The Scotsman

‘No role for council interferen­ce with pupil grades’ insists education secretary

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

Teachers should not be told to downgrade the grades of their pupils by local authoritie­s as part of the “quality assurance” process, Scotland’s education secretary has insisted.

Shirley-an ne somerville, who was speaking yesterday at the annual general meeting( a gm) of the Educationa­l Institute of Scotland (EIS), said the alternativ­eexams system for 2021 does not allow for teacher grades to be challenged on the basis of an “algorithm”.

The newly-appointed education secretary has come under significan­t pressure in recent weeks following the announceme­nt of the appeals system for pupils sitting exams.

The appeals system, as well as the ‘alternativ­e certificat­ion model’ (ACM) being used to award Highers and National 5s this year, has been criticised for failing to take into account the pressures of the pandemic and for pressuring teachers into matching grades with historic attainment.

Nicola Sturgeon was accused of being “sleekit” on the issue during First Minister’ s Questions on Thursday after councilssa­id they would be using historic attainment data to check the grades awarded by teachers.

Questioned on what a teacher should do if asked by a council to lower the grades of one of their pupils, ms somerville said there was “no place” for such interventi­on.

Insisting the model was based on “demonstrat­ed attainment and the teacher’s judgement of that demonstrat­ed attainment ”, she said the grade awarded by the school for a pupil “will stay that pupil’ s grade” with no interferen­cefrom the scottish qualificat­ions Authority (SQA).

She said :“There is a quality assurance process at a local level where at a local level a local authority or a school can look at previous attainment and can see if there are outliers and ask teachers to verify if they are content with their original decisions.

"There is no place in this model for local authoritie­s to instruct a teacher, because the whole point of the ACM is that it is based on demonstrat­ed attainment and the teacher’s judgement of that demonstrat­ed attainment.

"If there are any examples of that coming forward or even if there are any concerns from teachers that that is what is happening, the ni absolutely would want to hear about that because that is not how the model is designed to work. That is not what we all agreed in the NQ21 group of how the model would work, so I would take that very seriously if there is anything like that going on because that is not how the model is designed to work.”

The education secretary was also pressed for more details of the planned review of the role, remit and purpose of the qualificat­ions authority and Educations­cotland. stating that more detail would be announced in Holyrood on June 22, the day Ms Somerville is expected to respond to the long-awaited OECD report into Scottish education, the education secretary failed to say whether there view would be independen­t of the SQA, Education Scotland and the Scottish Government.

She said: “I am really, really keen that we look at this properly. This is not a piecemeal piece of reform, this is not a roundthe-edges piece of reform.

"We absolutely need to get this right. I am determined to make sure that we do that in a way where we have got teacher’ s voices, parent’s voices and very importantl­y as well young people’s voices.”

 ??  ?? 0 Shirley-anne Somerville says the alternativ­e exams system for 2021 does not allow for teacher grades to be challenged on the basis of an ‘algorithm’
0 Shirley-anne Somerville says the alternativ­e exams system for 2021 does not allow for teacher grades to be challenged on the basis of an ‘algorithm’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom