The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 2160 contributions
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
Is that transition recognised in the current SFC arrangements?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
My questions follow some of Mr Dey’s. I am trying to evaluate the idea of regionalisation and what the next steps are, and I am keen to focus on outcomes for young people. A lot of the evidence that we have had is about inputs, such as the number of young people attending universities. In 2020-21, the successful completion rate in Scotland was 61.3 per cent, whereas the roughly comparable figure in England was 89 per cent. Why does that gap exist?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
I take on board your point that it is difficult to find an exactly comparable figure, because the systems in England and Scotland are different, but it still seems to me to be a pretty stark gap in outcomes. The most equivalent figure that I could find in England was that 89 per cent of young people come out the other side with a qualification. You talked about the Scottish situation, but is there more that we can learn from models elsewhere? We are in a process of reform, so is there more that we could do to try to achieve better outcomes?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
I think that the horse has bolted on multiyear funding. The assumption was that we would see something about it in the spending review yesterday, but that only goes down to level 2, which means that colleges do not know how much funding they will have in the coming years. Are you renewing those calls today?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
Yes, I will, convener. We also have a team at the SFC that appears to be working up an alternative piece. Does anybody have any idea whether the SFC and the Scottish Government are working together on the same blueprint for the future or whether they are developing completely different plans? There seem to be a lot of plans. Do you have any idea whether the people involved are talking to one another?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
The budget settlement for 2022-23 has been passed on to the colleges. For almost all colleges, it means significant cuts to staffing and the programmes that they run. Principals and other senior staff have expressed concerns to me that they have received letters from the Scottish Funding Council telling them that they have to do exactly the same things that they did last year.
We have talked about the ability to flex in the longer term. However, in the short term, is the Government system responsive enough to the context in which colleges exist to enable the money that is allocated to them to reflect the job that the Government wants them to do?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
I am sorry, but I think that we might be talking slightly at cross-purposes. I am not talking about the SFC report but about the letters of requirement that are being sent to colleges telling them what they have to do with the money that is allocated to them. The SFC has produced a report about reform. I am concerned about the amount of money that is allocated and what colleges are being asked to do in the coming year. It is not realistic, is it? Colleges cannot cut posts and do the same job as they did last year.
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
My question is about access to university. Colleges are a critical part of that; Peter Scott referred to his report and some of his important work in that area. Following your report, some reports this morning are saying that the First Minister has said that Scotland is leading the way in university access, but this year’s Universities and Colleges Admissions Service’s figures show that the application rate from people from disadvantaged backgrounds in Scotland is 35.4 per cent, in Wales it is 37.5 per cent, in England it is 44.1 per cent, and in Northern Ireland it is 52.6 per cent. Do you agree with the First Minister that we are “leading the way”?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
We should do that work prior to a further round of reform, should we not? If we are talking about outcomes, we should plan what we want to achieve and find the pathways to do it. Would that be the sensible approach?
Education, Children and Young People Committee
Meeting date: 1 June 2022
Michael Marra
I will perhaps bring in Nora Senior, as well, off the back of this question. The success rates, as I have qualified them, of large colleges range from 52.7 to 73.6 per cent, and those of small colleges range from 59.7 to 70.4 per cent. There is a lower floor in larger colleges. I recognised one statistic; there will be a wealth of other things that we could look at, but the statistics seem to indicate that the direction of travel in recent years, in respect of the outcomes, is that there is a pretty significant gap of 7 per cent in young people getting qualifications to help them to advance in their lives, and the floor is a lot lower in the larger colleges. There seems to be a greater propensity for people not to achieve. Do you recognise that?