Holyrood, made browsable

Hansard

Every contribution to the Official Report — chamber and committee — searchable in one place. Pulled from data.parliament.scot, indexed for full-text search, linked through to every MSP.

129
Current MSPs
415
MSPs ever elected
14
Parties on record
2,095,827
Hansard contributions
1999–2026
Coverage span
Official Report

Search Hansard contributions

Clear
Showing 0 of 2,095,827 contributions in session S6, 11 May 2026 – 10 Jun 2026. Latest 30 days: 2,655. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 09 Jun 2026.

No contributions match those filters.

← Back to list
Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 22 September 2015

22 Sep 2015 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Education

In terms of sustained improvement, I presume that we would need some sort of longitudinal study to develop that. However, it is telling that Save the Children and other children’s charities make the same point about the need to target the resource at the individual children who need it.

The Government also needs to rethink its plans for national standardised testing. The education secretary and the First Minister insist that it is needed to help to tackle the attainment gap and will not herald a return to teaching to the test and league tables. However, few believe them. Initially, conditional support from the EIS was paraded by ministers who were desperate to justify their plans and reassure a sceptical public, teaching profession and pupils. However, the Educational Institute of Scotland now insists that

“it will be almost impossible to put in place safeguards which would stop national assessments leading to the league table, target-setting agenda which CfE was supposed to have ended”.

Only the Conservatives have been unequivocal in their support for the SNP’s plans for standardised testing, but they have no problem with league tables.

Finally, let me touch on teacher numbers and class sizes. The minister’s motion asks us to celebrate the Government’s successes. However, with 4,000 fewer teachers than there were in 2007 and a class-size commitment for P1 to P3 that has never been close to being honoured, that self-congratulatory tone seems to be misplaced. Even the agreement that was reached to safeguard teacher numbers is proving to be problematic. It is putting individual local authorities, which are already constrained by a never-ending council tax freeze, in a straitjacket. Council representatives told the Education and Culture Committee recently that the lack of flexibility is causing huge problems in matching teacher supply with demand, and is also resulting in large numbers of support staff being laid off. The comparison was made with police service reform and the effect on civilian staff roles. Again, that is hardly progressive.

None of what I have said detracts from the success and quality of education in Scotland, nor is it talking down the work that is done by the teachers and others who work in the sector. However, if we are serious about building on success, about addressing weaknesses that exist and about making genuine headway at last in closing the gap in attainment, we need to be honest and ambitious about what needs to be done.

I move amendment S4M-14311.3, to leave out from “Scotland’s educational success” to end and insert:

“the expansion of free nursery care for two-year-olds but is concerned that provision in Scotland still lags behind that available in England; believes that this support can help contribute toward addressing the difference in reading attainment between children from low-income and high-income households by the age of five, which is on average 13 months; understands that the average class size in the early years of primary school continued to increase to 23.3 in 2014, despite the SNP’s 2007 manifesto commitment to cut class sizes to 18 or less for Primary 1 to 3 pupils; understands that teacher numbers have fallen by approximately 4,000 since 2007 and regrets the rigid approach that the Scottish Government has taken to the enforcement of the teacher number guarantee; notes opposition to the reintroduction of standardised national testing and the views of the Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS) that “it will be almost impossible to put in place safeguards which would stop national assessments leading to the league table, target-setting agenda which Curriculum for Excellence was supposed to have ended”; welcomes the Scottish Government’s decision to dedicate more resources to tackling the attainment gap; however, considers that, while the Scottish Attainment Fund will make a difference in selected areas, it ignores the needs of children facing poverty and disadvantage elsewhere in Scotland, including Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Dumfries and Galloway and the Highlands and Islands, and urges the Scottish Government to introduce a pupil premium that targets funding at individual school-aged children in need, wherever they may live, as a means of helping close the attainment gap and improving equality of opportunity.”

14:49  
References in this contribution

Motions, questions or amendments mentioned by their reference code.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Tricia Marwick) NPA
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-14311, in the name of Angela Constance, on building on Scotland’s educational success. 14:08
The Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning (Angela Constance) SNP
Despite the fiscal challenges of the past eight years, education in Scotland has made real progress. The Government has rebuilt or refurbished 526 schools, c...
Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD) LD
I noticed the cabinet secretary’s careful language. She said that the Scottish Government is doing more than the rest of the UK, but that is not the case in ...
Angela Constance SNP
The UK Government’s aspiration might well be for 40 per cent of two-year-olds south of the border to access early learning and childcare, but the most recent...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
Audit Scotland said: “Some schools have achieved better attainment results than their levels of deprivation would indicate, suggesting that the gap between ...
Angela Constance SNP
I think that we can all agree that deprivation is a factor that impacts on our children’s attainment. It is a shame that the Tory Government is continuing to...
James Kelly (Rutherglen) (Lab) Lab
Why is it taking until the end of November to have an attainment adviser in place in every local authority?
Angela Constance SNP
Some of Mr Kelly’s colleagues on the Labour front bench with an education brief have highlighted that we most certainly do not want to adversely affect the a...
Iain Gray (East Lothian) (Lab) Lab
I will always relish the opportunity to celebrate Scotland’s educational success and debate how we should build on it, so I am pleased to speak to my amendme...
Angela Constance SNP
The latest information from local government shows that education spend this year will go up by 3.3 per cent. Will Iain Gray comment on that? What message do...
Iain Gray Lab
Ah—so spending on education is not the responsibility of the education secretary. My theme is that it is time that the cabinet secretary started to do her jo...
Mary Scanlon (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I thank the Scottish Government for holding a debate on education—in recent years, many education debates have been held in Opposition time. On the same cons...
The Minister for Learning, Science and Scotland’s Languages (Dr Alasdair Allan) SNP
You are welcome.
Mary Scanlon Con
Let us look at the education successes, Dr Allan. I am very happy to tell the minister about his Government’s record since 2007. According to the Scottish s...
Angela Constance SNP
I wonder whether Mrs Scanlon would be interested to know that since 2007 the number of STEM higher entries has gone up by 12 per cent and STEM higher passes ...
Mary Scanlon Con
We can trade numbers, but I have just given factual, accurate numbers for the past two years, which come from the learned societies group. If the cabinet sec...
Angela Constance SNP
Will the member give way?
Mary Scanlon Con
May I first give this figure? I would be delighted if the cabinet secretary responded to it. An Audit Scotland report confirmed that over the past five years...
Angela Constance SNP
Ian Wood spoke favourably about the college reform programme and how it had created a great platform and opportunity for the success of our children. We are ...
Mary Scanlon Con
I do not know whether the cabinet secretary heard what I was saying. Some 150,000 would-be part-time students cannot find a place, due to the cut—
Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP
No, no, no.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
Order.
Mary Scanlon Con
The Government has created 3,000 full-time places. There is also a desperate need for information technology courses, but there are 24,000 fewer students on...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
There is time in hand today.
Mary Scanlon Con
We are in favour of testing, assessment or whatever the Government wants to call it, as a diagnostic tool to ensure that no child is left behind. Children ar...
The Minister for Children and Young People (Aileen Campbell) SNP
Will the member give way?
Mary Scanlon Con
No. I am in my final minute and I have given way twice—and really, what a total waste of time that was. We hope that the Government will work with teachers ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
We have a bit of time in hand. Mr McArthur, you have six minutes or thereabouts. 14:40
Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD) LD
Like members who have spoken previously, I need no persuading about the many strengths of Scotland’s education system. Daily in my constituency I see evidenc...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP) SNP
Liam McArthur has asked for more resources for colleges, as I understand it, and is also asking for more resources for early learning. Does he have in mind a...