The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-09126, in the name of Stephen Kerr, on ending violence in Scottish schools. I invite members who wish to participate in the debate to press their request-to-speak button now or as soon as possible.
14:49
This debate is taking place because we need to address the unacceptable level of violence and disruption in our schools. My colleagues can attest to the fact that I am a very generous soul. Now my generosity of spirit extends to the Scottish ministers who are sitting opposite me because, today, I think that we have helped them. I am pleased that they have accepted the motion in my name, so I accept their amendment in the same spirit. There—it can be done. We can work across the chamber.
In her amendment, the cabinet secretary seeks to change one or two things in my motion—for example, she wants to add in a bit about what the Government is doing to collect and collate missing data. She sets out measures that I am calling for and agrees that the Government will hold a summit, which I believe will inevitably lead to the setting up of a working group, as my motion calls for.
The Government’s amendment is a testament to the work of my colleagues over many months to highlight what is happening in our schools. The cabinet secretary could hardly do anything other than what she has done today in embracing the motion that the Scottish Conservatives lodged on Monday, because I know, and Jenny Gilruth knows, that what the motion sets out is what is now needed, and that the approach that is taken will be supported by teachers, pupils and parents across Scotland if and only if it leads to action.
The summit should meet without delay, and it should be inclusive.
I declare my interest as a former employee of East Lothian Council.
Does the member agree that, although there is much to be grateful for in the Conservatives’ holding of this debate and the agreement that seems to be extending across the chamber, the ending of violence in schools is a matter of urgency and delay must not come in the way of solutions being put in place?
I agree with my Labour colleague that the issue is a matter of urgency.
The summit should be inclusive. It should include young people, but let us please ensure that there is representation from beyond the usual bodies and voices. There should be an action plan. Teachers and pupils should start the new term, which is less than 100 days away, with the clarity of guidance that they need. Headteachers should feel confident that they and their staff have been heard and that political leaders have responded. The cabinet secretary should return to Parliament immediately following the summit and report the urgent actions that have been agreed. Members must be kept abreast of the outcomes of the summit.
Hearing from our teachers will be key. I want to quote Catherine Nicol, the president of the Scottish Secondary Teachers Association. She said that many teachers feel that providing education in our schools is
“now subordinate to managing disruption”.
She went on to say:
“At worst mob rule prevails in classrooms and corridors ... The number of violent incidents reported is increasing. A culture of accommodating the needs of the transgressor has become the default position in some places. Learners that do come to school to learn do not feel secure”.
Therefore, I cautiously celebrate the cabinet secretary’s announcement this week of a summit on school violence and disruption. However, we have demands to make of the cabinet secretary with regard to that summit.
First, the summit must meet within days. Secondly, before the summer recess, a statement must be made in Parliament on the outcomes of the summit. Thirdly, an action plan to tackle violence and disruption in schools must be ready before the start of the new school year. Fourthly, that action plan must include a new standard reporting system for cases of violence and disruption in all 32 local authorities; a plan to address the increasing issues with attendance; new guidance for teachers, staff and school leaders; and reform of the exclusions procedure to ensure that pupils who are excluded receive the support that they need.
My fifth point is that a funding package must be put in place for meaningful intervention to help every pupil who is a victim or a perpetrator of violence in school. Sixthly, a national helpline should be established to support teachers and staff who are afraid to report violence and disruption in their classroom or school. The cabinet secretary knows that such teachers exist in large numbers.
I remind the chamber that my wife is an additional support needs teacher.
Teachers in my constituency have told me of their frustration at the Scottish Government’s failure to back its policies with funding and resource to make them real. They tell me that they are particularly frustrated with a Government that blames the situation that the member is describing on local authorities and teachers, and especially with the Government suggesting that teachers are insufficiently trained in de-escalation and making them do more continuing professional development, which they do not have time for. Does the member share my constituents’ desire that, in her response today, the minister takes ownership of those policy decisions and does not shift the blame and the responsibility for remedy on to teachers and local authorities?
We have a little time in hand, but interventions will have to be a little bit briefer. I can give you some of that time back, Mr Kerr.
Liam Kerr makes a very good point. The Jenny Gilruth of last Tuesday probably conveyed that impression when she answered a topical question from my friend Jamie Greene, but I think that the Jenny Gilruth who sits before us in this chamber today, having embraced our motion and lodged a constructive amendment to it, is taking a different approach. I hope that that will be confirmed in her speech.
Does my colleague agree that the continued erosion of after-school clubs, youth clubs and extracurricular activities that has been perpetrated by this Government is a key driver of the escalation of school violence and poor mental and physical health in this country?
We have to make the school experience the holistic educational experience that many of us enjoyed when we were at school. That heritage is the birthright of all Scottish pupils and it should be made a reality, but it is not a reality across Scotland.
Scottish Conservative research has found that, since 2017, there have been almost 75,000 verbal or physical attacks on staff, 20,000 of which happened in the 2021-22 school year. It is a problem that seems to be getting worse.
One of the issues with gathering that information is the difference in recording standards between schools, which is why we demand a new national reporting framework. That is something that unions have been asking for and something that we, as political leaders, should expect of Government. The Government has not even collated, let alone published, those statistics since 2016. That omission must be urgently addressed and the figures published.
A pupil in a school in my area was violently attacked by fellow pupils. Her attackers shared footage of the incident on social media, so the pupil was not only physically injured but suffered mentally, knowing that everyone at her school had potentially seen the video of her being beaten up. Those responsible are still at the same school; the headteacher felt that they could not do anything about it, as did the police. The victim now attends school infrequently and suffers from severe anxiety when she does.
Teachers want a properly regulated classroom, but they feel that they are unprotected and potentially open to legal consequences if they act against violent pupils. Too often, our school leaders feel, as in this case, that they have no sanctions. That is a key issue for the summit. Pupils know it, teachers know it and parents know it.
Removing perpetrators from classrooms is a vital first step, but that cannot be the end of the story, because exclusions must lead to something else. The offenders need help, too, and returning them straight back into the classroom is not a workable solution. There needs to be somewhere for those disruptive and damaged pupils to go. They need help, not isolation.
We also have a crisis in attendance. Alongside that, there is a growing challenge of internal truancy, where pupils go to school but refuse to go to class. The language of rights has taught some children to say that their teachers cannot force them to go to class. There must be consequences for such disruptive and disrespectful behaviour. We need parents to be involved in resolving the issue. There should never be a culture of “What happens in school stays in school.” Parents must always be a part of the solution, but they can add to the problems that teachers are dealing with when they fail to back the teachers. Getting the teachers the tools and guidance that they need to deal with that will effect real change. Strengthening the authority of teachers will go a long way to resolving this important and difficult issue.
At decision time, we must—and I think that we will—unite every member of this Parliament, of every party, in supporting those who are entrusted with the teaching of our young people. We need to show them that we back them, that we appreciate them and—more importantly, with regard to this subject—that we have heard them. They need to believe that, at the summit on school violence, we will do something more than talk about getting them the help and support that they need.
The cabinet secretary told a teachers conference recently that she would work on a cross-party basis to bring about improvements in educational experience, outcomes and opportunities for our young people. Today, in supporting my motion, the Government in which Jenny Gilruth serves is making a start on keeping that important promise to teachers and uniting the chamber in tackling violence in our schools.
I move,
That the Parliament believes that no pupil, teacher or member of school staff should suffer physical or verbal abuse and that every child and young person has the right to an uninterrupted school day, free from violence and disruption; notes the impact that the current escalation of violence in schools has had on the teaching profession, especially in relation to retention and mental health; understands that evidence relating to violence in schools was last gathered in 2016, and therefore calls on the Scottish Government to address this matter urgently by collecting data and publishing findings on a regular basis, and believes that the Scottish Government must work with parents, schools, local authorities and unions to establish a nationwide school violence working group, that will produce a national framework for reporting instances of violence and disruption within schools, update guidance on exclusions laws and policies, ensure pupil support assistants are available and issue materials that will support parents and schools, assisting them in promoting acceptable behaviour and tackling violence and disruption.
15:00
I thank the Conservatives for the opportunity to discuss an issue that is of vital importance to the education of our children and young people. As the motion notes,
“no pupil, teacher or member of school staff should suffer physical or verbal abuse, and ... every child ... has the right to an uninterrupted school day”.
I whole-heartedly agree, and I give Stephen Kerr and this Parliament an undertaking that I will work across parties on this issue, because I know how important it is that we get this right for our children.
I want to give some context to the debate this afternoon. It was only in 1987 that the last area in Scotland banned the belt in school. In fact, the relevant legislative loophole was closed only with the passing of the Standards in Scotland’s Schools etc Act 2000. I remember being appalled as my principal teacher at the Royal High school in Edinburgh explained to me how, as a young teacher, she was taught how to belt a child: lined up, the new teachers would practice by hitting a desk. The Scottish Office approved a two or three-leather Lochgelly tawse, which came in different weights, and guidelines applied to its application. One such tawse hung in the staff room of the last school that I taught in. It was framed, and the sign below it read, “In case of emergency, break glass.”
I was reflecting on that memory on Sunday morning when I read this headline in Scotland on Sunday: “Gilruth told to get tough on classroom violence”. Earlier in the week, a former headteacher wrote in The Scotsman about
“some wee thug who terrorises kids at break”.
I want to start my contribution today by urging members to be careful in their application of language this afternoon. Maybe, when that headline was written, Scotland on Sunday did not mean its readers to think of the tawse, but that is where my mind went, and the people we are discussing today are children, not thugs. Let us all remember that.
I think that I was probably one of the last people in Scotland to get the belt, as it was abolished just after I left school—I am not sure whether there was a connection.
I completely agree with the cabinet secretary. We need to deal with the root problems that young people express through distressed behaviour rather than view punishment as the solution. However, my concern is that, sometimes, teachers go in a never-ending loop of restorative discussions with some pupils because there does not seem to be any alternative available. Will she be able to address that issue in the summit?
I can give you the time back, cabinet secretary.
I recognise Mr Rennie’s comments, although I will not comment on his experience in school. The issue that he outlines is reflected in some of my experience in the classroom. I recognise that schools need to put in place behaviour management policies that support their staff, and I agree that the experience can be deeply frustrating for classroom teachers. I heard that in Mr Kerr’s response about my comments to the teaching union’s conference on this very issue. Staff need to feel supported, and so do our young people.
I provide all of that context for where we are now, because we should all reflect on how behaviour in Scotland’s schools and the response from the authorities has changed in the past 40 years.
I have been in post for nearly two months and, during that time, I have made it absolutely clear that behaviour—that is broader than school violence—relationships and wellbeing in our schools are among my top priorities. That is why I have already engaged with the Association of Directors of Education, the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities and our teaching unions, and why I have visited a number of schools in the past seven weeks to ask the staff directly about their experiences of behaviour and about the culture in their schools following the pandemic.
Stephen Kerr hit on a number of relevant points, the first being attendance. I receive fortnightly updates on national attendance, and it is interesting to look at the changes in relation to the year groups who experienced the start of lockdown measures when they were going through, for example, the transition from primary into secondary school. We are starting to see some of that show up in attendance evidence. We also know that kids from poorer backgrounds are much more likely not to attend school and not to engage with the system, so it is important that we reflect in Government that there are different challenges for different pupils in different parts of the country.
Is the cabinet secretary confident that the data is identifying that small but, I would say, significant group of pupils who are struggling to return to school at all?
In all honesty, no, I am not, and I have asked officials for further advice on that. I receive the national picture, and it is broken down by local authority. I have asked officials for further advice on how we can get a more granular understanding of what is happening in our schools, particularly in relation to year groups. I recognise the point that the member makes.
In general, our schools are places of learning. They are sanctuaries for many young people that provide stability in an often chaotic world. I do not think that any of us should underestimate the impact of the pandemic on learning; we know that particularly for older—
Will the member take an intervention?
I will take the intervention from former teaching colleague Liz Smith, but then I would like to make some progress.
The cabinet secretary has just replied to me in a parliamentary written answer about pupil equity funding, giving me the updated figures. She knows that a very high percentage of that PEF money is being spent on extracurricular activities and outdoor education, which has a proven track record on improving behaviour. Does she agree that that could be looked at in her group?
