02 - Scotland- Ongoing debates and future developments

Joint Future Thinking Taskforce on Universities

The Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning agreed with Universities Scotland in November 2007 to establish a Joint Future Thinking Taskforce on Universities, chaired jointly by the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning and the Convener of Universities Scotland, Sir Muir Russell. Other members of the taskforce include university Principals, Government officials and the Chair of the Scottish Funding Council.

The taskforce's remit is to consider:

  • how to optimise and shape the contribution which the Scottish university sector can make during the next 20 years to the Scottish economy, to Scottish culture and society, and to the political priorities of the Scottish Government; and
  • what opportunities can be created and what barriers will need to be overcome to achieve that; and
  • what resources will be needed and how they will be provided.
The taskforce is planning to agree challenges and next steps by the Summer of 2008.

Support for Students

In May 2003 the Scottish Government announced the introduction of financial support of up to £1,500 per year for all 16 to 19 year olds from low-income families in schools and colleges, to encourage them to continue their education beyond the date at which they are legally allowed to leave school. A programme to provide Education Maintenance Allowances (EMAs) for eligible 16 and 17 year olds was introduced in 2004/05. The full implementation to 16 to 19 year olds is being completed in 2007/08.

Review of Scotland’s Colleges

The Review was launched in June 2005 at the Annual Conference of the Association of Scottish Colleges. This was the first major review of the college sector since the colleges were incorporated in 1993. The review has provided an important and robust evidence base as the Executive's 2007 spending review.

School – College Partnerships

A strategy was published in May 2005 explaining how the Scottish Government will increase and further enhance school/college partnerships. The aim is to give school aged pupils the opportunity to benefit from a wide range of educational opportunities and equip them with a variety of skills that prepare them for life, the workplace, and the community.

Skills for Scotland

In September 2007 the Scottish Government published Skills for Scotland – A Lifelong Skills Strategy. This sets out approaches to: ensuring very good foundations for young people's skills development at school; developing potential by equipping individuals with needed skills; developing the workforce; improving the provision of advice, guidance and support services; and public investment in learning and training providers. The Strategy was presented by the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning as a call to action by government, learning providers, employers, local authorities and other partners – and individual people. The publication includes appendices spelling out the action that the several partners in the Strategy need to undertake. A new body, Skills Development Scotland, has been created to take the Skills Strategy forward. This brings together in the same organisation four previously separate types of provision - Careers Scotland; Scottish University for Industry (learndirect scotland, learndirect scotland for business, ILA Scotland, The Big Plus); key skills elements from Scottish Enterprise; and key skills elements from Highlands and Islands Enterprise.

Eurydice - the information network on education in Europe

Date: 2009
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