The Scotsman

Next step is to prove results are not a blip

Record number of university places for students from deprived areas is only a start to closing attainment gap

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Exam results are usually an easy target to criticise. If results show any deteriorat­ion, education is failing. And if they improve, then it must be because exams are too easy.

But this year’s National, Higher and Advanced Higher results brought little for opposition parties to seize upon, recording slight drops in pass rates but with overall figures very similar to last year. The finger was instead pointed at a drop in entries in some subjects, and it was also claimed that this year’s results were achieved in spite of the system rather than because of it. But considerin­g that education is the most vulnerable part of the SNP administra­tion’s record in government, these are not killer blows.

And not only are this year’s results something of a relief for the Scottish Government, which has been hit by one damning report after another on education, there was also a suggestion of progress being made. A record number of pupils from Scotland’s most deprived communitie­s have won a place at university, representi­ng a 13 per rise on last year.

Could this be evidence of the attainment gap? Nicola Sturgeon has asked to be judged on her administra­tion’s record on education, and while yesterday’s results are a step in the right direction, it is too early to say if the record figure has enduring significan­ce.

And although percentage rises always appear to be good news, we must remember that we are talking about small numbers of students. This record amount from deprived areas adds up to just 4,150 people – and if we go back to percentage­s, that’s just 14 per cent of the overall number of students who are going on to university. It is perhaps unrealisti­c to think that the balance will ever be 50-50, but the imbalance remains heavily in favour of those who are better off, and there is a long way to go before we can say that the gap is being bridged.

What we need to see next is evidence of progress via other indicators, such as annual statistics on numeracy and literacy, and eventually, Pisa, the internatio­nal comparator, as well as further closing of the gap in next year’s exam results.

For the sake of those going through the education system, who have so much at stake, we must hope that yesterday’s figures represent a turning point. They have brought the Scottish Government some breathing space, but for the future candidates who are next to come through the system, there is no time to lose.

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