Scottish Government 'complacent' over online school learning, claims Douglas Ross

Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross has said the closure of schools was “necessary”, but accused the Scottish Government of complacency over online learning.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced on Monday that schools would be closed to all pupils except those who were children of key workers or who were vulnerable until at least February 1.

Instead, online learning would be put in place in response to a new, more transmissible Covid-19 variant, which now accounts for 50 per cent of new cases in Scotland.

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Schoolchildren head home as schools are closed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty ImagesSchoolchildren head home as schools are closed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Schoolchildren head home as schools are closed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
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Writing in the Scottish Daily Mail, Mr Ross said he has accepted that schools should be closed temporarily.

“This new variant of coronavirus is up to 70 per cent more transmissible than the original strain,” he wrote.

“Based on what all the data tells us, the temporary closing of schools is painful, but necessary.

“None of us wants to gamble on the health of children or their teachers.”

But he added: “But the emphasis is on the word ‘temporary’.

“Bruce Adamson, the Children and Young People’s Commissioner, warns that ordering children to stay at home poses a ‘serious risk of harm to their wellbeing’.

“We also know closures have a disproportionate impact on the poorest children. The attainment gap between those from differing social and economic backgrounds grows wider with every passing day.”

Mr Ross went on to accuse the Scottish Government of complacency over their attempts to institute online learning.

Professor Lindsay Paterson of Edinburgh University had said “astonishing incompetence” from education authorities meant that pupils may not be prepared for online learning.

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He also said there was “no evidence” of planning being done for fully online learning since schools returned in August.

Mr Ross wrote: “Not every child has the technology, whether computer hardware or efficient internet provision, to properly engage. Many won’t have the necessary parental support. Some will be in homes without adequate workspace or that is shared with siblings who all have different needs.

“That is why we have continually called on the SNP to prioritise education and ensure our schools, teachers and pupils were fully prepared if a return to normal learning was not possible.”

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