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Schools face next year with fewer teachers and bigger classes

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Published Date: 30 May 2008
SCHOOLS across Scotland face starting next year with fewer teachers and books and larger classes because of funding cuts, The Scotsman can reveal.
Teachers claim that for the first time in over a decade, classes in Glasgow will increase in size because of a 2 per cent cut in the city's education budget.

That will fly in the face of the SNP government target to reduce class sizes in the firs
t three years of primary school to a maximum of 18 pupils.

Teachers from schools across the city met earlier this week to compare the effect of cuts in their own schools and found it added up to a grim picture.

Exams in some subjects will have to dropped, teacher numbers are being cut and budgets for jotters slashed.

It marks the failure of a flagship SNP policy as the effects of the party's key election pledge, to freeze council tax, begin to bite.

Willie Hart, Glasgow secretary for the EIS teachers' union, warned the cuts could harm children's education. He said: "We are not saying this is the fault of the city chambers, Holyrood or Westminster.

"We are just asking the politicians to address the issues before it gets worse."

And the union described Glasgow as just one of many local authority areas where children's education was at risk.

An EIS spokesman said: "We are receiving reports of other authorities in similar positions."

In the union's survey of budgets, 18 councils expected a negative financial impact on education. Eight predicted job cuts and three expected compulsory redundancies.

Areas reporting negative impact are: Aberdeen, Angus, Argyll and Bute, Clackmannanshire, East Ayrshire, East Dunbartonshire, East Renfrewshire, Fife, Glasgow, Highland, North Ayrshire, North Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, Scottish Borders, South Ayrshire, South Lanarkshire, West Dunbartonshire and West Lothian.

Others, including Edinburgh, which had to ditch plans to close 22 schools last year, have not yet responded to the survey.

Cuts vary from 1 per cent in Argyll and Bute to 3 per cent in North Ayrshire.

Gordon Matheson, Glasgow City Council's executive member for education, said the city's education budget had risen by almost 25 per cent over the last four years. He said: "We spend more per pupil than the Scottish average, and more than any other city in the country. Education is Glasgow's first priority.

"However, we must be prepared to change how we do things so that we become more efficient and can invest where it is most needed.

"I understand that there are those who will not support all of our priorities but as politicians we will make the decisions that are in Glasgow's long-term interests."

The Association of Directors of Education in Scotland admitted most councils were having to make cuts of between 1 and 2 per cent in education budgets.

John Stodter, its general secretary, said: "That can be a challenge for schools because budgets are already tight.

"But the actual cost of areas such as transport, fuel, and contracts for school meals have all significantly increased."

A Scottish Government spokeswoman insisted council funding would rise more than 13 per cent over three years.

She said: "This record funding and the settlement itself, provides sufficient resources for local authorities to maintain teacher numbers throughout the spending review period.

"By doing this – in the face of falling school rolls – they can reduce class sizes."



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 May 2008 9:57 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Teaching
 
1

truthsleuth,

30/05/2008 01:18:39
Another Scot Nat success. They have increased teacher productivity will be the claim by ASS.
2

Bridged and tunnelled,

30/05/2008 06:47:12
It's on the record from last year that the class size policy will be implemented by 2011 and that this Government isn't training teachers for the dole queue.

(Salmond, Hyslop and Ingram, at various times in speeches and in the Parliament)

Since it was said, no doubt it will be delivered.
3

Seabhag,

Edinburgh 30/05/2008 07:26:32
2 - there is absolutely NO way that there will be class sizes of no more than 18 in P1-3 by 2011. The funding is just not there for that. Not even near it and the SNp should have thought much more carefully about HOW they were going to do that before dropping it in their manifesto.
4

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/05/2008 08:03:59
#4 Is that the best you can come up with Dave?

The problem here is SNP policy. Not council junkets. We are seeing service cuts, schools building programmes cut despite "brick for brick" promises, etc. etc.

It behoves those who support the SNP to be honest about when they make mistakes.
5

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/05/2008 08:34:56
No education money has gone on trips to see flowers Dave! You know this. You are using a diversionary tactic to try to throw mud and obscure the real problem, which is that the SNP made a very high profile promise which they are going to be utterly unable to keep. Everyone else said so at the time, and we are being proved right.

