Schools in two council areas added to Scottish Attainment Challenge
Education Secretary John Swinney has announced the Scottish Attainment Challenge, which aims to improve teaching for deprived pupils, will be extended to East Ayrshire and Renfrewshire, taking the number of “challenge authorities'' up to nine.
Councils will be given more than £20 million to improve teaching in up to 133 secondary schools.
Education Secretary John Swinney has announced the Scottish Attainment Challenge, which aims to improve teaching for deprived pupils, will be extended to East Ayrshire and Renfrewshire, taking the number of “challenge authorities'' up to nine.
Mr Swinney will address head teachers, school and council representatives at Hampden Park in Glasgow on Thursday.
An additional £20 million will be devoted to raising attainment in primary schools in challenge authority areas in 2016-17.
Mr Swinney said: “We must support and empower teachers to deliver an education system that gives all young people the chance to reach their potential and achieve their ambitions, and ensure our schools are places where young people can overcome inequality and succeed regardless of their background.
“Since we launched the Scottish Attainment Challenge last year, the Scottish Government has supported hundreds of primary schools to develop their approaches to literacy, numeracy and health and wellbeing.
“Local authorities and individual schools are already using the challenge to tailor new approaches to their own needs and circumstances.
“All 32 local authorities in Scotland now have a specialist attainment adviser working with their schools and the new national improvement hub provides a range of online resources to help those working in the sector.
“This has been a good start but I want to extend the reach, expand the scope and increase the pace of the attainment challenge.
“So, in addition to allocating more than £20 million to continue the work of the challenge authority primary programme into its second year; we will add East Ayrshire and Renfrewshire to the challenge authorities programme - both of which have significant levels of multiple deprivation.
“We will also increase the scope of the challenge to include secondary schools, both in the challenge authority areas and elsewhere where there are schools supporting young people who live in areas with significant levels of deprivation.
“All of this underlines the Scottish Government's firm commitment to closing the gap between the educational attainment of young people in our most and least deprived areas over the next five years.”