Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point

In Depth

On Air

Archive
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Monday, June 7, 1999 Published at 09:18 GMT 10:18 UK


Education

New fears for Scottish rural schools

There are fears for the future of more small schools

BBC Scotland education correspondent Kenneth Macdonald reports.

A new body is being set up to support Scotland's small rural schools.

The move has come from the Scottish School Boards Association, which says local councils are preparing a fresh round of closures.

Meanwhile, a government initiative to save rural schools from the axe has failed to win a single reprieve in more than a year since it was launched.

Rising concern over rural school closures prompted the then Education Minister Brian Wilson to make the so-called "Dunoon declaration" 15 months ago.

Under its terms no rural school would be allowed to shut because of cost alone - the educational advantages of closing it would have to outweigh the adverse effect on the community.

Final decision

The government promised its new standard would be applied to rural closures which were subject to a final decision by the Secretary of State for Scotland.

Since then, however, just one school has come before the secretary of state, the 11-pupil Portnahaven Primary on Islay.

Parents and pupils there have been waiting nearly six months for a decision.

If that does not arrive by the end of the month, the task will pass to the new Scottish administration, which assumes full powers in July.

The Scottish Office says the matter is still under consideration and a decision will be made in due course.



Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©


Education Contents

Features
Hot Topics
UK Systems
League Tables
Internet Links


The Scottish Office Education and Industry Department

Scottish Parliament


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

'Golden hellos' fail to attract new teachers

Children join online Parliament

Pupils 'too ignorant to vote'

Red tape toolkit 'not enough'

Poor report for teacher training consortium

Specialist schools' results triumph

Ex-headmaster guilty of more sex charges

Blunkett welcomes Dyke's education commitment

Web funding for specialist teachers

Local authorities call for Woodhead's sacking

Dyslexic pensioner wins PhD

Armed forces children need school help

Black pupils 'need better-trained teachers'

College 'is not cool'