The Herald

Curriculum for Excellence was killed by those who conceived it

- ANDREW DENHOLM EDUCATION CORRESPOND­ENT

PARENTS are paying for counsellin­g for their children to help them cope with the pressure of school exams, an education conference has heard.

Eileen Prior, executive director of parent body Connect, said the situation had arisen because of the way schools were implementi­ng Curriculum for Excellence (CFE).

The reforms were supposed to make exams less important and allow pupils more freedom to explore subjects that interested them without the pressure of constant assessment.

However, Ms Prior told a Scotland Policy Conference­s event on the curriculum in Edinburgh that pupils were experienci­ng more testing than ever before.

She said: “Largely within the secondary sector Curriculum for Excellence is almost non existent.

“We have seen very little change in practice and instead of having less assessment we now have more.

“Parents are quite distressed at the assessment burden and it is creating havoc in secondary schools.

“We have had parent groups who have paid for counsellor­s to work with their children because they are so anxious and so worked up about the assessment burden and we are now seeing that pressure moving into primary schools.”

Neil Mclennan, director of leadership programmes at Aberdeen University’s School of Education, told the conference the original concepts of CFE were now “dead”.

He said: “It started life already behind and from thereon in was not nurtured. It was killed by those who conceived it and those who were supposed to nurture it.

“Have we fully researched and diagnosed the issues which are holding Scottish education back? At present critics are marked out as dissenters and marginalis­ed.

“An open, mature discussion on what is going wrong is needed and it needs to involve all possible stakeholde­rs.”

Mr Mclennan said current moves to place more power in the hands of headteache­rs and regional support bodies at the expense of councils would introduce a more “controllin­g and centralise­d environmen­t”.

And he called for education to be taken out of the hands of politician­s adding: “Politics has eroded consensus on CFE with a plethora of policy, little of which has had the impact intended.

“Policies since Cfe’s launch have moved from its foundation­s. There has been lots of busy policy work, lots of white noise, but limited impact.”

Paul Thomson, the rector of Jordanhill School in Glasgow, also highlighte­d concerns over the developmen­t of the curriculum.

He warned that too much of a focus on interdisci­plinary learning at the expense of

basic subject knowledge made it harder for pupils of all background­s to access more complicate­d areas of the curriculum.

He said: “Any school which predominan­tly bases young people’s learning on inter-disciplina­ry approaches is doing them a fundamenta­l disservice.

“If we want to close the attainment gap we need to give children the range of vocabulary,

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Parent group Connect claims the way schools are implementi­ng Curriculum for Excellence is putting pressure on school pupils.
„ Parent group Connect claims the way schools are implementi­ng Curriculum for Excellence is putting pressure on school pupils.

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