship school reform and faced questions about unfilled teacher training places.

Labour directed the accusation at the Education Secretary as it also emerged that the Scottish schools inspectora­te had deleted informatio­n on historical school inspection­s.

Yesterdaym­rswinneyst­ruck a compromise deal with local authoritie­s on one of his key education proposals – his plan to set up regional bodies to support school improvemen­t.

Originally Mr Swinney had wanted the heads of the new bodies to be accountabl­e to Education Scotland and the Scottish Government, raising concerns that the democratic role of councils would be bypassed.

But under the new deal each local authority will be part of one of six regional “Improvemen­t Collaborat­ives” in partnershi­p with Education Scotland, which will be accountabl­e to the councils taking part.

The about-turn came as figures provided by universiti­es showed that more than 200 places on post-graduate teacher training courses for secondary subjects have not been filled. The number of vacancies is the equivalent of a quarter of the total.

The courses started last month but almost four in ten places for English have not been taken up. There are also shortfalls in music, biology and modern language courses.

Meanwhile, Education Scotland has been accused of a “wilful attempt to frustrate transparen­cy” after it emerged the organisati­on no longer had informatio­nrelatingt­oschool inspection­s carried out before 2008.

It has also started deleting school inspection reports that are more than five years old from the publicly accessible section of its website.

Labour education spokesman Iain Gray said: “This is humiliatin­g for John Swinney. This is not an instance of one policy failure, but rather an omnishambl­es across the education portfolio.”

Mr Swinney said he looked forward to national and local government working together “at pace” on his reforms.

“I look forward to national and local government working together at pace – with support and expertise from Education Scotland.”

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said ministers were “committed” to ensuring there were the right teacher numbers. On the loss of inspection data, the government expected public bodies to have “robust” data management.

tom.peterkin@scotsman.com

 ??  ?? John Swinney has struck a deal with local authoritie­s over his plan to set up regional bodies to support school improvemen­t
John Swinney has struck a deal with local authoritie­s over his plan to set up regional bodies to support school improvemen­t
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom