Posts

Getting Started with Culturally-Sustaining Mythology

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Last year, I adapted our school's existing unit on Greek Mythology (centred on The Odyssey ) to be more culturally-respectful for my international students. My learners come from a wide range of places, cultures and ethnic backgrounds. To say it was a success is an understatement. Not only did students express their appreciation for being able to bring their prior knowledge and family cultures into the classroom, they also loved learning about mythologies they'd never even heard of. From my point-of-view, I learned as much as the students because they were empowered to be experts in their fields. The pride they took in exploring and sharing their cultures' most enduring stories was an experience I want to repeat again and again - I also want to share it with other educators so all students benefit wherever they are. My father's culture and ethnicity were completely invisible in my own education, and I want to ensure that my students avoid that experience. I also want to...

Decolonise the Curriculum - Starting Points

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Since my return to school for the 20-21 academic year, there has been a lot of discussion around antiracism - a discussion that is long overdue and most welcome. A recurring issue that appears in these conversations is that already-overloaded teachers don't know where to begin. Below is a document I compiled from a couple of sources that might give you and your teaching team some points to reflect and take action upon. If you find it useful or have other resources that would complement this, please do share.

Marley Dias Taking Action

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When adults fail to address the needs of kids, what happens next? Well, if you're Marley Dias, you take matters into your own hands and start a movement entitled #1000BlackGirlBooks, where you aim to get at least 1000 books with non-white characters into schools. Then you smash that goal and make it over 10,000 books and keep on going. Find out more about her and her mission in the video.

What's hair got to do with enquiry learning?

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This morning, I was sent this article about growing up in Ireland with 'unmanageable' Afro hair. It made me sad for the writer, but also hopeful that she eventually gained a healthier perspective on this aspect of her ethnicity. It might seem trivial to focus on such a story when it's about appearance but this is still an aspect society (sub/un/consciously) judges us on at all ages. How does this connect to the classroom? Especially as adolescents, we go as far as scarring ourselves to try and fit in. Some of these scars are physical - such as the chemical burns this writer endured - and some are psychological. When we aren't accepted as we are or - worse - we find ourselves made to feel like the 'other', it hurts. It impacts our self-worth and self-acceptance.  This is why the conversation around diversity in the classroom matters. If our students can't connect to their peers in the room on a given aspect of their identity, we need to provide opportuniti...

Diversity in the Classroom

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Photo by  Ernest Brillo  on  Unsplash I'm an international school teacher. My specialisms are Humanities, EAL and Digital Literacy. I have huge diversity in the classroom. Great! Here's my conundrum: 1 school. 1 community of learners. 1 dominant teacher nationality. BUT 60 student nationalities. 1700 unique individuals each with their own complex stories. SO What will connect them? Where to begin? Maybe by caring. Maybe by asking questions and listening to the responses. I'm not sure, but I'd like to explore the possibilities. The discussion starts soon.