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Labour calls for overhaul of school leaver data

Iain Gray MSP (Andrew Cowan/Scottish Parliament)
Iain Gray MSP (Andrew Cowan/Scottish Parliament)

 

YOUNGSTERS who find work on a zero-hours contract after leaving school should not be classed as having achieved a “positive destination” in Scottish Government statistics, Labour has claimed.

Education spokesman Iain Gray said the current method for measuring what teenagers do after school regarded “almost any job, no matter how temporary or insecure, as a success”.

A major overhaul of the system is needed, he added, saying the current criteria is “no longer fit for purpose”.

The latest statistics showed that in 2015-16 91.4% of school leavers went on to a “positive destination”, such as university, college, training or work, down from 92% in 2014-15.

In the most affluent areas, 96.2% of school leavers achieved this, compared to 85% in the most deprived communities.

Mr Gray said: “SNP ministers have long hidden behind ‘positive destination’ statistics which count almost any job, no matter how temporary or insecure, as a success.

“There’s nothing positive about the rise in zero-hours contracts, but that’s how they are classified by the SNP.

“We can’t start to improve outcomes until we know what a successful transition from education to employment is. The Scottish Government’s current criteria is no longer fit for purpose.

“If SNP ministers are serious about improving life chances for the next generation, they have to get serious about facing up to how well, or how badly, their policies are working.

“It’s time for a major overhaul.

“SNP ministers have been too distracted to focus on the day job and too ready to believe their own ‘spin’, so Labour is doing their job for them and putting forward a proposal that would transform the way we measure success.”

Labour favours returning to the system used by the previous Scottish Executive, which tracked youngsters’ progress over several years.

Such changes would tie in with proposals in the party’s industrial strategy, which includes plans to invest in education to tackle skill shortages, particularly in the STEM subjects of science, technology, engineering and maths, Labour said.

The party also wants to ensure public contracts are not awarded to companies that carry out blacklisting, put workers on zero-hours contracts or fail to pay the living wage.