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Mathematics teaching in Scotland today*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2016

Chris Pritchard*
Affiliation:
McLaren High School, Callander FK17 8JH

Extract

Home to just over five million souls, Scotland is the most sparsely populated part of Britain. The people are overwhelmingly white (some 98.7%) and English speaking. Levels of deprivation vary considerably across the country as a whole. Some 20% of the school population was entitled to free school meals in 1995, though the figure was twice as high in the City of Glasgow, where life expectancy is 10 years below that of affluent parts of the south of England. In July 1997 proposals were presented for the creation of a Scottish parliament. Whilst the Westminster parliament would ‘remain sovereign’, many powers would be devolved to Edinburgh, including those relating to virtually every aspect of education. So today, the Scottish Executive Education Department (or SEED) administers Scottish Executive policy for pre-school and school education in co-operation with local authorities that are responsible for providing school education in their areas. No less than 96% of youngsters are educated in state schools. Schools associated with religious groups including the Roman Catholic Church were incorporated into the state system in the 1920s. The annual cost of running the whole education system is a little under £5 billion or some 9% of Scottish GDP [1, p. 17].

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Mathematical Association 2003

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Footnotes

*

This is an abridged and edited version of a talk given at the NCTM Annual Meeting in Orlando in April 2001. The author wishes to thank the anonymous referee for the helpful comments given.

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