I recognise that point, and I also recognise the member’s interest in the issue. I think that she is taking forward a member’s bill on that. I very much recognise the sentiment behind Liz Smith’s question, and I am happy to ensure that the summit will consider that in more detail.
The pandemic impacted on children’s learning. We know that it created anxiety and stress, and we know that that has impacted on behaviour in our schools. We also know that young people’s mental wellbeing improved when lockdown conditions ended, and that parents’ and carers’ wellbeing was also impacted. Lockdown was tough for our young people and we need to reflect that. I do not use Covid as an excuse in that respect, but we need to be mindful that Covid has changed the type of behaviour and the type of relationships that happen in our schools.
I go back to Stephen Kerr’s point about what is happening with attendance. What I do not see as cabinet secretary, because I get the national evidence base on attendance, is internal attendance challenges. For example, when young people get up and decide to leave a classroom and walk around the school, that is not captured at national level. Those are the things that I would like to pursue more broadly at the summit, because it is important that we talk about them at national level.
The majority of children and young people in Scotland are well behaved in school. I do not want to paint a false narrative, because relationships between our pupils and teachers are good. They have to be otherwise our schools could not operate, but I recognise that there are challenges post-Covid.
I make a very brief intervention to say that that is exactly why we must deal with the issue of school violence. The vast majority of our children go to school to learn, but they are having a disrupted learning day, which will ultimately result in a poor outcome for them if we do not act.
Cabinet secretary, I can give you the time back for the interventions.
I agree with Mr Kerr.
The Conservative motion talks about a working group. I am not against that suggestion per se, but we already have a working group in the Scottish Government on the issue—the Scottish advisory group on relationships and behaviour in schools, which I chaired two weeks ago.
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
I would really like to make some progress. I am now seven minutes in and have a number of other points that I would like to make—apologies.
That group includes representatives from COSLA and teaching associations, parents and carers, and it is jointly chaired by COSLA. We do not need another working group at this point; we need a call to action. Indeed, the chair of the National Parent Forum of Scotland told BBC Radio Scotland this morning that we need a wider community approach. We cannot expect schools to solve all those problems on their own.
The Government amendment proposes to convene a summit on behaviour in our schools, bringing together parents and carers, local councils, our teacher professional associations, young people and wider partners.
We need to trust our teachers, and we need to support them, and we have heard that point made in the debate today. That is why our councils, who have a statutory responsibility to deliver education, have a key role to play.
We should not tolerate a blame culture in our schools, as I discussed recently at the Scottish Secondary Teachers Association’s annual conference. If a member of staff is struggling with a challenging class, as Mr Kerr alluded to, they should not be made to feel that they are the problem; they should be supported.
Last week I addressed Parliament on our behaviour in Scottish schools research, which is currently under way. That research is critically important in building our understanding of exactly what is happening in our classrooms, including what underlying factors might be affecting behaviour.
This is the fifth wave of behaviour in Scottish schools research since 2006, and Stephen Kerr is quite right to say that the last one was in 2016. It should have been carried out in 2020, but, because of the pandemic, it was not. Since I have been in post, I have asked whether it is possible to have the information earlier. It is not, because of the way in which the data is gathered, but in the interim I accept the challenge to Government that we need to act.
The Government is already providing more than £2 million to support the delivery of a wide range of violence prevention activities in schools and communities. When incidents occur in schools, we accept that there should be an appropriate and consistent method of recording them. If members have not already appraised themselves of the inspection that Her Majesty’s inspector of education carried out in 2019, in relation to bullying, I ask them to please do so, because it shows a mixed picture in relation to how such incidents are recorded in schools. I suspect that there would be a similarly mixed picture on the recording of violent incidents in schools and more challenging behaviour generally. We need to address that at the summit.
I accept that the Opposition has gathered freedom of information data from individual local councils, but there are some challenges with that—for example, not all local authorities provided data in response to the request. I am also aware that councils use a variety of different approaches to gathering data on violent incidents—as I alluded to. We need to be mindful that the robust data that we gather from BISSR will give us a more accurate picture of the national approach.
Presiding Officer, I am conscious of the time.
I can give you a bit of time back for the interventions.
Thank you.
Excluding a child or young person from school—whatever the circumstances—is an extremely serious step, and it is one that no teacher would take lightly. We know that school exclusions do not impact all young people equally. Evidence shows that children from ethnic minority communities, those living in poverty and those with additional support needs are far more likely to be excluded. Exclusion can also have a significant impact on a young person’s learning and their future outcomes.
Currently, Scotland has record low levels of exclusions in school. The Opposition might argue that that, perhaps, is the problem, but the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development review of 2015 identified that Scottish schools are highly inclusive compared with those in other countries around the world. We should be proud of that. I do not want us to see record numbers of young people being excluded, because I do not accept that that is the answer, and I do not want us to demonise a generation of young people; we must not go backwards. However, I accept the need for Government to act.
Those at the chalk face are key. We need to remember that our teachers are skilled professionals. They work to defuse contentious situations daily—much as the Presiding Officer does in Parliament. Therefore, before summer recess, I will also convene a headteacher task force from across the education sector to consider school exclusions in more detail and to provide me with advice on suggested actions.
It is clear that responding to the issues presented by changes in behaviour and relationships in our schools will require a partnership approach, and it is right that we work together to develop solutions. Therefore, I will be listening for contributions from members with suggestions on what those solutions might be.
Our teachers need practical support in their classrooms. They also need back-up from management teams in schools. If incidents become more serious, they need to know that they have a supportive local authority that will work to support their professionalism and the children that we entrust to their care.
At the heart of today’s debate is a generation of young people who have grown up with two years of disruption to their formal education. Punitive responses to that trauma will not work; we need systems to pull together for the benefit of our children. That will be how we get it right for every child, and I am committed to engaging with every party to that end.
I move amendment S6M-09126.3, to leave out from “notes” to end and insert:
“recognises the impact that violence in schools has on teachers and school staff, especially in relation to retention and mental health; further recognises that evidence relating to violence in schools was last gathered in 2016, and that data collection is now underway, and that this will be published later in 2023 as routine publication returns to pre-pandemic arrangements; recognises that there has been a shift in school culture over the period of the COVID-19 pandemic that affects a wide range of issues, including violence but also extending to issues such as attendance, and agrees that the Scottish Government should work with young people, parents and carers, schools, local authorities and unions to host a summit on the issue of violence in schools, to identify the work that is now needed to ensure that the right national framework for accurately reporting instances of violence and disruption within schools is in place, the right guidance on exclusions laws and policies is available, and the right resources that are needed to support schools, parents and carers and young people themselves are available to assist them in promoting acceptable behaviour and tackling violence and disruption.”
Thank you, cabinet secretary. I wish those headteachers more success than the Presiding Officer is sometimes able to achieve.
15:13
The transformative power of a good, world-leading education system can never be overstated. I know that first hand. My experience is not unique and it was not without significant challenges, but it shows that, when challenges in education are overcome and our education system works, that really can give young people a fighting chance at a future. However, when the system does not work, that potential is wasted.
That is why I have found it deeply sad, in the short time that I have had to witness it up close recently, that Scotland’s once world-leading education system faces the challenges that we see and are discussing today, such as regular challenges to authority, persistent refusals to adhere to school rules, online bullying of teachers and pupils, increasing bullying and harassment in schools, misogyny, pupils wandering around corridors rather than learning in classes, and physical and verbal abuse.
I am afraid that that deepening worrying culture in our schools is a sorry symptom of failure at the hands of a Government that has not delivered on some of its promises, which could have helped to avoid the situation that we are in. In failing, it has not only let down staff and pupils; it has put the future and the next generation of our country in jeopardy.
In her publicised remarks this week, the cabinet secretary was correct in noting that schools are facing challenges in the midst of a cost of living crisis that followed three very tough years of a pandemic. However, she must also recognise that the impact of those challenges was deepened by the Government’s inaction on recovery and its lack of proper analysis and a plan to rebuild from the trauma of the pandemic in schools.
Of course, the pandemic and the cost of living crisis impacted schools, but the problem was growing long before the pandemic. In 2018, there were 17,602 recorded incidents of abuse towards teachers in Scotland. No one should ever be made to feel unsafe in their workplace. Alarm bells should have been ringing for the Scottish National Party long before the situation reached that point. Instead, five years later, it is only just admitting that there is a problem. Of course, we welcome the fact that it has now done so but, in the meantime, the situation has escalated. The National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers has estimated that the number of its members who have experienced verbal abuse by a pupil has increased by well over a third since 2019, and 16 per cent of its members have reported experiencing physical assault this year.
My fear is that, rather than working to solve the problems, the SNP has exacerbated them by failing to meet promise after promise. One of the earliest promises, which was made way back in 2007, was to reduce class sizes. Sixteen years later, the proportion of classes with more than 18 pupils in them is higher than it was back then. That situation is not helped by a drastic fall in the number of teachers, which has reduced by more than 900 in that time.
Teachers are well skilled in identifying and well placed to identify the challenges and needs of their pupils, but the strain on their resources and time has left them overstretched and hindered in their ability to do that.
A decline in the number of ASN teachers who are available to support pupils who need support against a cluttered backdrop of the confusing and overlapping legislation that surrounds transitions and access to additional support has made things worse. Teachers are left to pick up the slack, and too often the same is true of their pastoral duties.
That is why I welcome the SNP’s commitment to increasing mental health support and counselling in schools. Doing that would not only have lightened responsibility on teachers; it would have meant better support for young people.
Pam Duncan-Glancy mentioned mental health and support. Does she support our suggestion—our demand—that there be a national helpline just for teachers who face particular stress and who often feel that they cannot open up about it or that they are not getting the support that they would like from their school management? Does she agree that that form of helpline would be invaluable to some teachers who are currently suffering as a consequence of what they are enduring in classrooms?
I can give you the time back.
Thank you, Deputy Presiding Officer.
I thank Stephen Kerr for that contribution. I think that that suggestion could be very helpful. It would be crucial to do that work with the trade unions, so that we understand fully what teachers require. We definitely need to address the fact that some teachers and people who work in schools are worried about reporting incidents. Such a helpline could be a solution to part of the problem.
To return to the issue of better support for young people, the truth is, of course, that the picture of mental health support across Scotland is too varied. I think that the lack of consistency results from a lack of leadership by the Scottish Government.
Teachers are resilient. We saw that clearly in the way that they stepped up and got on with it during the pandemic. However, when their resources are stretched and support is lacking, that really hinders their ability to take preventative measures. Where they are able to do so, they strive to implement restorative practices. As we have heard, managing student behaviour has become increasingly difficult, not just because schools are still struggling to navigate in the aftermath of the pandemic, which meant that many pupils lacked routine and social contact, but because the Government has let schools down by not evaluating fully the impact that that has had on them or putting in place a strategy to address it.
The digital devices that were promised could have bridged the access gap, and the provision of bikes could have encouraged physical activity and improved mood. That would have helped, too. However, once again, those ideas have remained aspirations that were overpromised and underdelivered. I am afraid to say that a very disappointing circumstance has led us to this point. A failure so systemic that it cannot be ignored has led us to the dire situation that we are in and discussing today.
Will the member take an intervention?
I can take an intervention on that point if I can get some time back.
Please make your intervention brief, Mr Whittle.
Does Pam Duncan-Glancy agree that the strategy going forward must be long term and must tackle the problem of, and the reasons for, violence in a wider educational sense, and not just look at the current crisis?
I completely agree with that. We need to look at the big picture and consider the issue into the future, too.
We need to do all that we can to ensure that our schools are safe and secure learning environments and workplaces. It is high time that the Government took responsibility for fixing the issue. Therefore, although I welcome the cabinet secretary’s announcement that there will be a summit, I would appreciate her recognition in closing that that alone will not be enough. I have heard some commitments today in that regard that I am really heartened by, but they have come quite late, so actions must follow swiftly.
Trade unions, teachers, parents and pupils themselves have been pleading for action for years, and they really are desperate. They need more than just a talking shop or a photo op. I am quietly confident that we can push in that direction, but it must be a space for teachers, parents and pupils to participate meaningfully, to lead to a real plan to keep the classroom safe, and to require a comprehensive national strategy to combat violence in schools, to deal with the longer-term approach that we have just heard about.