The council tax freeze and concordat is a disaster for local government, and when the deliberately unworkable LIT plan fails (which will be blamed on Westminster) local government will be unable to deliver, and the Scottish Government will be to blame.
6

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/05/2008 09:04:39
#8 Indeed they should have said no to the tax freeze. They are a bunch of idiots who were swayed by the removal of ring-fencing and believed that freedom to spend on what they wanted would mean some magical increase in available funds. Instead it means a requirement to implement government policy with no funding attached! COSLA was ill-advised to agree, and the councils were ill-advised by COSLA.

I think the blame for the state that Aberdeen is in lies with both the previous and present administrations. I think it was madness for the SNP to go into coalition with the Lib Dems in Aberdeen given the way they successfully campaigned against the incumbents in the election campaign. The SNP has a thirst for power which, in both Edinburgh and Aberdeen, has landed them in seriously hot water, and they deserve criticism for it. Currently they shrug this off with arrogance, but they are doing themselves no favours in either city.

I will be very glad when we get past this "it was the last lot's fault" phase and the current administrations in both cities can be held properly to account for their woeful approach to governance.

Ditto the national government. They have some fundamentally flawed policies stemming from populist electioneering, and I'd prefer for them not to wait until they explode in their faces before reversing them.
7

Yada,

30/05/2008 09:15:40
Is this a private fight ...
I'm no SNP supporter but if all you can do is Nat-bash, Duncan, then what's the point in listening to you?
There's not an Education Department in Scotland that couldn't make a one per cent saving if it tried especially in a time of falling rolls.
Dave is right. Money that has been spent by councils sending members and officials swanning off on junkets *could* have been spent on Education. They just chose not to, like Councils in Scotland (and England!) have been doing for decades and are only just now starting to learn that it is the taxpayer that comes first.
8

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/05/2008 09:22:03
#10 Ach, I know. The trouble is, I stay this feisty all day! Have a good one Dave. You know how jealous I get when you remind me where you get to spend your days... :-)
9

Duncan in Edinburgh,

Edinburgh 30/05/2008 09:25:38
#11 I look forward to hearing how you would propose Edinburgh education department make a 1% saving when the SNP government has just turned round and said that it's promise to match schools buildings programmes "brick for brick" actually meant that they were canning £100 million worth of essential buildings works across the city.

Tell the pupils of Portobello High that their crumbling school, whose replacement was delayed as soon as the SNP hit government, and has now been effectively cancelled, that in fact not only do they not need a new school, but they can get by with a further cut in teaching staff or maintenance.

Just try it!
10

,

30/05/2008 11:16:41
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
11

suzuky7502000,

Belgium 30/05/2008 11:54:48
Less teachers for bigger classes=same policy here in Belgium
12

Corky,

30/05/2008 12:47:50
How come my parents had average class sizes of 35+ at primary school and still managed 5 degrees between them, no criminal convictions and hold down good jobs?
13

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/05/2008 13:13:50
#16 By the sound of it, they had above-average intelligence. I agree class size reduction is not the panacea it is being painted as. What it is is a useful, populist election promise for a party which did not expect to have to deliver on it.
14

Tormod,

Auld Reekie 30/05/2008 14:29:34
Bloody Scotsman web page lost my comment, I will try be short.

I have no confidence in my local education authority to deliver any improvements in children's education due to my experience.

My own local council fails to get 40% of pupils to the measured grade of maths and english.

Those is Budgetry control do what ever they can to protect their Silo's. I've been informed a common problem is that teachers are on short term or temporary contracts, how many unemployed teachers do we have?

The cost of the PFI/PPP contracts you see building schools and running through this method has a price. Again those who say don't care what it costs build the schools using the PFI/PPP model should appreciate that.

So if the councils have been given greater sums and more freedom to deliver and fail to do so again and again what does that say about those charged with service delivery?

Look at what has happened at Aberdeen's Education department when a bright light has been shown into the darkness.

15

Tormod,

Auld Reekie 30/05/2008 14:33:25
Folks look to you own past at school, was you education the best it could have been or were you treated as though you were a number.

There are large / huge endemic problems within the education system in Scotland and soon as anybody thinks about problem solving, squeal squeal. By the very people
who are failing to deliver.
16

Tormod,

Auld Reekie 30/05/2008 14:36:23
Riddle me this Batman, why is education departments are closing schools due to falling numbers, then say that they do no have enough capacity to meet the smaller class sizes! So to get more capacity we close schools and spend even more money in building schools to replace that capacity??

It's a riddle wrapped inside an enigma right enough!

 

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