The Scotsman

Choice of subjects in Scottish schools falls

● Fears of a new ‘attainment gap’ ● Most restrict exam options

- By SCOTT MACNAB scott.macnab@scotsman.com

The constraint­s on subject choice in Scots schools has “worsened considerab­ly” in recent years, new research today indicates.

State schools have been continuing to reduce the number of National 4 and 5 exams children are permitted to sit, prompting warnings of a “new type of attainment gap”.

A “minority” of Scottish state schools allow pupils to sit more than six exams, with some only offering five subjects, compared to independen­t schools that typically continue to offer eight or nine.

Children whose parents can afford to send them to private school or move within another school’s catchment area will be unaffected by this “unintended consequenc­e of the Curriculum for Excellence”, director of Reform Scotland

0 In many state schools across Scotland the number of subjects available in National 4 and 5 level exams is falling

Chris Deerin said. Calling on the Scottish Government to urgently address the situation, Mr Deerin said: “We are

in real danger of opening up a new type of attainment gap in Scotland – one where children who are allowed to sit eight or

nine National 4s or 5s will have a distinct advantage over those restricted to five or six, regardless of the latter’s ability.

“The schools cutting the number of exams on offer are typically those serving our more deprived communitie­s, further limiting the life opportunit­ies of children who may already be disadvanta­ged.”

Freedom of Informatio­n requests by the group revealed that, in 2016, all schools in Edinburgh, East Dunbartons­hire and Dumfries and Galloway offered eight exams. Now no schools in either East Dunbartons­hire or Dumfries and Galloway offer eight, and the limit in Edinburgh varies between six and eight.

The implementa­tion of the Curriculum for Excellence (CFE) by the Scottish Government

has been blamed for the reduction in available subjects, which critics say shows the “hallmark of poor management”.

Keir Bloomer, chair of the Commission on School Reform and one of the authors of Curriculum for Excellence, said: “One of the purposes of CFE was to broaden pupils’ education, but instead the way in which it is being implemente­d is narrowing it significan­tly.

“There is ample opportunit­y for pupils to combine practical and academic options when they are enabled to sit nine, eight or even seven exams, but when we narrow it down to six or five there is very little room for manoeuvre.

“Reducing the number of subject options is not a government policy. It has come about by accident – the unintended consequenc­e of ill-conceived advice. This is the hallmark of poor management. “This is a lose-lose.” A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said the school curriculum provided “significan­t flexibilit­y” and allowed schools to design a “bespoke three-year senior phase” comprising a range of qualificat­ions to meet the needs of the young people at the school”.

She said: “What matters is the qualificat­ions and awards that pupils leave school with and not only what they study in S4.” Almost two-thirds now leave school in sixth year, with record numbers going into work, training or further study.

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PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES

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