Move to scrap music tuition is ‘ridiculously short-sighted’

A local authority has been attacked for its move to become the first in Scotland to scrap instrumental music tuition in its schools. The EIS teaching union said the plan by Midlothian Council was “ridiculously short-sighted”.Pupils studying for Higher and Advanced Higher music will continue to receive instrumental music tuition free of charge, and children will get music in schools as part of the normal curriculum. However, there will no longer be the opportunity to pay for extra lessons to learn a musical instrument. The council is understood to have spoken to its instrumental music service staff on Wednesday, telling them that nine of 12 full-time equivalent posts would be cut under proposals to address the huge budget pressures that it, like many Scottish local authorities, are facing this year.The move confirms the fears of campaigners that instrumental music tuition could become “extinct” in parts of Scotland.EIS general secretary Larry Flanagan said: “This penny-pinching move will rob young people in Midlothian of an invaluable opportunity to develop their musical abilities, and deny them the many added benefits that instrumental instruction can offer.Learning music benefits young people in terms of their self-confidence, and in their ability to work both independently or as part of a larger group.”He added: “It is a bitter irony that, shortly after the Scottish Parliament’s Education Committee has recommended that instrumental music tuition should be provided free by all local authorities, the response of Midlothian Council is to scrap music tuition altogether.

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