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3. PURPOSE AND CONTEXT
This strategy focuses on the provision of publicly
funded
ESOL in Scotland for a community of
learners which includes asylum seekers and refugees, along
with settled minority ethnic communities.
3 For the purposes of this strategy, adult
ESOL learners are defined as those for
whom English is not a first language and who need spoken
and written English for everyday life and to participate in
the labour market, learning, their local communities and
wider society. Scotland also has a thriving commercial
EFL (English as a Foreign Language)
sector. Whilst we recognise the contribution that this
sector makes to Scotland's economy and reputation at home
and abroad, this strategy focuses on publicly funded
provision. The proposals in this consultation paper are
subject to views offered by those contributing to the
consultation. They also reflect the recognition that much
can be done through closer collaboration and coordination
within the existing capacity of currently funded provision.
The outcomes of the consultation exercise will highlight
the existing capacity across the various
ESOL providers, and any proposals for
additional resources will take this into account to be
considered in line with other Executive priorities.
However, in the intervening period, resource has been made
available for some development activity related to
quality.
Coherent provision and consistent high quality will
benefit all learners within
ESOL and
EFL provision. This strategy therefore
encourages the recognition and sharing of transferable
tenets of good practice. Furthermore, in Scotland,
ESOL learners are often integrated into
mixed classes irrespective of residency status. Recent
research suggest that this is a highly successful delivery
model.
4
Recent research into
ESOL provision in Scotland, carried out
to inform this strategy, indicated that 71 per cent of all
ESOL students enrolled were learners who
had settled in Scotland and needed English to participate
more fully in Scottish society or the economy, with around
10 per cent being international students who had come to
Scotland with the specific purpose of studying English.
5 Just under 80 per cent of student enrolments were in
further education colleges (this includes outreach
provision funded through local authorities or
CLD partnerships), at least 18 per cent
in
CLD partnership provision, and around 3
per cent within the voluntary sector
.6 It is important to note that
CLD partnerships are cross-sectoral,
with
FE colleges and voluntary sector bodies
as full, active partners, and in many instances, have a key
role in co-ordinating and developing
ESOL provision across sectors. During
03/04, there were over 9,000 enrolments for publicly funded
ESOL classes.
7 The same research indicates a degree of unmet
demand.
8
Changing Demographics
Since 2000, the demographics of
ESOL provision in Scotland have changed
considerably. There have been two reasons for this.
Firstly, Glasgow City Council's agreement with the National
Asylum Support Service (
NASS), under which the number of asylum
seekers and refugees settled in Glasgow grew from 500-600
in 2000 to between 10,000 and 11,000 in 2004.
9 Much smaller numbers of refugees have subsequently
moved to other parts of Scotland.
10 The most recent stage of
EU enlargement has also seen an increase
in the number of migrant workers coming from
EU accession states to work across
Scotland.
11 The numbers of people coming to live and work in
Scotland, who may need access to
ESOL provision, will increase with the
advent of the First Minister's
Fresh Talent Initiative. The
Fresh Talent Initiative aims to encourage people
to come and live and work in Scotland and acknowledges the
contribution which New Scots are making and can make to
Scotland's economy.
12
ESOL providers in the further education,
community learning and development and voluntary sectors
have risen admirably to the challenges which this sudden
growth in demand presented. They have striven to provide
ESOL learners with sufficient access to
ESOL classes and support to enable them
to participate more fully in their local communities and
society. To meet increased pressures on the
FE college sector arising from a rise in
demand for
ESOL and other provision stimulated by
the influx of asylum seekers and refugees since 2000, the
Scottish Executive made an additional £5.4 million
available to
FE colleges to pay for part-time
ESOL and non-advanced and advanced (from
March 2003) vocational courses between 2001 and 2004.
13 Also, in at least two cases, employers (one in the
South West and another in the North East) have shown a
willingness to fund
ESOL provision for their migrant
workers.
14
In 2003, the Scottish Refugee Integration Forum (
SRIF) recommended the development of a
national (Scottish) strategy for
ESOL (action 51)
15. The recommendations of the
SRIF action plan were endorsed by
Scottish Ministers and
Life Through Learning; Learning Through Life
(2003) pledged the Scottish Executive to, 'implement the
relevant recommendations of the Scottish Refugee
Integration Forum with regard to the creation of learning
opportunities for refugees and asylum seekers'.
16 Changes to
UK naturalisation regulations - under
the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 - have
also contributed to an increase in demand for
ESOL provision in Scotland. These
regulations stipulate that an applicant for British
citizenship has to show, 'sufficient knowledge of a
language [English, Welsh or Scots' Gaelic]' to be
determined by possession of 'a specified qualification'.
17 These are now being extended, under the Home
Office's five year strategy, to include all those who have
permanent leave to remain in the
UK.
18 The development of an
ESOL Strategy for Scotland is also a key
component of the Executive's commitment to the formulation
of a national languages strategy for Scotland.
