Greens issue SNP with ‘education report card’

Party wants Scottish teachers’ pay to be restored and for pupils to receive a free breakfast and lunch all year round
18th October 2018, 11:43am

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Greens issue SNP with ‘education report card’

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The Scottish Greens have urged the SNP government to “copy their homework” on education policies to close the attainment gap.

The party’s education spokesman, Ross Greer, issued ministers yesterday with a “report card” outlining the results of the government’s education policy, including a 20 per cent drop in teacher pay and 3,500 fewer teachers than 10 years ago.

It also highlighted the 16 percentage point gap in educational attainment between the most deprived pupils and their more affluent peers, and marked the government’s performance as “needs improvement”.

It stated: “The Scottish government is performing poorly in education and would benefit from a change in attitude.

“They are having trouble working well with others and need to focus more on cooperation and teamwork.”

‘High-quality education for all’

The party also published a policy paper outlining their proposals for education entitled ”Level the playing field: high-quality education for all”.

Among the pledges made are to restore teachers’ pay to help address recruitment and retention, to train all teachers on additional support needs and to mandate consent-based sex and relationship education in all schools.

The paper also contains a series of pledges aimed at addressing poverty in order to tackle the attainment gap, such as giving all pupils access to a free breakfast and lunch, including in the school holidays.

Further proposals include topping up child benefit by £5 a week and free bus travel for young people.

Mr Greer said: “The SNP’s education report card could be defined by one line, ‘Needs improvement.’

“The core issue facing Scottish education today is not governance structures or lack of tests but a decade of budget cuts which have left schools short-staffed, under-resourced and with unsustainable workloads for those who are left.

“Given that the poverty-related attainment gap doesn’t start in classrooms, though, measures to tackle poverty at source will do just as much, if not more, to help pupils from deprived backgrounds as any measures taken in schools.

“If the Scottish fovernment really wants to close the attainment gap, they should copy our homework.”

A Scottish government spokesman said: “Through our actions, we are making progress to deliver a world-class education system.

“Attainment overall is up and the gap between young people from the most and least deprived backgrounds is narrowing.

“We have seen an additional 543 teachers in classrooms this year and created a national school clothing grant payment of £100.

“Despite the UK government’s cuts to Scotland’s resource budget, we continue to prioritise education spending and will invest an additional £750 million in the course of this Parliament to tackle the poverty-related attainment gap.

“Responding to the views of the teaching profession, we have reduced teacher workload, simplified the curriculum framework and removed unnecessary bureaucracy.”

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