The strategy must take account of the wider circumstances, such as the pandemic and the cost of living crisis, but also evaluate the impact of continued cuts to local authority budgets on those circumstances. It will have to address concerns around hesitancy in reporting incidents, as we have heard, for fear of damaging school reputation, by establishing a national framework for reporting. To do that, we must also be able to understand the true scale of the problem.
I urge the Government to do everything that it can. I welcome the cabinet secretary’s request to bring forward the research from the end of the year, but we can and should do something with the data that we have now. Trade unions have made that quite clear.
The battle against the problem needs leadership from the Government, which must come alongside transparent and open communication that will allow the widest possible engagement. It must also ensure that any outcomes are effectively implemented with the support of schools, pupils and parents.
I and Scottish Labour will always have high aspirations for our education system in Scotland, as we do for all the people of Scotland. That is why we must all unite today in our determination to make sure that our schools are safe, pupils are thriving, and teachers have the resources to ensure both. Together, we can create an education system that uplifts and empowers every child to have a better future.
I move amendment S6M-09126.2, to leave out from “establish” to end and insert:
“urgently develop and bring forward a national strategy for tackling violence in schools that will empower teachers and schools, ensure pupil support assistants are available, develop material that will inform parents and schools, tackle the growth in accessibility and circulation of harmful online content and produce a national framework for reporting instances of violence and disruption within schools; recognises that trade unions have been raising concerns about violence and risks to teachers’ safety in Scotland for a number of years; understands that the recent escalation in violence has not started overnight and that there are various factors that contribute to the circumstances where violent incidents may occur, including class sizes, a lack of mental health support for pupils, harmful online content, inequality and cuts to youth services, and calls on the Scottish Government to deliver on the promises that have been made to Scotland’s young people and ensure that any assessment of the current situation takes into account the wider circumstances facing pupils, teachers and parents, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the cost of living crisis and the underfunding of local services.”
15:22
I am a liberal. I believe in tackling the root causes of behaviour rather than simply punishing the symptoms. I support an approach that hunts for the best in our young people, but I refuse to ignore the unacceptable behaviour that traumatises young people and staff.
We have heard some of the figures. We need to have a health warning on some of the data collection details, but it is clear that recent numbers are at a five-year high, that the majority of incidents are in primary school, which surprised me, and that there is underreporting. The unions are concerned that staff do not think that it is worth reporting an incident on some occasions, so they just do not report. Therefore, the numbers could be even higher.
On the specific point in relation to the data that has been gathered by the Liberal Democrats, it shows an increase of less than 1 per cent in the number of incidents in primary schools between 2018-19 and 2021-22. I hope that Willie Rennie recognises that. I acknowledge that there is a challenge here, but we need to be pragmatic and realistic about the national picture when, in some instances in primary schools, that increase has been less than 1 per cent—it is not substantive in that regard.
I actually think that that reinforces our point that it is not a new problem. The pandemic has exacerbated the issue, but it has been there for some time. The minister helpfully makes that point for me.
I am afraid that, up until recent months, the political and education establishment has found this to be an inconvenient truth. Official figures have not been collected for years, and we will not get the new figures for months yet. The previous education secretary did not even turn up to her own specialist working group in December.
Education authorities often play it down because of a misunderstanding about the rights of children. I believe in getting it right for every child but, too often, that can mean getting it right for the violent child but not for every other child in the class. I believe that all children have rights.
The NASUWT says that nurture principles must not be used as a methodology to cover up abusive behaviour or indiscipline or to reduce public exclusion figures.
Some school leaders are concerned about the reputation of the school—I have experience of that myself—but I care more about the education and wellbeing of our young people and staff than I do about that.
Sometimes, social media are blamed for inspiring attacks, but that ignores the fact that the majority of attacks are never filmed and never shared. I do not think that we should shoot the messenger.
The time for excuses is over. We need to accept that there is a problem and that the problem has been around for some time. It is true that staff have reported an increase in distressed behaviour since children have returned from months of lockdown, but the violence existed before that. It is about time that we started to listen to those reports. Teachers should not have to return home at night battered and bruised, and parents deserve to know that their children will be safe at school.
The SNP loves a good summit; it also loves working groups and carrying out consultations on various things. Often, that is to hide the absence of action. However, I suppose that the new summit at least allows us to make the case for change.
I welcome the cabinet secretary’s change of approach. She made a good speech this afternoon, in which she showed an understanding of the issues. However, we need solutions. For me, that is about confidence, tools and resources. Teachers need to have confidence that the school leadership and the council have their back so that, when they ask for help, they will get it.
Outside the school, waits for mental health and autism assessments are far too long. In school, we need more staffing and classroom assistants. We need proper resourcing of additional support needs, which now cover one in every three pupils. That is an astonishing number.
Will the member take an intervention?
No—sorry.
There must also be a proper debate about how we apply the restorative approach. For the avoidance of doubt—I have already made this clear—I am not in favour of punishment; I am in favour of restoration.
Some say that schools are a soft touch, that they do not exclude enough, that the offenders must be punished and that the police should be called. It would be a sign of a failed system if the only answer was increasing the number of young people who are branded as criminals, probably for life. However, I hear reports that restorative conversations are too often seen as the only tool in the box. Teachers reporting persistent or more serious behaviour problems are trapped in a never-ending loop of restorative conversations with the same pupil and are given no support for more serious consequences for regular or serious misbehaviour.
A personalised solution—sometimes with individualised risk assessments—is required, because every young person is different. In some cases, the deployment of consequences—even microconsequences—is required to enforce the boundaries of unacceptable behaviour. Others do not understand consequences. In those cases, there will be little point in deploying those.
I have seen what works. In one struggling primary school—Aberlour primary school—the young people were given the tools to cope with the pressures of school and family life. However, Bannerman high school staff went on strike and Educational Institute of Scotland members in Northfield academy in Aberdeen balloted for strike action because they had had enough of dealing with violence and behaviour issues without adequate support. Quick as a flash, the resources for doing so were found. It should not take a crisis for the resource to be brought in.
For many staff, teachers and pupils, violence is a daily occurrence. Too often, they feel helpless and ignored. We must start listening and, more important, start acting.
15:28
We have already heard in the debate about the horrific statistics for the rise of incidents of violence in schools. However, teachers tell me that the statistics understate the problem. Willie Rennie is quite right: in many cases, teachers have simply given up reporting incidents, because they feel that the effort of filling in the forms is no longer worth while, that that is a pointless exercise and that nothing will change.
Let me just read a message that I received from a teacher in a primary school in my region. I will not name the school—it would not be fair to do so—but it gives a flavour of what is happening in a primary school classroom today.
She wrote:
“I was pleased to see that you are raising the issue of school violence at Holyrood. My school is simply no longer a safe place to work, and I do not believe that those in authority understand the scale of the issue.
We are, on a daily basis, sworn at, spat at, punched, scratched and bitten by children as young as five. We have books, chairs and tables thrown at us. Very young children trash classrooms and rip up other pupils’ work, causing them great distress.
I have colleagues who have had multiple trips to hospital as a result of attacks from a pupil. There are teachers in the school who have been off sick for weeks with physical injuries or with stress and anxiety. Some are literally too scared to come back to work.
This isn’t just an awful situation for the teachers, it is terrible for the majority of children who just want to get on and learn. Their life opportunities are being ruined by a small minority of disruptive children. The parents of these kids offer us no support, and in many cases, simply don’t have the skills to deal with their own children. The parents of the other children are up in arms about the situation.
What is so frustrating is that we lack the tools to deal with the problem. We are not permitted to exclude children and there is literally nowhere else for these kids to go, so they have to remain in school, no matter how bad their behaviour. ‘Getting it Right For Every Child’ is an absolute joke. We are letting down the children who can’t behave by not tackling the problem at root, and we are letting down every other child in the class who themselves are in fear of being attacked, and cannot concentrate on learning. I would encourage the Education Secretary to come and spend a day in a school like mine and see for herself what we have to put up with. It can’t go on like this.”
Those are not my words but those of a primary school teacher at a Scottish school. I know from conversations that I have had, which many other members will also have had, with teaching union representatives that her experience is by no means exceptional.
As we have already heard in the debate, it seems to be the case that, since Covid and the interruption of schooling or nursery for many younger children, the problem has got worse. However, it is clear that the situation cannot be allowed to persist.
So, what needs to be done? I suggest three things that need to be tackled. First, we must review the presumption against exclusion for those who have persistent behavioural problems. In her remarks, the cabinet secretary said that it was a positive that exclusions were at such a historically low level. I am not sure that many teachers would agree with that approach. Where there are children who are persistently disruptive or violent, it is simply unfair to the others in the class who just want to get on and learn in a safe environment that those children continue to be there.
Having taught disruptive classes in my previous life as a teacher, I recognise the point that Murdo Fraser is making in relation to exclusion and how that can impact on other students’ learning. However, is an increase in the number of young people who are excluded the answer? Will that meet those children’s educational needs or is there a better approach to framing support for them? I am not necessarily sure that having a huge increase in the number of exclusions would be a signal of success.
I will give you the time back, Mr Fraser.
The answer—I am about to come to precisely this point—is about what alternative provision is put in place for those children.
The second thing that I was going to say, which ties into my first point, is that the policy of mainstreaming children with serious behavioural issues needs to be reconsidered for the same reasons.
Thirdly—this addresses the cabinet secretary’s intervention—we must ensure that there is appropriate alternative provision for children who cannot be in mainstream education, for whatever reason. That might mean having dedicated units in schools or, alternatively, having separate schools for those whose behaviour means that they are a risk to others.
Importantly, there must be a distinction between two different groups. There are children who have serious developmental issues or learning difficulties, and they should not be lumped in with children who have behavioural or discipline issues, which happens too often. Those are two separate categories of pupils, but too often they are put in together, which is not to the benefit of the children in the first category.
Those are all practical steps that I hope the Scottish Government will consider. Like Stephen Kerr, I very much welcome the fact that we are having a summit. A summit is good, but it cannot just be a talking shop; it actually has to come up with concrete changes in policy that will then be implemented, because there is an epidemic of violence in our schools and it is getting worse. If we refuse to deal with it, we will be letting down a generation of children, and we are at risk of losing good teachers from the profession, so we must see action.
We still have a little bit of time in hand, but I do not think that I or subsequent Presiding Officers in the debate will be able to be quite so generous in giving back time for interventions.
15:35
Our schools, as workplaces and learning environments, must be safe. Physical force, verbal abuse or threats, including prejudice-related incidents, and damage to property are all forms of violence that are completely unacceptable. No one in our schools—no pupil, teacher or other member of school staff—should be abused, threatened or assaulted. The violence that is reported in the media that has prompted our recent debates is shocking and I am, of course, particularly concerned for any individuals who are harmed. No one should feel frightened or unsafe in their place of work or learning.
I note and accept the cabinet secretary’s comments on data. This is a serious matter that needs to be dealt with seriously, in a calm and considered way, with a proper understanding of the scale of the issue. Inflaming things will only cause more stress and anxiety to teachers, pupils and parents. I will not be alone in having had feedback from teachers that the manner in which we discuss education, and its subsequent reporting in the media, can really have an impact on them. I know that we all understand the pressures that teachers face and the vital work that they do every day in our classrooms, and I will be keeping that in mind today. I also acknowledge that the topic is not new to our skilled teaching workforce.
Local authorities have a statutory responsibility to provide education in our schools, and all Scotland’s schools and colleges should have strategies to address, prevent and deal with work-related violence, including verbal and physical abuse of staff. I am grateful to my local authority—North Ayrshire Council—for keeping me informed of the work that it is doing in this regard. In June 2023 it will introduce a new health and safety incident recording system, which it is anticipated will have an impact on the quality and quantity of data that is being collected through the incident reporting process.
The council has established a working group to address how health and safety incidents—in particular, those relating to violence towards staff and pupils—are reported and supported across educational establishments. The group, the remit of which has been agreed with trade unions, will carry out detailed data audit and analysis to focus attention on the areas where improvements can be made, and on the processes and procedures for handling incidents of violence in North Ayrshire schools and supporting those who are affected by it. That includes developing a consistent process to record, respond to and reflect on incidents, with the intention of reducing the frequency of incidents and increasing support for those who are involved and, importantly, raising awareness of and improving access to advice, guidance and training for all staff.
North Ayrshire Council has told me that the aim is that its education service will have reviewed and designed processes that ensure that staff are knowledgeable and confident in dealing with incidents of violence and in building positive relationships with young people, and that senior leaders will be confident in enabling staff to undertake professional learning in the area.
In my constituency, the issue is not about logging of incidents; it is about empowering teachers and giving them confidence and a safe space to do that. That is something that the Government can help to encourage.
I think that what Rachael Hamilton has said is perfectly reasonable.
The points about culture that the cabinet secretary made in her opening speech are important and illustrate why the issue is about much more than what goes on in school buildings. Covid lockdown and school closures were very hard on some pupils and some parents. There was a complex mix of changes and disruptions for children and young people to deal with. As is frequently the case, those with the greatest existing challenges will have been impacted the most.
In briefing me, my local authority confirmed that the additional support needs sector accounts for about half of all incidents that are reported to the council. Those incidents are due to distressed behaviours that are displayed by young people, with no intent to harm being shown on their part. In North Ayrshire, as seems to be common across the country, the number of such incidents following Covid has risen across all sectors.
In part, culture relates to behaviour, so it is important to look at things that drive aggressive behaviour, but we also need to look at broader issues including attendance. As has been mentioned, young people who, during lockdown, faced transition periods—for example, the transition from primary school to secondary school—who had caring responsibilities or who were shielding will have found the return to in-person schooling to be challenging.
Teachers are very well-trained professionals, but I recognise their frustration about what sometimes feels like an endless list of social woes, which we all have a responsibility to change, being landed at their door. Culture change requires society as a whole to respond. In that regard, it is welcome that the Scottish Government will continue to engage with trade unions and will publish updated material to show the national picture. Responding to the issues that are presented by changes in behaviour and relationships in our schools requires that partnership approach, so it is good to hear that the Government will be working with the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, the Association of Directors of Education in Scotland, trade unions, parents and pupils.
We all agree that any form of violence in schools is completely unacceptable. I think that we can also agree that it is clear that working in partnership is the way to promote acceptable behaviour, prevent violence and disruption and ensure that our learning institutions are safe and productive places for pupils and staff.
15:41
A lot has gone wrong in Scottish schools over the past 16 years. Although I welcome the Government’s announcement on the emergency summit—which was, of course, forced by the Scottish Conservatives—standards have slipped, with Scotland plummeting down international league tables on education. In primary schools, performance is declining in literacy, reading, writing, listening, talking and numeracy.
None of that is the fault of teachers: the quality of Scotland’s teachers is one of the few remaining shining lights in our education system. Although the SNP has done huge damage to the reputation of our schools, it has not yet managed to prevent the thousands of brilliant Scottish teachers from continuing to do what they do best.
I say “yet” because the trend is concerning. Teachers are under more strain and pressure than ever before because of the system that the SNP Government has created. They are suffering from more abuse and violence than ever before because of SNP Government reforms. It turns out that broken promises have consequences, despite the Government having for years acted as though that was not the case. The SNP promised to make education its number 1 priority, but—
I am keen to understand which of the Government’s reforms have led to increased violence in our schools. I am at a loss to understand what those reforms might be.
That will become apparent during my speech. I will give examples of whistleblowers in my constituency and I will set out the pressures and strains that they are under because of the curriculum and other issues following Government decisions on schools. If the cabinet secretary cannot see that—[Interruption.] I would advise her to, because many teachers are watching today.
The former First Minister promised to close the attainment gap between richer pupils and poorer pupils, but it is as wide as ever. What more evidence does the cabinet secretary want? The impact of those broken promises is clear in classrooms across the country.
The SNP has failed to live up to the lofty expectations that it set, and it has left teachers to pick up the pieces. They are being forced to manage somehow to deal with mountains of extra bureaucracy as a result of a flawed curriculum, as I highlighted to the cabinet secretary, who seems to be blind to such issues.
Will the member take an intervention?
No, thank you.
Teachers have been made to somehow keep standards high while the SNP cuts teacher numbers and centralises decision making. We have crumbling national agencies that are long overdue a radical overhaul. Teachers have been put in difficult—close to impossible—positions by 16 years of confused reforms that have tried to turn teachers into social workers who must place a far higher emphasis on children’s happiness than on their learning and development.
The SNP Government has forgotten that schools are places for discipline and that they are buildings for knowledge, skills and building character. The Government has left teachers without enough support, but it expects them to somehow set things straight anyway.
Our schools have wonderful teachers who do all that they can. They have struggled on and succeeded despite the Government’s reforms. They have helped tens of thousands of young people to get ahead and to go on to fulfilling careers. However, they have reached breaking point and are resoundingly saying that the situation cannot continue. The consequence of SNP failure to manage our schools properly is a teaching workforce that is subjected to appalling levels of abuse and violence.
As teachers try their hardest to somehow live up to the expectations that the cabinet secretary and the SNP have placed on them, they are met by a very small number of pupils who have been handed a free run to ruin the learning environment. I recently heard from a constituent who is a teacher about a steep rise in violence in her school—the “horror story”, as she put it, of a small group of kids rampaging through the school on a near-daily basis, throwing chairs, pouring glue over carpets and wielding weapons including metal bars. She described children who are unsafe, adults being in tears over violence and emotional stress, and some people having been sent to hospital. She said that her school has done all that it can, but the problem does not stop.
That would be bad enough if teachers had a way of speaking out about those issues. However, they feel that they do not. Teachers say that they have no real recourse when violence strikes; that they fear repercussions on their career; and that they feel powerless to prevent abuse.
As it stands, only in teaching does it seem to be considered to be okay for staff to be battered and abused without repercussions. The culture of silence that has developed about violence in schools must end. It is failing everyone—not only the teachers, but the majority of well-behaved pupils and concerned parents, too.
The Government must answer for its reforms, the impact of its changes on the relationship between teachers and pupils, and the promises that it has broken.
15:46
I want to first acknowledge the hard work, dedication and commitment of the staff working on the front line of our schools. There is no doubt that the past few years have been challenging for staff and pupils. Let us be in no doubt that many of those challenges have been years in the making and were a cause for concern raised with the Government time and time again.
As the National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers pointed out in a brief for the debate,
“Behaviour in schools is not simply a post-pandemic concern. NASUWT has been raising concerns relating to pupil behaviour for some time. Back in May 2019, NASUWT requested violence at work be placed on the agenda for discussion at the Scottish Advisory Group on Relationships and Behaviour in Schools (SAGRABIS).”
NASUWT goes on to say that
“While the Scottish Government committed to gather all existing resources in to one place, the drafted document fell short in terms of both its clarity and ability to support and affect real change for teachers on the ground.”
Given that there now seems to be a further commitment from the Government to work towards recording violence and behavioural incidents in our schools, one can only hope that this time it actually happens. The Government needs to listen to stakeholders as it develops its approach. As Martin Whitfield said in welcoming the fact that there is to be a summit, there is an urgency—the summit needs to happen as soon as possible.
More importantly, we need to know what actions and what funding will be brought forward to support teachers and, indeed, pupils. The majority of pupils in our schools are well behaved, but they become the victims of the pupils who do not behave and their education suffers as a result. I have lost count of the number of times that parents have approached me about behavioural problems in schools and told me that the pupils who misbehaved seemed to be rewarded. We really need to address that issue; it is not about calling for people to be expelled or suspended from school, but there has to be an alternative. We have to stand up for the majority who are behaving, who want to learn and who go to school to learn.
The failures of the Government have been highlighted already, including the failure to deliver on class sizes, teacher non-contact time, support for pupils with additional support needs and mental health support for young people, as well as the failure to address harmful online content, continuing inequalities and cuts to our youth services.
In our schools and across the entire education system, Scotland’s children are being let down.
I point to the answer to my recent question, which asked the Scottish Government what the average real-terms spending, based on current prices, was for primary and secondary pupils and pupils with additional support needs in each year since 2007. The response from the cabinet secretary highlights quite starkly some of the problems with school finances. Additional support for learning spending has fallen drastically over the past 10 years. There has been a consistent drop in nine of the 10 years from 2012-13 to 2021-22. The real-terms spending for additional support for learning per pupil has been cut by 35 per cent.
There was also a sharp decline in primary spending from 2010 onwards, which only recovered to pre-2010 levels last year. On top of that, there was a steady decline and then stagnation of spending on secondary education from 2008 onwards. That started to increase again only in 2018, but the latest spending is still not back to pre-2007 levels. Therefore, there has been a massive cut in spending on education in schools up and down Scotland. Against that financial background, is it any wonder that teachers are feeling overwhelmed? Is it any wonder that the Scottish Government has presided over a sharp drop in specialist teachers while the number of pupils with additional support needs has soared?
The number of specialist teachers supporting children with additional support needs in primary school has fallen from 858 in 2008 to 442 in 2022. Again, that is not acceptable. Put simply, it is not good enough. We need an education recovery plan that recognises the need for more additional support teachers and to address the teacher pupil ratio, to cut class sizes and to recognise the major pressures on our schools. The fact that the number of teachers in Scotland has fallen by 907 since 2007, with a drop of 92 in the past year, at a time when many probationary teachers say that they cannot get a job, should be a concern for everyone in the chamber.
Our amendment also highlights the cuts to youth services—youth clubs, youth support and youth workers—up and down Scotland; they have been cut to the bone. There are hardly any youth services left, so it is not just about the school but the support round about the school. We can do much better, so I hope that this summit is the start of that. I hope that the cabinet secretary is serious about this and that she will come back to Parliament and tell us what actions will be taken and how those are to be financed.
15:53
There is no doubt that today’s debate is an important one. People are in agreement across the chamber—we have heard that already.
The debate was no doubt triggered by the ugly events in Renfrewshire last week, but as we all know and have heard already, that was not an isolated incident.
Schools are places where students and staff should feel safe without worrying about acts of physical or mental aggression. However, we are now regularly seeing reports of violence in primary and secondary schools, with reports suggesting a surge of violence compared with even pre-pandemic levels.
I have no doubt that every member in the chamber, regardless of whether they are speaking in the debate, has engaged with casework involving a student or staff member who has contacted them as their MSP about acts of violence and intimidation in their place of study or work, particularly in schools. Of course, that is not right. I have met many students, parents and administrators whose lives have been appallingly affected by violent acts in schools, and we can all agree that violence is never acceptable and that the safety of pupils and staff is absolutely paramount. That includes all pupils.
I welcome the cabinet secretary’s opening remarks, in which she cautioned us about our use of language in approaching this debate because we are talking about children.
In looking at the reasons for the increased instances of these events, we must consider and be mindful of a number of things.
Although we are talking about behaviour in schools, that behaviour does not occur in a vacuum. Circumstances at home and other external factors such as the influence of social media are often leading causes for individuals to be violent in a school setting. Schools can do very little to address that and yet teachers are still expected to defuse challenging scenarios on a daily basis. I take the opportunity to thank the schools in my constituency for their engagement with me on the issue, when I have had to speak to them about it, and their desire and ability—on a lot of occasions—to respond quickly and innovatively to those situations. There are some great examples of that across the country and I have seen some of it in action in Coatbridge and Chryston in particular.
As we have heard, the Scottish Government devised a national approach to bullying in 2017 with the launch of? “Respect for All’, which provides a holistic framework for adults working with children and young people to address all aspects of bullying. The Scottish Government still places emphasis on preventing bullying in the first place. The education secretary recently stated that
“The preventative approach is critical: children who grow up with less trauma, surrounded by love, are much more likely to fulfil their potential and enjoy wellbeing”.
I completely agree with that quote. It is good to see that the Scottish Government remains committed to working together with COSLA on the Scottish advisory group on relationships and behaviour in schools. Engagement with local authorities must be a core part of Scotland’s approach to resolving violence and bullying in schools. As I said, there are great examples across the country. I take the opportunity to highlight the example of Coatbridge high, which has done a lot of work to tackle bullying in schools. I encourage the cabinet secretary, if she has time, to pay a visit to that school or to any other school in my area.
Our local authorities have a statutory responsibility for the provision of education in our schools, so they must remain a key partner in combating this issue. As well as the discussions with COSLA, I welcome the education secretary’s discussions with the Association of Directors of Education in Scotland and the teaching unions on the issue.
Further Government support can be seen with the investment of more than £2 million in violence prevention. Projects that are supported by that large investment include the mentors in violence prevention project, which is delivered in schools and supported by Education Scotland; the medics against violence project, which runs several violence prevention programmes targeting the impacts and consequences of violence; and the no knives, better lives engagement programme through YouthLink Scotland, which is focused on preventing violence and knife carrying among young people and provides resources and support to local partners. That is a particularly welcome initiative in my area. We know that there have been issues with knife carrying in the west and central belt of Scotland historically. I therefore completely welcome that initiative.
Although I commend the Scottish Government for the work done so far, I also believe that headteachers, teachers and other school staff and local authorities are best placed to decide how to address bullying in their schools. Schools are expected to develop and implement an anti-bullying policy, which should be reviewed and updated regularly. For us to entrust schools with that responsibility, we must make sure that they are fully informed and have the latest information to hand.
Fulton MacGregor has mentioned a lot of initiatives, all of them very worthy. Does he also agree that there should be additional support for teachers, who sometimes feel cornered by what is happening in their experience in the classroom? Would he support the call that we have made today for a confidential national helpline through which teachers can get the help that they need to deal with the situations that they are trying to cope with in our classrooms?
I do not disagree with the premise of what Stephen Kerr said. Who could? The premise is simple, but this is a very complex issue—which he knows, as he has brought it to the chamber. The cabinet secretary has found a lot of agreement with him on it and members on these benches are finding agreement with him on it. We need to work together to find the best solutions.
The point that I was making before the intervention is that, although there will be a national framework, it is down to schools to decide how to tackle these issues in their own communities, because all our communities are very different. I see that I am close to the end of my time, Presiding Officer.
The motion calls on the Scottish Government to increase data collection and publication. I agree with that sentiment, as recording and monitoring helps organisations identify recurring patterns, which enables early intervention and appropriate support at a local level. The Scottish Government has stated that updated material showing the national picture in relation to the issue will be published later this year.
I had other things to say, but I will very briefly conclude, as I am over my time. The issue of violence in schools is a grave one. I thank the Conservatives for bringing the motion to the chamber and the Government for its amendment. The upcoming review must revisit the issues of the definition of bullying and the changing world of online bullying. We must get to the bottom of it and continue—as Parliament is doing today—to work together to tackle this very serious issue facing our young people.
15:59
I am honoured to contribute on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives to this important and much-needed debate on violence in schools as part of our party business.
I am not surprised that the debate is coming from this side of the chamber, because more than a year ago, when I asked the then Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills what action the SNP would take on the abuse that teachers experience, she abdicated responsibility and said that she would step in if there was
“a requirement for further support”.
In truth, however, we are long past that point.
As my colleague Stephen Kerr pointed out, there have been almost 75,000 verbal or physical attacks on teachers and staff since 2017, and our schools have become not just a torturous place for pupils and staff but dangerous, too. On around 200 different occasions in the past year, dangerous weapons were seized from school pupils. This much is clear: we need action, and we need it now.
Earlier this year, I visited a constituent at home, and I heard at first hand about the harrowing experience that a small girl went through. She reported an incident involving a dangerous weapon, which went unnoticed in a supervised area. After doing some digging, her father realised that none of those incidents had been reported on SEEMiS in line with Government policy.
This is not about just one isolated incident, however. The report that was published by the Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights states that 61 per cent of schools have not reported on bullying and equalities using the SEEMiS recording system.
Will the member take an intervention?
Would I get the time back, Presiding Officer?
We have a very small bit of time in hand.
I am happy to take the intervention.
I am grateful to Pam Gosal for giving way. Does she agree that there is also a challenge between the reporting that is required under health and safety legislation as an employment matter where an injury or risk occurs, and the reporting of the dangerous behaviour or unusual behaviours in school that SEEMiS captures?
Absolutely—it is very important that both are reported on.
I cautiously welcome the cabinet secretary’s support for Scottish Conservatives’ proposals to ensure that the right national framework for accurately reporting incidents of violence and disruption in schools is in place.
Another parent in my region, whose child was bullied daily, asked the school to intervene, but the bullying only got worse. The pupil had to be given a hall pass to be excused from classes early to avoid a kicking. What message does that send to the bullies and to those who are being bullied? To the former, it suggests that they can bully without consequences, but to the latter, it suggests that they should simply hide.
Some educators are so scared even to take action or speak up about such things, because they might end up facing a backlash from pupils and parents. They should not be frightened to do the right thing.
I am pleased, therefore, that the Government has listened to our calls to ensure that the right guidance on exclusion laws and policies is out there, and I appreciate commitments to understand the root causes of distressed behaviour.
We in the chamber all know that bullying causes untold damage to mental health and to our children’s ability to learn. I go back to the two stories that I have shared with members. The young girl to whom I referred grew anxious and was unable to attend a single class in 18 months. The young boy became withdrawn and, after he moved school, his parents soon discovered that he was around two years behind pupils his age. For too long, under the SNP, education was, despite being hailed as a priority, always on the back burner. However, after hearing the contributions from members today, I am confident that there is a cross-party commitment to introduce a violence reduction plan urgently.
The 16 years of neglect that we have had under the SNP Government has left children having to fend for themselves and has left teachers as punching bags. That is why today’s Scottish Conservative debate on violence in schools is timely and necessary. I truly hope that the SNP listens to all the parents, children and teachers who will be watching the debate who have suffered the consequence of violence in schools, and that it will right that wrong by creating a national framework for reporting; introducing an immediate violence reduction plan; reviewing the policy and guidance related to exclusions; and assisting parents and schools to tackle violence and disruption in the classroom.
16:05
I refer to my entry in the register of members’ interests. As a former primary school teacher, I retain my passion for education, and I visit schools across my constituency almost every week. I like to know what is going on in the system because it matters to young people and to all of us in this place and beyond. I acknowledge that violence in schools is a problem—I will not deny that, and I hope that nobody here would do so—so I welcome the debate.
There has been an uptick in poor behaviour in our schools since lockdown, and that has created serious challenges. However, the reality is nothing like the lawless out-of-control environment that has been portrayed by some Opposition members. The vast majority of our classrooms are happy learning environments that are supported by a rights-respecting agenda.
It is very important that Kaukab Stewart recognises that Opposition members are not making up stories. We are not trying to paint a false picture. We are trying to convey something that is authentic and true. It is not right to say otherwise. Does Kaukab Stewart agree that there is a problem, which is growing, and that we should tackle it and take action today?
I thank Mr Kerr for that intervention. I absolutely acknowledged that violence in schools was a problem. However, I also wish to remind members that the vast majority of our classrooms are happy learning environments. We must remember that.
The problem of violence in schools is not only a Scotland-wide problem; similar trends are being seen in England and Wales, and across the world, as a side effect of the measures that were necessary during lockdown. We must deal with the additional challenges that have come down the line. If we do not get this right, as well as letting down our current dedicated teachers, we risk stifling an entire generation of young people, who need not only our love and care but clear boundaries, consistency and support.
I hope to offer some constructive suggestions based on my experience and the experiences of people who are still working in the profession. The feedback that I am getting is that some children who have returned to full-time physical attendance at school are seriously struggling to get back into school routines. For some, that has resulted in issues with poor behaviour. Unfortunately, on occasion, it has resulted in horrendous incidents, which colleagues have mentioned, when others have been made victims and have faced terrible harms. It is understandable that any parent of any child who went through that would be furious—sickened, even.
In my view, when a bullying incident occurs, there are at least two victims—the bully and the bullied. I have yet to meet a happy child who misbehaves, who picks on others, who acts out or who disrupts class. I welcome the Conservatives accepting that a summit would be a better place to bring everyone together to secure the support that is required: support for the pupils who are the victims; support for teachers who are also victims; support for children with their behavioural challenges; and, importantly, support for the parents of those children as well. I have yet to meet a parent or a household member who is falling short in meeting a child’s needs who is not struggling severely in other areas of their lives, such as with finances, bereavement or adverse childhood experiences, which inevitably have an impact.
Mental health support is the key element to reaching a solution. Child psychologists, among other professionals, are well placed to identify trauma and offer solutions, perhaps even working with entire family units. I would be grateful to know more about what plans the Scottish Government has to extend mental health support in our schools to children with behavioural issues, as well as those who have been victims of bullying or violence, and, of course, their families.
Will the member give way?
I need to press on.
I want to talk about the reporting of incidents and their causes. I agree that there must be a national framework through which we can better understand the data around incidents. However, I would stress that the current systems that are in place can be—and are—laborious and time consuming, and they can take teachers away from the jobs that they are trained to do. I would be grateful if, in summing up, the minister could provide an assurance that that will be discussed with the teaching profession and trade unions to find solutions that give us an accurate picture of classroom and playground behaviour but streamline the reporting procedure, allowing teachers to do their job.
We need to talk about trigger thresholds. If a teacher is facing consistent issues in the classroom, a local authority can step in and offer targeted support. In my view, the trigger threshold must be much earlier than it is currently.
As I mentioned, counselling and support should be consistently provided to the teacher and pupils involved, and, where possible, their families.
All behaviours are forms of communication, and teachers are well-trained professionals who know how to recognise when a child is in distress. What they need support with is around having that wider conversation about how to accommodate and deal with children’s support needs, working with school policies on positive relationships that are based on mutual respect.
I am running out of time, but I ask you to indulge me, Presiding Officer. There is a poem by Dorothy Law Nolte about how a child lives. The bit that struck me was this:
“If a child lives with criticism, he learns to condemn.
If a child lives with hostility, he learns to fight.”
It is up to us to come up with the solutions. The poem goes on:
“If a child lives with fairness, he learns justice.
If a child lives with security, he learns to have faith.”
We need to have faith in a secure education system where everyone is free to thrive.
16:12
I was genuinely and pleasantly surprised to see the Conservatives break from their tradition for Opposition education debates and propose something that is genuinely constructive, and which gives Parliament an important opportunity to discuss a really serious issue. [Interruption.] I see that the Conservatives are enjoying that reflection. I welcome the fact that they have accepted the Government amendment.
As the motion says, every young person and member of school staff has the right to a school day uninterrupted by violence and disruption. Clearly, that is not the reality for everyone. Last year’s report on life in Scotland for LGBT young people certainly confirmed that. Seven in 10 gay and lesbian young people have been bullied at school; for bisexual and trans young people it is just under six in 10. The percentage of queer young people who feel confident reporting bullying in schools has plummeted in the past decade, to just one in four. One in five trans young people surveyed was forced to leave school, college or university as a result of the bullying and bigotry that they faced.
It does not take a genius to work out why the situation for many trans pupils in our schools is getting worse rather than better. Some members of this Parliament, including those condemning bullying in our schools, need to seriously re-examine their own conduct over the past few years and consider the consequences when they dehumanise trans people and question the very validity of their existence. What did they think was going to happen? This is the result.
I wonder whether Mr Greer will agree with me on this. Alexander Stewart and I, on behalf of the Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee, have just come from Glasgow, where we met three 12-year-old girls who were victims of violence by other girls. Two were left unconscious in pools of blood and gore. In each case—I have not heard this reflected in the debate—the incidents were filmed by friends of the perpetrator. The police and the school accept the prima facie evidence, but say that nothing can be done. Despite the evidence, the violence continues. Is that not a problem that we have to get to grips with?
I could not agree more with Mr Carlaw, and that was a welcome reflection because the reality is that, in terms of the current legal framework, there is no reason not to take action. We need to get to the bottom of why schools and other authorities such as the police believe that they are unable to do so. I can speak from personal experience of seeing action not being taken when I was a pupil, including instances when I was the victim of bullying.
There are wider lessons to be learned from the progress that has been made towards our schools becoming LGBT inclusive. The motion and the Government’s amendment both mention the importance of recording instances of violence and disruption. Importantly, the cabinet secretary’s amendment specifically mentions the need to accurately report those instances.
The Time for Inclusive Education campaign brought the issue of reporting to the fore when it made the point that the number of recorded instances that mention a protected characteristic such as sexuality was far lower than the number of instances that queer young people were reporting to them. It was clear that schools were reporting instances of bullying and violence where bigotry was the motivating factor without including that key information. I suspect that that is absolutely the case with misogynistic violence against young women and girls, where a report of any kind has even been made—I will come back to that point in a moment.
Fife Council has developed a robust system for accurately reporting instances of bullying and harassment in their schools. I believe that that system is separate from the SEEMiS service, and I encourage the Government and COSLA to engage with Fife Council on what the rest of the country can learn from that approach. That might make for an appropriate agenda item at the upcoming summit.
Given the consensus around the importance of collecting accurate data, I must again ask MSPs who spent months undermining the pupil health and wellbeing census to take a moment to think about the impact that their opportunism has had. Last year’s census was undoubtedly badly impacted, and its response rate lowered, as a result of the manufactured culture war nonsense that was pushed by those who should absolutely have known better, leaving us with less of exactly the kind of data that we need to tackle this problem.
Ross Greer is badly misjudging the tenor of this debate. This is not a moment for that sort of gratuitous speech; it is a moment for we parliamentarians to unite and welcome what we are going to do to resolve this issue, which is a rising problem across Scotland. I think that Ross Greer needs to think about the tone and the tenor of what he is saying—it is not good.
If Mr Kerr wants to reflect on tone and tenor, there are members behind him whose tone and tenor he can certainly reflect on. I am reflecting on the fact that we do not have essential information on the experience of young people in our schools in relation to bullying because of a manufactured culture war issue around the health and wellbeing census.
In the Glasgow City Council area, we had a 51 per cent response rate. Within that, we found out that 12 per cent of pupils in the area had been physically hurt by a bully in the past year. However, we do not know about the other 49 per cent of pupils in Glasgow, because of the manufactured nonsense around the health and wellbeing survey. I hope that certain members will reflect on that. I did not even mention which political party I thought responsible, but Mr Kerr’s intervention is telling in that regard.
Will the member take an intervention?
I should be closing, but I would feel guilty if I did not take the intervention.
Actually, Mr Greer, you should start to think about concluding your speech.
I understand, Presiding Officer.
Before finishing, I need to point out that the motion—well intentioned as it is—does not mention young people as one of the groups to work with in tackling violence in our schools. I am sure that that was just an oversight, but it is essential that young people are active participants in these discussions, not just the topic of conversation. If we want young people to feel respected and safe in our schools, they need to be part of the conversation about how we make our schools safer—a point that, I am glad to say, is reflected in the Government’s amendment.
I welcome the fact that we appear to be developing a consensus in Parliament this afternoon. It has made it clear to those who are watching that the Scottish Parliament and all of its members stand with the victims of this violence, whether they are members of staff or pupils. I hope that that will provide some reassurance for them.
16:19
I refer members to my entry in the register of members’ interests, which states that, until the elections last year, I was a councillor in Aberdeen City Council, a post for which I received remuneration.
We can all agree that any form of violence anywhere, but particularly in our school estate, is unacceptable. As a parent whose daughter was on the receiving end of taunts and emotional bullying at school, I know how important it is to protect our young folk from bullying and intimidation. Within and outwith our school estate, the safety of our pupils and our staff is paramount.
However, I have to say that the Tory motion does little other than tar all young folk with the same brush, and that is a very dangerous path to take. Never has a saying had more meaning than “it takes a village to raise a child”. We all have a collective responsibility when it comes to our children.
Will the member take an intervention?
Will the member take an intervention?
Do I have time to take an intervention?
A very brief intervention. Who are you giving way to?
I heard Mr Kerr, not Ms Gallacher; I do not mind.
Stephen Kerr.
The point about the motion is ridiculous, because her Government has pretty much copied it word for word. It changes only one or two words. I do not know what the member is getting at; she is accusing her own Government of being anti-young people, which we on this side of the chamber certainly are not.
Absolute rubbish—I was not doing that. I hear the tone of language that is coming from the other side of the chamber, and I have not once in the debate heard from them about the children who want to learn.
The more that you tell young folk that they are bullies or violent, the more they will begin to think that they are and the more they will act as though they are. We should be talking up our children, not talking them down.
Listening to the language of some members in the chamber today, I am disheartened that some appear to want headlines rather than solutions. Scotland’s focus on progressive preventative action remains paramount, and the Scottish Government is taking specific action to engage with young folk to prevent further violence and harm. The Tory motion fails to mention that a range of different factors can impact on children’s behaviour in school, and those factors are often external to the school community.
Teachers are professionals who are skilled in defusing challenging scenarios on a daily basis. Although it is clear that those teachers need support to respond to challenging behaviour, it is also clear that the examples of extreme events that have been reported in the press must be treated very carefully, given that we are talking about children. It is also well known that many of those stories are sensationalised through attention-grabbing headlines. As leaders, we must be cognisant of that.
Headteachers, teachers and all other school staff and local authorities are best placed to decide how to address bullying in our schools.
Will the member take an intervention?
No—I do not have time.
Our local authorities have a statutory responsibility for the provision of education across our school estate, a fact that we in the chamber should know well, given that many of us come from a local authority background. The Scottish Government works closely with local authorities to tackle violence and bullying in schools. That work is supported by a wider investment of more than £2 million on violence prevention. The Scottish Government also supports Scotland’s national anti-bullying service, respectme, which provides advice and resources to schools, parents, carers and young folk. That commitment is important.
We must not forget that, whether we like it or not, social media and online platforms are a big part of our young folk’s lives. Those platforms have a responsibility to ensure that they do everything in their power to help tackle bullying. We must not treat online bullying differently from face-to-face bullying. We address online bullying effectively when we address it as part of our anti-bullying approach, not as a separate area of work or policy.
The Scottish Government rightly takes online safety incredibly seriously and continues to liaise with law enforcement agencies to ensure that they have the powers and resources to tackle any incidents of criminality. However, regulatory responsibility for social media lies with the UK Government, and the Scottish Government has limited means of intervention. The UK Government must call on social media companies to improve their standards and sanctions when it comes to removing material that promotes violence, and we must back it on that call.
Yet again, the Scottish Government is constrained when it comes to taking real action on bullying—this time on the online safety of children. Despite that, in 2022-23 the Scottish Government is providing more than £2 million to support the delivery of prevention activity across Scotland. Supported projects include mentors in violence prevention, which is delivered in schools and supported by Education Scotland; Medics Against Violence, which runs several violence prevention programmes targeting the impacts and consequences of violence; and the No Knives, Better Lives engagement programme through YouthLink Scotland, which focuses on preventing the incidence of violence and knife-carrying.
Diversity and equality are at the heart of the policies that underpin education in Scotland, and I ask the cabinet secretary that that will remain our approach. Bullying must be addressed, but that must be done through prevention and understanding the root causes of behaviour, not through the demonisation of all young people.
16:25
I am not sure which debate Jackie Dunbar has been in today, but it is not the one that I have been in, that is for sure. She can shake her head, but let me say to her that she should not confuse members on the Conservative benches sharing the real lived experiences of young people and teachers with storytelling and manufactured grievance on our part. Jackie Dunbar needs to hear the reality, which is that the only manufactured grievances that I have heard this afternoon have come from those on the SNP benches.
It should not be those on Opposition benches using Opposition time to debate this. It should be done in Government time, and the Government knows that very well—which is why the minister has a sheepish look on her face.
Will the member take an intervention?
In a second. I have important points to make.
Members across the chamber have raised these issues repeatedly. They have raised very serious incidents. I raised one at topical question time, last week, as the cabinet secretary will recall. Every time we have raised these issues, we have been met with the same or similar responses—time after time. When we have raised these issues in the chamber, ministers have said that they are isolated cases. No—they are not. They told us that they are issues for individual schools. No—they are not. We were told that local authorities should tackle this. No—they should not. In fact, it is best illustrated using the cabinet secretary’s response to my topical question on a very serious situation that happened in my region—a case that I will not go into. She said:
“Yes, they happen—but they are not the norm.”
The reality that we have heard about this afternoon—hour after hour, from member after member, about case after case—is that this is the norm in Scotland. Far too many teachers are having their workplace disrupted, and far too many pupils are having their learning disrupted. The status quo is clearly causing harm for far too many. People are desperate, which is why we make no apologies for bringing the issue to the chamber this afternoon. There have been 75,000 attacks in schools during the past year, which is not a few incidents, and 200 dangerous items have been seized from young pupils, which is not a few items.
I put a shout out on social media yesterday, in which I challenged people to come and share their own real lived experiences. I asked teachers and pupils—anyone who wanted to participate in today’s debate—because we have a voice and they do not. I have to say that the response was immense, and I am sure that the same will be true for other members who asked for responses ahead of today’s debate. Every single person who responded asked us to please not share their name or the name of the school, such is the fear that exists about raising issues of this kind.
I would simply say that the culture of fear has to stop. Teachers fear speaking out because of the repercussions in their school; schools fear speaking out because they do not want to admit that there is a problem; and local authorities fear speaking out and admitting that there is a problem because of the reaction that the Government might have.
Here is what some of them had to say. This is the reality. A teacher who worked as a supply teacher got in touch to say that he had been attached 10 times in just three years. That is not a few times; that is life changing. It is no wonder that people are leaving the profession. Raising these issues is not talking the profession down. Instead, by raising these issues in Parliament, we are standing up for the profession.
Another real-life story came from a parent who got in touch. I will not read out the whole email, but what she told me was utterly horrendous. Her 15-year-old son was subjected to an unprovoked attack by a group of seven boys on a school bus. She asked me to share the story and she told me of many other incidents involving her son, two of which involved knives. She said to me:
“All of those incidents were not addressed in any meaningful way”.
She said that her son is petrified and that he will not go to school, so he is missing out on his learning while his attackers carry on with theirs. That underlines the deep-rooted problem, which is why we have to talk about it. The school responded that it could not do anything about the attack because it happened on a bus, and the bus drivers will not do anything about it because they are petrified, too. Bus drivers are being attacked on the way to and from school, and the police rarely get involved.
The member will need to conclude soon, because we have no extra time in hand.
The Government will not like to hear it, but many factors are involved, and a perfect storm of events over the past couple of years has led to the situation. A reduction in behavioural support staff in schools, a failure to reduce classroom sizes, a loss of campus officers, a loss of locally funded police officers and the ratio between teachers and pupils are all factors that have come into play. The Government has put its head in the sand and refused to listen, but it cannot ignore the voices of teachers, pupils and parents who have all shared their horrendous experiences.
Of all the party business and motions that we have brought to the chamber of late, this is the one that we should be most proud of, because it was long overdue and it is much needed. It is always a shame that the Government talks about these things only when it is under pressure or embarrassed into doing so. That must change. I support the motion in Stephen Kerr’s name.
I advise members that we have now used up all the extra time that we had. So, although members are perfectly free to take interventions, if they do so, no extra time will be added back and they must absorb the time of the intervention within their allocated time.
16:31
I, too, agree that no pupil, teacher or member of school staff should suffer any kind of abuse. The recent incident at a central belt high school, where three teachers had to receive medical treatment and a 14-year-old pupil was given medical assistance in an incident that involved an ex-pupil, horrified everyone. No-one should have to go through that experience—I know that we all agree on that.
The minister took many questions on that incident and the wider issues that are involved, and she spoke to a number of the points that are raised in the motion. Her replies clearly showed that the Government takes the issue seriously. She has met and raised the matter with the Association of Directors of Education in Scotland and, as chair of the Scottish advisory group on relationships and behaviour in schools, she has raised the matter with COSLA and trade union representatives. She also informed members that the Scottish Government is currently gathering evidence to help it to better understand behaviour in schools at a national level through research on behaviour in Scottish schools.
I turn to a key ask of today’s motion. A number of weeks ago, the minister asked for an update on the research on behaviour in Scottish schools and informed the chamber that she will be able to access that data in the autumn, at which point she will be in a position to update Parliament. I genuinely understand the frustration and the strong feeling, because we all have to get the correct information so that we can go forward and change the bad situation. Of course, we all want to have the data as soon as possible, but we have to make sure that the approach is right and that we deal effectively with this very real issue.
That measured approach is definitely the right one. We need to work together with pupils, parents, teachers, local authorities, COSLA and other stakeholders and listen to them about what works, what does not work and what they want and need. By working together, we will get it right for every child and every teacher, and that is the right thing to do.
I also think that we have to be measured and careful in how we characterise the issue. We need to be extremely careful not to stigmatise children by painting a picture that such behaviour is the norm. As was said earlier, the majority of school kids are well-behaved, attentive, keen learners, and we need to appreciate that, reward it and acknowledge it. We need to listen to them and understand how that environment works for them and how we can further foster a positive learning environment for everyone. On the flipside, we need to listen to those who are not as keen and for whom the environment does not work as well, to understand why and to incorporate that into future education strategies.
Last week, I saw many members and the Presiding Officer get hands on at the construction skills demonstration outside in the gardens, which was sponsored by Gordon MacDonald and Alex Rowley, on what was yet another sunny day.
The event saw construction skills demonstrations by young tradespeople, in which school pupils received a mini masterclass in key trades to help them to make an informed decision about their career choices. Speaking to some of the pupils, I was struck by how the traditional learning model had not really appealed to many of them, but they got really keen when doing hands-on work.
I spoke to the organisers about the support for the scheme from trade unions and about what support there was from local authorities. I was told that some local authorities are very supportive of and very positive about the scheme; others not so much. I was sorry to hear that Glasgow was mentioned as one local authority area where the organisers needed more support to get into every school and to reach out to every school child. Will the minister perhaps look into the issue and get back to me regarding what Glasgow needs to do to offer those choices for the many for whom traditional learning is perhaps not their thing?
When speaking to the organiser from City of Glasgow College, I was reminded of how many of us chose an alternative route to employment, to do something that we got a lot out of. My grandfather was a stonemason in the building of the Kelvingrove art galleries and the Kelvin hall. The family of the organiser from City of Glasgow College had also been involved in that work. Those people shared the same opportunities, and our kids in this century deserve to share them, too.
We all deserve the same chances in life. Let us work together to get it right for every wean.
16:36
I welcome this debate on a topic that is rarely discussed so openly in the Parliament, and I welcome some of the honest debate from members today.
I am sure that, for many, the opportunity to see these issues addressed at a national level will be refreshing, and I trust that we will continue to shine a light on these very serious matters in the weeks and months to come.
I know that many teachers and support staff have raised concerns with all of us about this very subject—as we have heard—and they are right to do so. Not enough is being done. I believe that councils would love to do a lot more to help if only they had the resources to do so, which is at the heart of the matter that we are discussing.
In fact, I have spoken to a number of teachers who have reported incidents in which they genuinely feared that that they or a pupil would be seriously harmed. What is really remarkable is that, in those cases, the teacher’s primary concern was the wellbeing of the pupil and what had led them to act in that way. That tells us a lot about the caring and professional workforce that we have.
In many such cases, the problem is rooted in emotional and mental health needs and a lack of provision for young people when they need it most. Much of that stems from the serious poverty and neglect that are evident in parts of our country, which are often hidden but are always there.
I am sure that many of you know that we have young people living lives that would be unimaginable to most of us and to most people in our constituencies and regions. That all contributes directly to worsening emotional, mental and physical health across the country.
I am sure that the cabinet secretary will agree that there is a crossover of briefs here. She does not need me to remind her that, currently, only 70 per cent of children and young people are seen within 18 weeks of a mental health referral, which is well short of the Government’s already modest target of 90 per cent. That is happening in a climate in which more than 10,000 children and young people were referred to child and adolescent mental health services in quarter 4 of 2022 alone. That equates to thousands of children who are waiting endlessly for referral, and even those who receive one are often waiting well beyond the point that they can bear.
I am sure that the cabinet secretary will recognise that the toll that such waiting times and lack of support are taking on young people is often intolerable. Teachers see the result of those difficulties day after day, yet, as we have said, selflessly, they continue to serve.
I am afraid to say that the Government is letting young people and the school workforces down, and a little bit of honesty is needed. The Government has failed to deliver on class sizes, teacher non-contact time, support for pupils with additional support needs and mental health support for young people. It has also failed to address harmful online content, continuing inequalities and cuts to youth services. Our teachers and young people deserve better. They need more action, with greater urgency, to address those challenges.
The cabinet secretary has said in the chamber that she is aware of how teachers feel. I am sure that she knows that teachers are overworked, overtired and, in many cases, lacking the necessary support staff to assist them in increasingly difficult classrooms.
Trade unions have been pointing out these issues for years, often with no significant response from the Government. Education unions and others have repeatedly raised how vulnerable many teachers and staff are to assault or worse.
I am sure that we are all genuinely fearful that the problem could go further if we do not take it more seriously. We know of some of the harrowing and sometimes tragic experiences that teachers face across the United Kingdom—some of those have been mentioned today. There is no room for complacency. We cannot assume that things that are happening in other parts of the UK will not happen in Scotland. We are facing a serious challenge and we must act now.
A summit is welcome, but it is not enough on its own. We need to ensure that the experiences that have been set out in the chamber today and by those with lived experience are listened to, but, more important, acted on.
Teachers are workers just like anyone else and they deserve the same level of respect and consideration that we would offer to anyone in a workplace and, indeed, to anyone in our family.
We need to raise awareness among parents and pupils that this is a real and prevailing situation that requires every effort from people across the board. For the situation to be considered in a meaningful way, we must engage pupils, parents and professionals.
I reiterate that it is welcome that we are having this debate, but it should have been on Government time. Although today’s debate is useful, it is important that the Government raises the topic again, as we are running out of time to act. I thank all members for their contributions.
16:42
I, too, welcome this important debate. I am glad to be able to participate in it and to listen to colleagues about how we can work together to support our teachers, professionals and other members of staff working in schools across our constituencies and regions.
I do not think that it matters whose time we are using for this debate. The focus should be on our collective responsibilities and it is good that the debate has been largely constructive. As well as welcoming the fact that the Opposition has used its time for this debate, I welcome the Government’s response and its commitment to act, which has been clearly illustrated in its amendment and demonstrated by the cabinet secretary’s words.
I take this opportunity to point out that, in the cabinet secretary, we have a former teacher with life experience in the roles that she is occupying. That is a good thing for all Scotland. We as a Parliament should be doing all that we can to work with ministers constructively. When our education system succeeds, our young people succeed, and when our young people succeed, that is an investment for the benefit of the common good of all Scotland.
In that spirit, it is of vital importance that colleagues from all parties have raised incidents anecdotally and general statistics about the challenge of violence in our schools that we face together. However, that is a symptom of wider challenging behaviour, which takes place in the context of the difficulties of the past year and the pandemic, and other challenges, including the cost of living crisis that we confront right now. Social media is not a catalyst for this behaviour and trend, but it is a factor, as Jackson Carlaw’s example terrifyingly illustrated.
The issue goes beyond the school setting. Colleagues have made points about the need for a community response and the third sector’s involvement that are absolutely true. I want to emphasise my experience of that as the constituency member for Edinburgh Northern and Leith.
When I first had the privilege of being elected in 2016, we were experiencing issues with significant, serious antisocial behaviour and violence in the north of my constituency, both in schools and in the community. The only question that I asked at First Minister’s questions was about that issue—I probably need to ask some more questions. [Laughter.]
As well as violence, we had instances of motorbike theft and joyriding. The situation was concerning. Although it has not been completely resolved, it is much better now, because schools, the police and the community all worked together and we had youth work engagement. Many organisations made a difference, but I want to highlight one of them: the Spartans alternative school. What that school did during that time and what it continues to do in north Edinburgh is remarkable. It is utilising pupil equity funding as well as raising resource through its own and other fundraising initiatives. Using the power of football, as well as strong teaching staff, persuasive personalities and real credibility in the community, it has been able to turn around the lives of some people who were really struggling in school, being violent, not achieving and not giving their best and, in that, disrupting others. The Spartans alternative school has done that work in north Edinburgh on its own initiative, which is remarkable.
Perhaps there are some lessons. Bill Kidd discussed how to help people who do not necessarily engage as well as others do with traditional models of education. I know that, collectively, we have committed to a presumption to mainstream, but perhaps it is time to look at other models and alternative ways of doing things, and not to be ideological in how we approach that. At the same time, we need to hold true to equality of provision. If the Government would like to visit the Spartans alternative school, I would be more than happy to facilitate that. That model is not a panacea but, in the collective challenge that we face, if we are all open minded, perhaps we can make a bigger difference.
Another important lesson from north Edinburgh is that, although we have too many terrifying incidents of violence in our schools, we also need to collectively emphasise that, as the cabinet secretary was right to highlight, a minority of young people are involved and are disruptive, causing harm and damage. However, there is also a majority of young people, and we need to use debating time to talk about their achievements and to big up their academic excellence and the achievement of their goals. We need to make sure that we are giving equal, if not more, emphasis to the positive, while dealing with the collective challenge that we face.
16:48
I remind members of my entry in the members’ register of interests, which I referred to earlier. I say with an open heart that it is becoming a great pleasure to follow Ben Macpherson in his contributions to these debates, because he has managed to capture so much about what has been positive in the debate. I, too, look forward to having a fruitful discussion about mainstreaming and what we mean by it. If we consider the alternative educational provision that exists across Scotland, there are extremely good examples of fine practice.
The debate has been pleasurable in parts. I welcome what I see as a change of approach with the change of cabinet secretary. I am optimistic that there will be better and stronger cross-party support and that we can reach conclusions that support our young people, our educational staff—including our teachers—our local authorities and, fundamentally, our local communities. I assure the cabinet secretary that members on this side of the chamber will support those discussions and conclusions.
In that light, I want to mention a couple of things by way of parliamentary formality. But for the rule of pre-emption, we would have supported the Government’s amendment and, irrespective of the outcome of various votes, we will support what I hope will be an agreed motion at decision time. We will rightly be able to judge the Parliament and the Scottish Government on that motion in the coming weeks and months. I welcome the comment that Stephen Kerr made in his opening speech that we need to take a holistic view of the experience that our young people have in education rather than think about one-off events. However, we will be held to account for the outcome of all the proposals that we have heard today and, as I said in my intervention on Mr Kerr, the sooner that happens, the better.
I want to emphasise the issue of data. We have heard about violence, and many members have spoken about bullying. Sadly, we have heard a lot about pupil on teacher violence. We have not heard as much about pupil on pupil violence, although it is similarly important. Those are all different and separate issues, and they all have different solutions. The thing that brings them together is that they tend to occur on the education estate. However, as Jamie Greene rightly pointed out, some events happen outside that estate, particularly on school buses—most of us will have had correspondence from constituents on that. When incidents happen outside school, there is a challenge as to who takes responsibility, but the consequences of that violence for the individual victims are the same.
I welcome and wholly endorse the points about the language that we use on the issue. We are speaking about a minority of pupils although, sadly, the number of incidents is increasing. We have heard powerful subjective evidence today, particularly in the letter that Murdo Fraser read out. There are huge amounts of subjective evidence, but there is less objective metadata. I know that the cabinet secretary is talking about that and that she seeks to mine to a granular level the data that exists, as well as the data that I hope will exist in the very near future.
I like to think that we have an acceptance that Covid has not been the cause of the situation that our schools find themselves in, but it has certainly been an accelerating factor in the increasing trail of behaviour. I will not make this party political, because I agree with the member—I apologise, but I forget who it was—who said that education systems across the western world face the same challenge. However, Covid has accelerated the issue, and we have reached a position in which we can acknowledge that our education system is in crisis in relation to the matter. That does not mean that good work is not happening, but the system is in crisis. It is up to us in the Parliament to do everything that we can to change that situation as soon as possible.
Under article 19 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, our young people have
“a right to be protected from being hurt or badly treated”,
and that includes exploitation and neglect, as well as being hurt through violent images. That brings me on to the many comments that have been made about social media. I am not in total agreement with Willie Rennie that we should not shoot the messenger, because I think that social media companies have responsibility, but there is also responsibility for those who provide the wi-fi access. For the purposes of this debate, that is our local authorities, who might find that they have responsibility, as the carrier of images and of attitudes towards young people that are expressed by other young people.
