‘Using Scots language in class is immensely valuable’

The stooshie is noo a stramash. Would that be a polite way to describe recent events? Aye, it wid be. Polite, and definitely an understatement. It’s been an awful year for so many, and it’s not over yet.
But hopefully, there’s good news coming soon. In times like these, I find it helps to value the little things that go well. The wee victories. Think about Scottish football: sometimes simply qualifying is enough to celebrate-.
If there was ever a Scot who recognised and valued the wee-est of the wee, it was Robert Burns. Personally, my favourite Burns poem has always been . Burns wrote the poem after finding a moose’s nest when working in a field. Before he moved to Edinburgh and could sit alongside the intellectual elite of Europe, he lived on a small farm, in a much smaller town than Scotland’s capital, working with a plough rather than a pen.
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Using Scotsin the classroom, whether it’s Burns’ poetry or something else entirely,is immensely valuable. A fantastic example of this came during lockdown:I was contacted by Claire Kerr, a primary teacher in Dumfries, who instead of cancelling or rescheduling a collaboration she had planned with author Susi Briggs, managed to turn it into a project that every child in her class contributed to.
Burns Night: Exploring the Scots language in schools
The class - with the support and infectious enthusiasm ofBriggs - created a virtual glossary of the author’s children’s bookNip Nebs. You can see the results for yourself here , and seeevidence of the variety of literacy and language skills being developed - listening and talking, reading, learning new vocabulary, being able to “perform” and talk to a camera, to name but a few.
This was done entirely online, with support and consent from parents, and obvious joy from the bairns themselves. When it came time for me to nominate teachers for the , the first name on my list was Claire Kerr - and I was delighted that the public voted her the winner.
There are excellent weevideos for remote learning. I use these in the live e-Sgoil lessons I do as part of the . There are many other great resources available for teachers planning Scots lessons for bairns at hame, including,and.
Obviously, Scots can be tricky for learners who don’t already have a knowledge of the language. That’s why audio recordings and dictionaries are immensely valuable. So it’s braw to be able to share news of a new app: the folks at the (DSL) have produced a new Scots dictionary for schools, which provides meanings in English for 9,500 Scots words and phrases.
The dictionary’s contents rangefrom everyday terms like glaikit (stupid),mind (to remember)and bairn (child), to words now encountered mainly on Burns Night, for examplesonsie (attractive), drouthy (thirsty), and painch (stomach). The dictionary also includes audio guides to the pronunciation of around 600 unfamiliar spellings.
Deputy first minister and education secretary John Swinney said as the app was launched that Scots “is often the language used at home” and that it is important to“encourage and nurture young people’s creativity and identity as a Scots speaker”.
I think that’s a wee victory worthy o a toast on the Bard’s birthday.
For any teachers needing support (or even justa blether), please feel free to email me and I’ll do my best to help: bruce.eunson@educationscotland.gov.scot
Bruce Eunson isScots language coordinator for Education Scotland
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