
MSPs vote down curriculum body proposals
The body would also be given oversight of the development of teachers and staff, as well as being tasked with accrediting qualifications.
Ms Duncan-Glancy told MSPs the creation of the body would not increase costs on the Government, with funding, staffing and office space taken from Education Scotland.
Control over the curriculum, accreditation and improvement in education is 'spread over too many bodies' which 'do not always speak to each other'.
'The amendments in this group propose a remedy to this – Curriculum Scotland,' she said.
'A single, arms-length organisation that will steer what is taught, guarantee the standards of certificates that flow from that teaching and the continuous improvement of both.'
Responding to the Labour MSP, Education Secretary Jenny Gilruth said: 'My decision to refocus Education Scotland, which I announced to Parliament in June of last year, was a fundamental step in realising the shared ambition in relation to education reform.
'The curriculum improvement cycle, as members will know, is also already under way, with Education Scotland leading that work with the teaching profession.
'When considering these amendments, I am thoughtful about the principle of legislating only when necessary and I ask members to keep that at the forefront of their minds for voting on these amendments.'
She added: 'While I appreciate the intention behind these amendments, I cannot support them.
'I do not believe there are sufficient advantages to establishing a new standalone curriculum body in legislation and the expense that will incur, when we already have a national education agency being refocused on curriculum improvement and supporting implementation across the system.'
The amendment was defeated by 94 votes to 22.
Asked by Scottish Tory MSP Miles Briggs if creating such a body would require a standalone Bill rather than an amendment to an existing one, Ms Duncan-Glancy admitted it was not the 'neatest opportunity to do this, but it is the only opportunity that we face'.
While fellow Scottish Tory MSP Stephen Kerr said he understood the intentions behind the amendments, but added he did not think the plans were the right method of doing so.
The Bill will scrap the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) and replace it with Qualifications Scotland, which would work alongside a re-tooled Education Scotland and a newly-created chief inspector of education – who would be tasked with inspecting nurseries, schools and colleges.
In an hours-long session at Holyrood, hundreds of amendments to the Bill were discussed by MSPs.
Ms Duncan-Glancy did not push another raft of changes – on the make-up of Qualifications Scotland's strategic advisory council – she proposed to a vote after receiving assurances from Ms Gilruth on the group's membership.
MSPs also backed a push for a review of the accreditation of qualifications in Scotland proposed by Scottish Lib Dem MSP Willie Rennie.
Consideration of remaining amendments and a final vote on the Bill are scheduled to take place on Wednesday afternoon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
an hour ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Starmer must meet Tory conditions if he wants us to back Welfare Bill
The Tory leader said the Bill does not cut down welfare spending enough or go far enough to get people back to work and called for the Prime Minister to promise no new taxes would be announced in the autumn. Ministers have said the reforms could save up to £5 billion a year. Sir Keir has said he will 'press on' with the legislation despite the prospect of a major revolt when the welfare Bill comes before the Commons in a vote set for July 1. More than 100 backbenchers – enough to threaten the Prime Minister's majority – have signed an amendment designed to halt the changes. The Tory leader said Labour's MPs are in 'open rebellion' and set out conditions for her party's MPs to back the bill. 'The Government is in a mess, their MPs are in open rebellion. If Keir Starmer wants our support, he needs to meet three conditions that align with our core Conservative principles,' she said. 'The first condition is that the welfare budget is too high, it needs to come down. This Bill does not do that. 'The second condition is that we need to get people back into work. Unemployment is rising, jobs are disappearing, and even the Government's own impact assessments say that the package in this Bill will not get people back to work. 'The third is that we want to see no new tax rises in the autumn. We can't have new tax rises to pay for the increases in welfare and other Government spending. 'We are acting in the national interest to make the changes the country needs. 'And if Keir Starmer wants us to help him get this Bill through, then he must commit to these three conditions at the dispatch box.' A Labour spokesperson said that they are 'prepared to take on the challenges holding the UK back'. 'We're fixing the abysmal mess the Tories left behind, and MPs can either vote to keep a broken failed welfare system that writes people off, or they can vote to start fixing it,' the spokesperson said.


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Cross-party body seeks to tackle divisions in wake of 2024 summer riots
The cross-party body, led by former Tory home secretary Sir Sajid Javid and Labour MP Jon Cruddas, says it will seek to examine what the Prime Minister last year called the 'cracks in our foundation'. It has support from across the political spectrum, including the backing of Sir Keir Starmer's Government. The group will develop a series of evidence-based recommendations for measures to build more social cohesion across the four nations. Former Green Party leader Caroline Lucas, ex-Tory mayor of the West Midlands Sir Andy Street, and former counter-extremism tsar Dame Sara Khan are among its members. Sir Sajid Javid served in the cabinets of David Cameron, Theresa May and Boris Johnson (PA) Sir Sajid, who served in the Cabinets of David Cameron, Theresa May and Boris Johnson, said successive administrations had treated social cohesion as a 'second-tier' issue. He said governments had responded 'only when tensions spill over and too often ignoring the root causes.' 'This commission has been established to do what governments alone cannot: take a long view, propose radical policy changes and — crucially — help forge a cross-society consensus about how we want to live together now and in the future,' Sir Sajid said. Former veteran Labour MP for Dagenham and Rainham Mr Cruddas said the commission would seek to respond to one of 'the most pressing and persistently neglected issues' facing Britain. He said: 'This won't be a top-down exercise. Over the next year, we'll be listening directly to people across the UK – drawing on their experiences to help shape practical, long-term answers to the forces pulling us apart.' The commission is being facilitated by the Together Coalition founded by Brendan Cox, the husband of the Labour MP Jo Cox who was murdered by a far-right extremist. It was established in the aftermath of a wave of violent disorder that swept across parts of the UK last summer following the Southport stabbings. False information spread on social media about the identity of the attacker, later found to be 18-year-old Axel Rudakubana, was widely seen as playing a role in fuelling the unrest. The disturbances, which saw mosques and hotels housing asylum seekers targeted, were denounced at the time as 'far-right thuggery' by Prime Minister Sir Keir. Although not officially Government-sponsored, the commission is being supported by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. A spokesperson for the ministry said: 'We want to put an end to community division, which is why we are driving £15 million into towns and cities across the country through the Community Recovery Fund. 'This will provide vital support to areas affected by recent unrest – such as £5.6 million for Southport to help rebuild the town. 'We are supportive of the work that the Together Coalition is undertaking, and we look forward to following the commission's progress.'


North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Cross-party body seeks to tackle divisions in wake of 2024 summer riots
The cross-party body, led by former Tory home secretary Sir Sajid Javid and Labour MP Jon Cruddas, says it will seek to examine what the Prime Minister last year called the 'cracks in our foundation'. It has support from across the political spectrum, including the backing of Sir Keir Starmer's Government. The group will develop a series of evidence-based recommendations for measures to build more social cohesion across the four nations. Former Green Party leader Caroline Lucas, ex-Tory mayor of the West Midlands Sir Andy Street, and former counter-extremism tsar Dame Sara Khan are among its members. Sir Sajid, who served in the Cabinets of David Cameron, Theresa May and Boris Johnson, said successive administrations had treated social cohesion as a 'second-tier' issue. He said governments had responded 'only when tensions spill over and too often ignoring the root causes.' 'This commission has been established to do what governments alone cannot: take a long view, propose radical policy changes and — crucially — help forge a cross-society consensus about how we want to live together now and in the future,' Sir Sajid said. Former veteran Labour MP for Dagenham and Rainham Mr Cruddas said the commission would seek to respond to one of 'the most pressing and persistently neglected issues' facing Britain. He said: 'This won't be a top-down exercise. Over the next year, we'll be listening directly to people across the UK – drawing on their experiences to help shape practical, long-term answers to the forces pulling us apart.' The commission is being facilitated by the Together Coalition founded by Brendan Cox, the husband of the Labour MP Jo Cox who was murdered by a far-right extremist. It was established in the aftermath of a wave of violent disorder that swept across parts of the UK last summer following the Southport stabbings. False information spread on social media about the identity of the attacker, later found to be 18-year-old Axel Rudakubana, was widely seen as playing a role in fuelling the unrest. The disturbances, which saw mosques and hotels housing asylum seekers targeted, were denounced at the time as 'far-right thuggery' by Prime Minister Sir Keir. Although not officially Government-sponsored, the commission is being supported by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. A spokesperson for the ministry said: 'We want to put an end to community division, which is why we are driving £15 million into towns and cities across the country through the Community Recovery Fund. 'This will provide vital support to areas affected by recent unrest – such as £5.6 million for Southport to help rebuild the town. 'We are supportive of the work that the Together Coalition is undertaking, and we look forward to following the commission's progress.'