A group of teachers will probably require a delay in implementing the new curriculum for excellence.
The association of secondary teachers in Scotland (SSTA) said the delay may be necessary to best prepare for secondary schools to change.
The union is a way to debate this week appealed to year late.
Secretary of State for Education, Holyrood Mike Russell, on Thursday that the execution could be delayed if the evidence indicated it had become necessary.
The preparations for the new program, which must now be implemented in August in all schools in Scotland are generally thought to be better in primary schools, secondary schools and grammar schools.
The new system, which has been called revolutionary, is designed to encourage children to get more information themselves by more joint development classes instead of the traditional separation between subjects severe strain.
But Ann Ballinger, SSTA Secretary told BBC Scotland: The available data strongly suggest that schools implement not only willing to implement programs of excellence.
There is no specific information we need to produce the right course and to give our pupils in Scotland what it is earning – and much, much better one-day courses. Ballinger, said women delay starting the new program better, the discovery of three or four years later, the line was broken and gone was the first student to go through this inconvenience.
He added: The worst scenario for us is that children spend in school, you go upstairs, and found that for some reason they have the skills necessary to achieve the best possible outcomes is lacking, and this affects their future.
Our concern is that the skills approach in a surprising situation in primary schools of the cross is the norm, but there was no time to contribute to the resulting consequences in high school, different areas of accounting.
Issues such as modern languages, mathematics and sports have very different needs that must be addressed now, before the implementation of Curriculum for Excellence.
March 3, 2010
Teachers to back curriculum delay
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