Community Learning & Development Managers
Scotland (
CLDMS)
Stakeholder Platform
CLDMS welcomes the Scottish Executive's
commitment to expand and improve opportunities for
ESOL students. The draft strategy
endorses the good work already being developed in local
CLD partnerships under the banner of
lifelong learning. This consultation should establish
principles in which more and better opportunities can be
developed to suit the needs of this important community of
learners, and to fit local circumstance. The proposed
national framework may be desirable but will require more
resources to be effective. Resource implications must be
thoroughly examined, and any funding that becomes available
to partnerships should be utilised to produce maximum
impact.
The primary purpose of
CLD work with regard to
ESOL students is to support citizenship
training, and vocational and language skills development.
The
ESOL student should be able to access
guidance and support at a local level in order to
participate in person-centred services, to ensure not only
inclusion but to develop individual progression routes and
achieve personal negotiated goals. Learning styles and
ethos should be developed in line with the key principles
of
CLD as described in Working and Learning
Together to Build Stronger Communities (
WALT). Definitions of
ESOL learners need to be clear and in
keeping with these principles.
We advise against setting up new structures for
ESOL instead of using existing community
planning,
CLD and Literacies partnerships, where
the needs of
ESOL students are already being planned
for and in some cases met. Support from Learning
Connections and other national agencies are aligned to
these structures. It is potentially divisive to view this
community of learners separately from the communities where
they live and work. Colleagues from
FE/
HE, the enterprise companies, and the
voluntary sector are already linked to these partnerships
to ensure choice and progression for learners, subject to
current available funding.
Developing the Strategy: Stage One: ResearchStage One: Research
Until 2005, research data on the supply and demand of
ESOL in Scotland was patchy and largely
limited to
the Glasgow
ESOL Survey Report (2000).
19 The Scottish Executive's Enterprise, Transport and
Lifelong Learning Department, in conjunction with Learning
Connections
20, commissioned research to map all
ESOL provision and demand across
Scotland in May 2004 - The
National 'English for Speakers of Other Languages' (
ESOL) Strategy: Mapping Exercise and
Scoping Study (hereafter referred to as the
ESOL report) - to provide some robust
figures on demand for, type, quantity and quality of
provision in Scotland as a basis upon which to formulate a
national
ESOL strategy.
Developing the Strategy: Stage Two:
Consultation Process
The research was overseen by Scottish Executive's
Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning Department (
SE-
ETLLD) and an
ESOL Steering Group. The latter was
chaired by a member of Her Majesty's Inspectorate of
Education (
HMIE) and composed largely of
ESOL practitioners, along with
representatives of the Scottish Refugee Council,
Communities Scotland and the
SQA (See Annex B). The national
ESOL mapping exercise and scoping study,
carried out by researchers at the University of Abertay,
was published in January 2005.
The research was also complemented by a series of
recommendations from the
ESOL Steering Group, delivered to
ETLLD in February 2005. We have used
these documents, along with examples of international good
practice, to inform the development of this strategy.
21 The latter part of this process has been overseen by
the national
ESOL Strategy Group (see Annex B)
supported by a number of advisers retained from the
original
ESOL steering and working groups. We
have received feedback on the consultation document from a
number of relevant stakeholder bodies (see stakeholder
platform statements throughout this paper). Between July
and October 2005, a public consultation (on-line, by post
and at four events around the country) will be held on the
draft strategy.
The purpose of this document is to provide a blueprint
for the direction and structure of
ESOL provision in Scotland and support
for the
ESOL teaching community in their
delivery of, and further professionalisation for,
ESOL in the 21
st century. In this, the strategy is aided by
the enthusiasm and commitment of practitioners, and
existing developments from within the profession.
Consultation questions
Q.1. Do you agree with this vision?
Q.2. Do you agree with these guiding principles and how
we have defined them?
Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (
CoSLA)
Stakeholder Platform
The
COSLA Refugee and Asylum Seeker
Consortium is pleased to have the opportunity to comment on
the consultation regarding the development of an adult
ESOL strategy for Scotland.
One of the Consortium's key objectives is to secure
support from the Scottish Executive for the role of local
government and the Consortium in ensuring that refugees can
help Scotland to balance its skills gap and declining
ageing population. The provision of access to English
language learning is one of the most crucial aspects of
integrating refugees and other migrants into Scottish
life.
The recent extension of the European Union to include
the 10 new Accession states also requires a strategic
response to ensure that access to English language learning
is available across the whole of Scotland and covers
appropriate language groups.
The
COSLA Refugee and Asylum Seeker
Consortium, as a member of the Scottish Refugee Integration
Forum, fully supports the recommendation to develop a
national Scottish strategy for
ESOL and sees the establishment of the
National Panel as a key part of the process. The suggested
combinations of local authority areas for the eight
proposed fora is welcomed as this will help enable
appropriate local solutions to be worked out and avoid
lengthy travelling for necessary meetings.
The main tasks of the fora, as outlined, are clear and
consistent and will undoubtedly assist in the development
of the Strategy. Involvement of appropriate personnel from
local authorities in these fora will clearly contribute to
the process.
As the organisation representing local government and
its interests in Scotland,
COSLA is uniquely placed to assist in
providing relevant representatives for a National
Panel.
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