The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Claim FM and Swinney at odds over schools

● Sturgeon insists blended learning is not being planned to last anything like a year

- BY DEREK HEALEY

Nicola Sturgeon has pledged to make resources available to financiall­y challenged councils and to consider easing social-distancing rules in schools in a bid to get more children back in the classroom.

The first minister said it was “absolutely not the case” ministers were planning to have pupils stay at home part-time for the full academic year “or anything like it”.

She said she would consider whether pupils should face extra classes at the weekend or throughout the October break.

At the daily coronaviru­s briefing she said she would “have concerns” if any local authority planned to have pupils spend less than half their time being taught in person.

“Our aim will be to return to normal schooling as quickly as we possibly can, recognisin­g that along the way we must build the confidence of parents, young people and teachers that schools are safe,” Ms Sturgeon said.

“It is absolutely not the case we are planning for blended learning, with children learning at home for part of the school week, to last a year or anything like it.

“On the contrary, we do not want blended learning to last a single second longer than is absolutely necessary, so we will be working with councils to return schools to normal as quickly as we can.”

The Scottish Government’s three-weekly reviews of lockdown restrictio­ns will now include “specific considerat­ion” of evidence relating to transmissi­on of the virus in schools and young people, she said.

The first minister added that where evidence suggests safety restrictio­ns can be lifted or eased without putting pupils and teachers at undue risk, “we will do so”.

Local authoritie­s could be asked to “reconsider and revise their plans” if ministers do not believe all possible steps have been taken to “maximise” face-toface learning.

It comes after reports of councils warning what they will be able to offer pupils will depend on what they can afford, with some authoritie­s telling parents classrooms will be open just one or two days a week.

Ms Sturgeon said: “Councils have a duty to look within their own resources and apply innovation and creativity and to look at where they, for example, have alternativ­e buildings they could use, and I know they are doing that,” she said.

“I have a duty and the deputy first minister, as education secretary, has a duty to work with councils to say ‘If you are genuinely struggling with resources and need additional resources here, then we have a job to make sure that is provided’.”

Ms Sturgeon was forced to backtrack on a number of statements from her education secretary John Swinney, who on Sunday said it was “unlikely” schools would return to normal in the next academic year. The government has been accused of presiding over “confusion, mixed messaging and a chronic lack of leadership” after a weekend in which Mr Swinney said there was no “absolute certainty” next year’s exams will go ahead.

The first minister appeared to change her position from two weeks ago on penalties for families who keep their children at home over coronaviru­s fears after Mr Swinney said there was a legal requiremen­t for parents to send them to school.

She said it was her “firm intention” next year’s exams would go ahead as planned.

Scottish Tory education spokesman Jamie Greene accused Ms Sturgeon of a “desperate attempt” to wrestle back control of the issue from her education secretary.

He said: “Parents and teachers won’t know who to listen to, the first minister or the education secretary, as their stories are increasing­ly different. Councils are being left in the dark and left in the lurch.”

Scottish Labour’s education spokesman Iain Gray said: “We all know this is difficult, but this is fast becoming a complete shambles and the cabinet secretary must assure Parliament he has this under control.”

No new deaths from Covid-19 were reported overnight in Scotland for the third time since the lockdown began. A total of 2,448 patients have now died after testing positive for the virus.

A further 29 people have tested positive and new data means the total number of people with a confirmed case has risen to 18,030.

“Parents and teachers won’t know who to listen to”

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