The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Trades prestige call to parents, teachers

- BY CALUM ROSS

Sir Ian Wood has issued a fresh call for parents and teachers to play their part in creating a new “prestige” around vocational training, apprentice­ships and the trades.

The north-east oil services businessma­n told MSPs yesterday that society required a “mindset change” to end the focus on ensuring youngsters attend university after school.

Sir Ian, who headed-up the Commission for Developing Scotland’s Workforce in 2013, said “real progress” had been made but a culture shift was still required and that parents and teachers must help.

Giving evidence to Holyrood’s education committee, he said he had experience­d the same “old fashioned” view when he entered his father’s fishing business.

“I think we absolutely need to make apprentice­ships and trade occupation­s more respectabl­e,” said Sir Ian, who is a graduate from Aberdeen University and is chancellor of Robert Gordon University.

“We need doctors, we need lawyers, we need people to look at the plumbing in a house – we need a whole range of different things. And we need to create a prestige about it.

“My own experience in the north-east of Scotland, a lot of the youngsters who didn’t go to university, but did a really good technician training, they are earning more than a lot of the profession­al people are earning. So money is only part of it.”

Urging parents and teachers to change attitudes, Sir Ian added: “The vocational occupation­s – everyone’s got to get a mindset change, into understand­ing that they are worthwhile, they are essential and they are equally a part of society as other things we do.

“Teachers in schools are incredibly important. I actually think parents are the root of the problem, but teachers are the next stage up because a lot of them believe that their success is based on how many highers their children get.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom