logo
Falkirk schools' have highest number of leavers going to 'positive destination'

Falkirk schools' have highest number of leavers going to 'positive destination'

Daily Record13-05-2025

Councillors praised a "wonderful report" that showed 96.25 per cent of pupils found jobs or stayed in education
Falkirk schools reported the highest numbers of pupils leaving for a 'positive destination' in five years.
Provost Robert Bissett praised the passion and commitment of teachers, as members of Falkirk Council 's Scrutiny Committee heard that 96.25 per cent of the 1,760 pupils who left school in 2024 went on to further or higher education or into work.

The 2024 Leavers' Attainment Outcomes Report was presented to councillors by Jill Pringle, Falkirk Council's head of education, who told members that the report presented "a continuing strong picture for Falkirk 's young people".
"We are very proud of our young people when they leave our schools and we are very proud of the hard work that everybody puts in to ensuring that these outcomes are incredibly strong and continue to be so," she said.
The report comes from information that is published nationally and provides a wider picture of our education system than the annual exam results, published in September.
Ms Pringle said schools are beginning to look beyond the traditional exams and find wider opportunities for pupils, such as HNCs or Foundation Apprenticeships, which can be just as valuable.
The published data compares the local authority against Scotland as a whole as well as neighbouring authorities.
But Ms Pringle told members that the most useful - and fairest - comparison tool was the Virtual Comparator which uses data to compare pupils from similar backgrounds across the country.
While the results for each school are not made public, members heard that all of the data is increasingly used internally by headteachers and their staff to find areas in schools that can be targeted for improvement.

"Schools can look at their own data and understand their own picture," said Ms Pringle.
"Our schools are very good at that - they are data literate and becoming increasingly more so, so that's why you are starting to see that real improvement."
Director of Education Jon Reid agreed that one of the reasons for Falkirk seeing improved attainment is a previous council decision to provide an iPad for every pupil from Primary 5 upwards.

The results - along with several inspection reports that have praised digital learning in individual schools - showed "the investment is working", he said.
Benefits for pupils include having access to high quality feedback and a broader curriculum, while it also makes it much easier for pupils who are absent through illness to catch up.
"It provides equity, it's an essential tool for learning and teaching and I'm not sure what our classrooms would look like if that wasn't there," said Mr Reid.

Councillor Iain Sinclair, education portfolio holder, said: "This is a result of the focus and hard work of everybody involved which has led to these positive statistics and a five-year high in positive destinations of 96.25 per cent."
"I'd like to pay tribute to our phenomenal young people who continue to achieve in what can be very challenging circumstances, also to our central team for the support they provide and our dedicated secondary teams and in particular our headteachers for their relentless focus on achieving the best outcomes for our young people."
The committee convener, Provost Robert Bissett said: "It's a wonderful report and all credit to everyone involved in education.

"That continuous dedication to improve the lives of our pupils is phenomenal.
"Every teacher you speak to, you can feel their dedication and passion because education does change lives.
"Thank you from everybody here to everybody in education - well done and lets keep it going!"

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Falkirk pupils to use 'parts' of closed primary school for new term
Falkirk pupils to use 'parts' of closed primary school for new term

Daily Record

timea day ago

  • Daily Record

Falkirk pupils to use 'parts' of closed primary school for new term

The extension and modular units at the storm damaged Maddiston Primary School campus will be used for younger pupils next term Parts of Maddiston Primary School campus, near Falkirk, will be back in use for the new term although the main building will not reopen until August 2026 at the earliest. The school closed in February, after damage caused by Storm Eowyn revealed significant construction problems that were present throughout the 17-year- old building caused by mortar that was "significantly deficient". ‌ As the scale of the defects became clear, the decision was taken by Falkirk Council in February to shut the building and decant around 500 pupils to three primary schools across the district. ‌ Falkirk Council's director of education, Jon Reid, wrote to all parents and carers this week to tell them the arrangements for the school year starting in August. He said the school will be able to use the new extension and existing modular units which have been unaffected by the construction defects that have been found throughout the main school. In his letter, Mr Reid confirmed that the school would not reopen until at least August 2026. ‌ He said "This is clearly disappointing news, but it is essential that the building meets all necessary building standards before staff and pupils return." The letter also confirms that Maddiston Community Centre will be used for PE and lunch arrangements. The extension will accommodate three Primary 1 classes and two Primary 2 classes while one P2/3 class and two Primary 3 classes will be in the Modular Units. ‌ Primaries 4 and 5 will go to Wallacestone Primary and Primaries 6 and 7 will be in Bantaskin Primary. The Timezone and Inclusion class pupils will continue to attend Moray Primary and Carrongrange High School. Mr Reid said that the arrangements "allow us to make the best use of available facilities across our school estate, scale back the transport arrangements in place and ensure a stable and high-quality experience for all pupils and staff while work toward a full return to Maddiston." A report going to Falkirk Council's executive on June 19 revealed that the mortar used in the construction was "significantly deficient, providing inadequate bonding to the surrounding stone". The cost is estimated be around £5 million and the work is likely to take at least a year.

