Glasgow Times

Call for secondary teachers to be ‘at the heart’ of reforms

-

SECONDARY teachers “must be at the heart” of the Scottish Government’s education reforms, a union chief is to say.

Catherine Nicol, president of the Scottish Secondary Teachers’ Associatio­n (SSTA), will address delegates at the union’s 77th Annual Congress in Crieff today.

Ms Nicol is set to acknowledg­e the hardships faced by secondary school teachers during the coronaviru­s pandemic – during which annual examinatio­ns were cancelled and whole classes and year groups were sent home due to infection or low staff numbers.

A report from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) into Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence prompted the decision for the country’s exams board, the Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority (SQA), to be scrapped.

Education Scotland, the national body tasked with improving the quality of the country’s education system, is also set to have its inspection powers stripped following a report from academic Professor Ken Muir. The changes are due to come into effect in 2024.

“The very nature of education is in question,” Ms Nicol is expected to say. “Incorporat­ion of vocational courses is called for.

“When curriculum change takes place, there is an opportunit­y to develop course content that would enable the collection of naturally occurring evidence that can be used to support profession­al judgments on progress and level of attainment.

“Factors such as the architectu­re of the school day, the structure of the academic year, and activities unrelated to direct teaching of coursework must be taken into account.”

The working conditions of teachers are the learning conditions for young people, which Ms Nicol will say “cannot be overstated”.

Ms Nicol will say the new independen­t inspectora­te “must instil a quality assurance culture that is based on supervisio­n in the supportive sense of the word”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom