RUTH Davidson will today promise a review of the Scottish Government’s flagship schools programme as she brands the SNP’s record on education a “mark of shame”.

The Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) will be undergo a “root and branch” review to improve it for teachers and pupils, the Scottish Tory leader will tell activists in Glasgow.

The review will be led by Tory education spokeswoman Liz Smith MSP, who is expected to consult education experts, before reporting by the end of the year.

Ms Davidson does not want to abolish CfE - arguing teachers have had enough reforms imposed on them already - but is instead seeking ways of making it better.

Party sources said the move also intended to help the Tories present themselves as the next party of government in Scotland, offering solutions rather than kneejerk opposition.

Intended to be a more holistic approach to learning for 3 to 18 year olds, CfE has been criticised for burdening teachers with excess paperwork and not giving pupils basic skills.

After Scotland slipped down international educational league tables last year, Ms Davidson threatened to withdraw Tory support for CfE, which until now has had cross-party backing.

Ms Davidson is expected to say: “This SNP Government’s handling of our education system over the last decade in power has been shameful – and change needs to happen.

“Standards in reading, maths and science are all getting worse according to an international survey. Scotland does not perform above the international average in anything.

“The Sutton Trust, a leading education charity, last month said this: ‘There is no specific area where able children in Scotland really excel.’

“What an absolute disgrace. What a mark of shame. So much for your social justice, Nicola.”

Ms Davidson will not blame teachers, who she will say are doing “fantastic work”.

But she will add: “No. The blame lies with a school system that, thanks to this SNP government, simply isn’t working. Here’s the thing though: we can change this.

“So I can announce we are going to undertake a root-and-branch review of one part of the system that is failing – and that is Curriculum for Excellence.

“We don’t propose scrapping it altogether. But we do have to challenge the prevailing orthodoxy which has led to this collapse in standards - which thinks of facts and knowledge as of secondary importance, puts the latest fashionable theory before the basic need for a teacher to teach, and which has left a generation of teachers, parents and pupils utterly confused about what is going on, or what Curriculum for Excellence even is.”

She will add: “It is time to get rid of the waffle, and the theories that have failed – and restore Scotland’s reputation as providing the best education in the world.”

A spokesman for Education Secretary John Swinney said: “There already has been an independent review of CfE carried out by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development - not a hand-picked Tory party commission - who considered it to be a bold and a successful reform that was delivering a broadened education experience for young people.

“The Tories have supported CfE since its inception – indeed, Liz Smith was right when she said recently that CfE is the way forward for Scotland’s schools.

“The [league table] results made for uncomfortable reading - but in difficult times, leaders do not abandon their principles, retreat and run for cover. They hold fast to what is right.”

Scottish Secretary David Mundell is today expected to attack the conduct of SNP ministers in their dealings with Westminster about Brexit.