Time is short, but I want to mention the example that Ruth Maguire gave about North Ayrshire Council. One issue that we need to explore relates to the notifications that employees give to their employer of near-miss incidents through the Health and Safety Executive, and the notifications that arrive through SEEMiS, which members have referred to. Those are two separate systems. One is a legislative requirement and the other is, quite frankly, good practice and is needed for reporting. However, we need to look at why those two systems are so separate.
I am conscious of time. There is much that I would have liked to have talked about, particularly the powerful speech that Alex Rowley made—indeed, the vast majority of members who have spoken have come to the debate with positive ideas and, sadly, subjective examples. I do not want to make Ben Macpherson feel too embarrassed but, as he said, there is space to celebrate what is good and great that is happening in our schools for children through alternative education methods. Those children are there because the mainstream school architecture does not work for them. Their contribution, as we saw last week in the construction skills demonstration, is as valuable as everybody else’s.
16:55
I have listened intently to the contributions this afternoon. I shall not be providing marks out of 10, but suffice it to say that some members clearly listened to my contribution more than others—so two stars and a wish.
I very much recognise the challenge, and it is really important that we get this right. A number of members talked about the pressures that schools are working under. There are Covid impacts and on-going cost of living impacts.
A few weeks ago, I was in the school in which I taught, which is not far from here. The school prom is usually held in an expensive hotel in central Edinburgh, which costs quite a lot of money. This year, the prom is being hosted in the school, which is reducing the cost for all pupils to attend. The school has provided a swap shop where children can try on dresses, and some of the contributions have been donated to the school, so the experience is much more affordable for all pupils. The school is in a very middle class part of central Edinburgh, so if that school is struggling, I wonder how the cost of living crisis is affecting the school day in other schools.
We need to take a partnership approach. I will respond to some individual contributions, because there have been some really good ones this afternoon. As Kaukab Stewart said, the vast majority of classrooms are happy learning environments. I do not think that any member would disagree with that, but we all accept that there are examples of that not being the case. We have heard about some of them today.
Willie Rennie said that the behaviour in Scottish schools research figures have not been collected for years. I want to put on the record that that was due to the pandemic. Those figures are collected on a four-yearly cycle. However, I have been pushing my officials for early sight of that data, and I am keen to publish it as soon as we are able to. That data will give us the granularity of focus that Martin Whitfield spoke about and which we do not currently have. In relation to some of the FOI requests that Opposition parties have made, local authorities use a variety of methods in gathering data, and some did not respond to the requests, so that data set does not give us the full national picture.
Willie Rennie also made a point about restorative approaches, which I responded to earlier. I whole-heartedly agree with such approaches. Restorative approaches work when there is a partnership approach around the individual classroom teacher. However, if there is not that partnership approach, they can be quite a weak measure in our response to children and young people.
Murdo Fraser invited me to visit a school in his region, and I accept that invitation. I heard what he said about the experience of a teacher in his area. I am keen to hear about teachers’ experiences in schools. I want to get out and visit schools. As I said in my opening speech, I have spent a lot of my time doing just that. It has been quite heartening to see staff being quite taken aback by the cabinet secretary asking them about behaviour in schools. It has become almost unfashionable to talk about such things, but it is important that we do. As I said, I have made it clear to my officials that we should focus on this matter. As the cabinet secretary, I want to get this right, because I recognise that our schools are struggling following Covid. I do not accept that these issues have happened overnight, but the pandemic has nonetheless compounded some of the challenges that our schools face.
Ruth Maguire spoke about her local authority taking a more consistent approach to recording and monitoring incidents, and a number of members made similar points. I alluded to the HMIE inspection on bullying, which was also mentioned by one of the Conservatives. That inspection looked at some of the inconsistencies in how such events are recorded. We need greater consistency, and the summit will have to address that issue.
During the pandemic, one challenge in schools related to the different ways of learning and teaching. For example, we encouraged schools to have good ventilation. Windows were open, so young people were able to wear their jackets in class. That was a huge shift, and, to be blunt, teachers now face a challenge in getting young people to take off their jackets. Those are the day-to-day issues with which classroom teachers are grappling.
I know that we have focused on violence today, but I remind members that that is not the only issue. For example, there can sometimes be verbal abuse in the classroom. There are different ways in which challenging behaviour can manifest. In my experience, it was never violence.
On that point, does the cabinet secretary take a view on the solutions that have been proposed by Northfield academy in Aberdeen? How is that work informing her proposed solutions at the summit?
I have not seen the proposed solutions at Northfield academy but I have asked my officials for a visit to that very school, recognising some of the challenge that has been highlighted in recent times in the inspection report.
Martin Whitfield talked about some of the celebrations in our schools—it is important that we remember that great work is going on in our schools. I was in a school in East Kilbride a couple of weeks ago, learning about the ways in which staff are supporting their young people through what have been a challenging two years. Our teachers are really skilled at doing that; as a former teacher, I defer to their professionalism and trust them to respond appropriately. However, they do need support and that is what I hope that the summit will seek to provide.
It has been a good debate. We should remember that violence is preventable and that prevention is what a public health approach to violence is all about.
What role will the Scottish violence reduction unit play in informing the summit and the Government’s response to the challenges that we have heard about, not just in school but in our communities?
I am happy to engage with the Scottish violence reduction unit; I know that it does really good work, and the member makes an important point about how that work is encompassed in our response and the summit.
I come back to a number of points made by Alex Rowley, who talked about the points that our teaching trade unions have raised. I declare an interest as a former member of the EIS and I recognise that the issue has not happened post-Covid but is one on which the unions have been campaigning over many years. We in the Government recognise that it is important that we get it right, and I hope that members have heard from me today that that is the approach that I will take. Trade unions have been supportive of that in my engagement with them thus far.
Kaukab Stewart spoke about the importance of adverse childhood experiences. In my opening speech, I alluded to the point that some young people in our schools are traumatised and that we need to ensure that support is in place to recognise that, because it is really important. We know that children who come from disadvantaged backgrounds are far more likely to find themselves excluded, which is really detrimental to their progress, so we need to be mindful of that.
Carol Mochan made an excellent contribution in relation to the roles that teachers have in their classrooms and the worry and care that they have for their young people, which I recognise. She is right to point, too, to the cross-portfolio nature of the challenge in relation to mental health. We have provided funding for school counsellors; however, I am keen to work with my health colleagues on that issue more broadly because I recognise the need for us to look across portfolios, out of our silos in Government, to better support our young people.
Please conclude, cabinet secretary.
Yes; I am mindful of time. I thank members for their contributions. In general, it has been a very positive debate. It is important that we get the Government response right; the summit will seek to bring together partners to do just that and to work with our teachers, who are at the chalkface and will be essential to delivering the solutions that we need in responding to behaviour issues in our schools.
I now call Meghan Gallagher to wind up on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives, for up to eight minutes.
17:02
We have heard harrowing stories from across the chamber about the increasing levels of violence in our schools.
The first time that I heard about the true extent of the problem was when I took part in a panel event with NASUWT. The union spoke openly about how the education workforce is adversely affected by a minority of pupils who challenge authority, use threatening behaviour and abusive language and, in some instances, physical violence. No one should go to work feeling unsafe.
When I was putting together some words to say during the debate, I found myself returning to the same question: “How did things get so bad?” The testimonies that we have heard today from across the chamber are a damning assessment of Scotland’s education system. Colleagues have approached teachers directly so that they could share their stories—that shows that we have a serious problem. It is not our voices that need to be heard but the voices of education professionals who need the Government’s support.
I say to Ross Greer that if he thinks that raising concerns on behalf of parents and young people is stoking a “culture war”, he maybe needs to re-evaluate what it means to be an MSP.
Without wishing to assume the experience of others, I am pretty sure that I have more experience than most members in the chamber of being the pupil who is left bloodied by an attack at school. I am just interested in what made the Conservatives so uncomfortable when I raised the experiences of LGBTQ young people who face violence at school.
That was not the case at all; we were referring to concerns that were raised on behalf of parents and young people. I do not think that Mr Greer should misconstrue what we were trying to point out.
Voices are powerful, and Murdo Fraser quoted the experiences of one teacher, who said that he had seen people being sworn at, spat at, punched, scratched and bitten, tables being thrown and colleagues having multiple trips to the hospital. However, the part of Murdo Fraser’s contribution that should shame the Government is that that teacher said that the getting it right for every child policy is “an absolute joke”. That did not come from an MSP but from one of Scotland’s educators.
There is something fundamentally wrong with our education system and it is clear that our teachers have had enough.
I am grateful to Meghan Gallacher for giving way.
Does she agree that the Scottish Government’s response so far has been reactive, that it is scrambling to deal with symptoms—which are only one side of the coin—and that consideration should be given to how we tackle the issues before they become a crisis, such as by investing in pre-school activity, which includes a healthy breakfast? Tackling hunger and poor mental and physical health, attainment and poor behaviour—
Mr Whittle, we need to go back to Ms Gallacher.
I thank Brian Whittle for his intervention and could not agree more. Prevention is key, and we need to look at ways in which we can tackle the issues in our schools.
Rachael Hamilton pointed out that teachers have succeeded not because of the SNP Government but in spite of the reforms. We need to find solutions to the unacceptable levels of violence that we see in our schools. Last week, I raised violence in our schools as part of a long list of SNP Government failings, so if the cabinet secretary is looking for somewhere to start, this is the place—by making our schools a safe space for teachers to teach and for pupils to learn.
As we have heard so frequently today, this is not a new problem. Teachers have been raising it for years, and an acceptable-violence culture has been allowed to grow, which Pam Duncan-Glancy rightly raised. We have yet to see a cabinet secretary of this Government do something about the increasing violence in our schools.
Will the member take an intervention?
I have taken quite a few, so if the member will forgive me, I would like to continue.
It is reassuring that the majority of speeches today have approached the issue with good intentions.
In June 2022, I raised the issue of violence in our classrooms and, again, the concerns of the NASUWT. One union representative said that it is as though they—meaning the Scottish Government—really do not want to know the scale of the problem. At that time, I also asked the Scottish Government to accept that cuts to council and education budgets—or the inaction with regard to reducing class sizes, which was mentioned earlier—were putting teachers at risk.
Shona Robison, who was the cabinet secretary who responded at that time, then announced that research into school behaviours had been cancelled due to Covid, with no confirmation that the research would be reinstated later. Although the advisory group on relationships and behaviours in schools met last December, the then cabinet secretary did not attend, as Willie Rennie said in his contribution. I think that the advisory board has not met since, which is something that I wanted to ask the cabinet secretary about earlier, because it is important that we, as MSPs, know exactly what the group is discussing so that we can take matters on and raise them fully in our roles.
Stephen Kerr also pointed out that parents are worried about their children’s safety and prospects. Pam Gosal spoke about bullying and the untold damage that it will have on a child’s mental health and ability to learn. That underlines the importance of bringing everyone together to tackle the problem.
I want to know and understand further how the Government can understand the scale of the problem when it has not collected, let alone published, data on violent incidents in our schools since 2016. That was seven years ago; we can hazard a guess about some of the causes.
I thank Meghan Gallacher for giving way. I think that I have responded to that point a number of times in the chamber today. Of course the research should have been carried out in 2020, but it could not be carried out because of the lockdown. However, it is going ahead, so I hope that that gives the member reassurance about why the research could not be carried out: we were in lockdown so children were not in school.
Yes, I accept that point, but it does not mean that it is acceptable that nothing has happened in seven years.
The Conservative motion is one of concern and solution, so I am pleased that the SNP has supported our principles and action points. It is good to see that it has finally accepted Conservative education policy, although I would say that changing a couple of words and trying to call it an amendment might be a bit of a stretch. However, the Scottish Conservatives will support the SNP’s amendment this evening. That is cross-party working at its best.
I hope that the Scottish Government will agree to our action points—which Stephen Kerr outlined earlier—and in particular the first three: the summit, which must meet urgently; a statement in Parliament on the outcomes of the summit; and an action plan to tackle violence and disruption in our schools.
This Government cannot be allowed to get away with any more years of doing nothing. I welcome the cabinet secretary’s warm words about working to tackle the issue, but until we see the results, it is just another issue on which the Scottish Conservatives will need to hold the Scottish Government to account, in order to end the violence in our schools.
That concludes the debate on ending violence in Scottish schools.
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