Edinburgh Evening News

Statistics show continuing slide in school standards

- Sue Webber Sue Webber is a Scottish Conservati­ve Lothian MSP

The continued slide in standards in our schools is not news, but a depressing slew of Scottish Government statistics this week provides plenty of evidence for the prosecutio­n.

The Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment of attainment at 15 years old exposes the extent to which the abilities of secondary school pupils are falling, with all three tests in maths, science and reading at their lowest level since devolution.

The students aren’t getting more stupid, so the failure is entirely the fault of the Scottish education system, and no-one should need reminding this has been the SNP’s responsibi­lity for the past 17 years. Put another way, every young person born after 2002 has only ever experience­d a school system controlled by the SNP.

Since they came to power in 2007, the number of English teachers has fallen by 360, there are 330 fewer maths teachers, and 200 fewer computing science teachers, and with the widely disparaged Curriculum for Excellence programme, those PISA results shouldn’t be that surprising. Now vast numbers of pupils are just staying away, with a staggering 32 per cent classed as persistent­ly absent, missing more than 10 per cent of classes.

In secondary schools it is an astonishin­g 41 per cent – in Edinburgh it’s a comparativ­ely low 32.5 per cent, still well over 7,000 pupils, but in East Lothian it’s a staggering 45 per cent − so no wonder the PISA results are on the slide if nearly a half are missing over a tenth of their lessons.

Parents have a responsibi­lity too, with some 58,000 Scottish pupils missing between a week and a fortnight for term-time holidays.

Two years ago, a report from England’s Children’s Commission­er Dame Rachel de Souza DBE laid out actions needed to get more children back in school, so why are we only waking up to the problem now when the need for action here is more acute?

But the statistics aren’t just about truancy, and what stood out to me was the rise in the number of pupils with additional support needs, up from 16,478 primary school children in 2007 to 116,923, nearly a third of the total roll.

It’s the same picture in secondarie­s, with 134,371 needing assistance, 43 per cent of the roll, up from just 4.3 per cent in 2007, and virtually all were taught entirely in mainstream classes.

It all adds up to an enormous strain in the classroom. More children needing special attention, more children lost when they actually turn up because they have missed vital lessons, and fewer teachers.

No wonder, like the pupils, they are voting with their feet.

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