Holyrood, made browsable

Motions, questions and answers

Every motion, amendment, parliamentary question and answer the chamber has lodged since 1999, searchable in one place.

129
Current MSPs
415
MSPs ever elected
14
Parties on record
305,439
Motions and questions
84,137
Motions
234,089
Questions
Chamber activity

Motions, questions and answers

Last 30 days
292 motions
956 questions · up to 16 Jun 2026
Most-active MSP
23 motions in the last 30 days
Top topic
in 257 titles
Unanswered questions
568
Items shown
0
Motions
0
Questions
0

Covering Unknown to Unknown. 5,653 amendments linked to their parent motions. 59,985,316 recorded MSP supports. 2,901 divisions on record (1,666 carried, 1,208 defeated).

Most common

What kinds of items appear

Written Question 206,214 Standard Motion 63,175 Portfolio Question 10,776 General Question 9,020 Motion For Debate 5,277 Members' Business Motion 5,213 Bureau Motion 5,029 Amendment 3,793 First Minister's Question 3,585 SPCB Written Question 1,621 Inspired Question 1,589 Topical Question 983
Year by year

How many items per year

Showing 0 of 0 matching items in session S6, 10 Jun 2025 – 10 Jun 2026. Latest 30 days: 1,285.
Reference Item MSP Type Date (desc)
Nothing matches those filters — try a broader search or clear a filter.
← Back to list
Question

Untitled item

S6W-23639 · Written Question · lodged by Sweeney, Paul

Lodged on
06 Dec 2023
Heard / answered on
20 Dec 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to improve access to English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) classes.

The answer

The Scottish Government’s aim is to support high quality, relevant, appropriate and accessible ESOL provision that meets learner need. The Scottish Government’s ESOL funding is currently provided through colleges as part of the grant allocated to the Scottish Funding Council. Colleges are instructed to work with Community Planning Partnerships (CPPs) to determine the level of need for provision and agree with partners how this need can be met.
In addition to this, I have announced an independent review of Community Learning and Development (CLD) which includes ESOL learning. The Independent Review of CLD offers a timely opportunity to better understand how we can ensure that proposed changes to the education and skills system has a focus on the most marginalised learners. Given the ongoing work to reform the education sector, and the intention of the review to provide recommendations on how CLD, including ESOL learning, can best fit within it, it makes sense to pause implementation of the adult learning strategy until such time as the future shape and strategic orientation of CLD is considered.

Answered by Graeme Dey on 20 Dec 2023.