Falkirk area primary school will remain closed for at least a year after mortar found to be deficient
Falkirk area primary school will remain closed for at least a year after mortar found to be deficient

Daily Record

time3 days ago

  • Daily Record

Falkirk area primary school will remain closed for at least a year after mortar found to be deficient

Councillors are being asked to agree to appoint a company to manage the project to make the massive repairs A Falkirk area primary school in that has been closed since February is not expected to reopen until summer 2026, after mortar used in its construction was found to be "significantly deficient". A gable wall at Maddiston Primary School - one of Falkirk Council' s newest and largest primaries - was visibily damaged by Storm Eowyn in January this year, but investigations to assess the extent of the damage revealed more widespread problems affecting the entire building. ‌ According to a report going to members of Falkirk Council's executive, the mortar used in the construction was "significantly deficient, providing inadequate bonding to the surrounding stone". ‌ As the scale of the defects became clear, the decision was taken in February to shut the building and decant around 500 pupils to three primary schools across the district. A report going to Falkirk Council's executive on June 19 will ask councillors to approve a procurement strategy that officials say will allow them to move as quickly as possible to the next stage in the work to repair the school building. According to the report, the cost is estimated be around £5 million and the work is likely to take at least a year. ‌ The report explains that "investigations confirmed that the defects were present throughout the building to varying degrees." Since the decant, the report says, substantial works have been undertaken to "expose sections of the external walls, remove defective materials, and allow further intrusive inspections of the building's structural elements. Councillors will be told that intrusive investigations have also been undertaken internally to ensure that all construction defects and wider condition issues are identified while the building remains unoccupied. ‌ The report states: "The works required are extensive and complex, involving the removal and replacement of substantial elements of the external fabric, internal structural supports, and remedial works to ensure the building meets current safety, compliance and educational standards." Council officers are looking for councillors to approve work continuing with a company called HUB East Central (HUBco) which is providing strategic support services, including project management, architectural, and structural engineering input. Local members are being asked to agree that the works should progress through HUBco - which has a track record of working with local authorities including Falkirk - with a partner contractor being appointed once the full scope of works has been confirmed. ‌ The report says that this approach "is expected to allow mobilisation on site at the earliest opportunity". A construction quality review and a separate root cause analysis are also now underway. The report says these will inform "not only the repair works Maddiston Primary School but also any potential future actions and wider lessons for future capital investment across the school estate". ‌ The project board overseeing the works includes senior officers from Education and Place Services and is supported by external specialists. Falkirk Council's head of investment, assets and climate, Paul Kettrick, said: "This has been a complex and urgent response to significant construction issues that have been identified at the school. 'Our focus is on delivering the necessary remedial works safely and to the highest standard as quickly as possible. "The proposed approach will allow us to proceed efficiently while ensuring that upon completion we are satisfied the building is free of defects and meets all structural and condition requirements." The report will be discussed by Falkirk Council's executive on Thursday, June 19 in Grangemouth Community Education Unit, Abbots Road, Grangemouth, at 10 am. It will also be livestreamed on Falkirk Council's YouTube channel.

YouTube fans warned app will stop working on seven popular gadgets including some iPhones as major update rolls out
YouTube fans warned app will stop working on seven popular gadgets including some iPhones as major update rolls out

The Sun

time3 days ago

  • The Sun

YouTube fans warned app will stop working on seven popular gadgets including some iPhones as major update rolls out

YOUTUBE'S app will soon stop working on a number of popular devices including some iPhone models. The Google -owned platform has put out an update meaning selected older gadgets are no longer compatible. 1 YouTube now requires a minimum of iOS 16 installed on iPhones instead of iOS 15, and iPadOS 16 on iPads. More recent products are able to run iOS 16 and later so they're unaffected. But as with any software update, there is a cut off eventually. There are seven Apple devices that are too old to run iOS 16 / iPadOS 16 so they can't use the new YouTube app. This includes the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, which were released back in 2016. See the full list below: iPhone 7 iPhone 7 Plus iPhone 6s iPhone 6s Plus iPhone SE iPad Air 2 iPad mini 4 Most of these are already on Apple's dreaded "vintage" list - and the iPad Air 2 is "obsolete". It's likely more popular apps will follow the same trend as YouTube given that dated kit can no longer handle the tech improvements. WhatsApp just did the same thing to a number of older iPhones. Doomed gadgets to STOP working properly in 2025 closures – phones, laptops & even home thermostats to go wrong in weeks However, affected users who wish to cling onto their current handset and still use YouTube have a back-up option. They can still access the YouTube website via their iPhone web browser of course. APPLE'S VINTAGE AND OBSOLETE LIST Apple defines iPhones and other products as vintage when sales were stopped more than five years ago but less than seven years ago. After seven years, they become obsolete resulting in no hardware service at all. Here is the full list of "vintage" iPhones as it now stands: iPhone 4 (8GB) iPhone 5 iPhone 6 iPhone 7 Plus iPhone SE iPhone 8 (64GB, 256GB) iPhone 8 Red iPhone 8 Plus Red iPhone X And these are the iPhones that are obsolete: iPhone iPhone 3G (China mainland) 8GB iPhone 3G 8GB, 16GB iPhone 3GS (China mainland) 16GB, 32GB iPhone 3GS (8GB) iPhone 3GS 16GB, 32GB iPhone 4 CDMA iPhone 4 CDMA (8GB) iPhone 4 16GB, 32GB iPhone 4 GSM (8GB), Black iPhone 4S iPhone 4S (8GB) iPhone 5C iPhone 5S iPhone 6 Plus iPhone 6s (32GB) iPhone 6s Plus (32GB) Image credit: Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store