National Education Union
This is a significant year for anti-racist organising movements, including Black Lives Matter and Decolonising Education initiatives.
NEU Black Educators have been actively engaged in ensuring schools and colleges are working progressively towards inclusive and anti-racist environments using the anti- racist framework and following up from the NEU’s Decolonising Education conference in December 2019.
This is a significant year for anti-racist organising movements, including Black Lives Matter and Decolonising Education initiatives.
NEU Black Educators have been actively engaged in ensuring schools and colleges are working progressively towards inclusive and anti-racist environments using the anti- racist framework and following up from the NEU’s Decolonising Education conference in December 2019.
The NEU is also following up on letters to the DfE to overhaul the curriculum to include Black histories and national and global stories of Black culture and achievement. Benefiting every pupil, this would counter race inequality and contribute to creating a sense of place and belonging for Black students in all phases.
The NEU sees Black History Month 2020 as an opportunity to explore how to make Black history/culture and achievement matter throughout the year, across all subjects and age groups. The month also serves as a focus for awareness of issues affecting culturally diverse communities, and an opportunity to give voice and listen to narratives and histories, under-acknowledged or missing from educational curriculums and/or resources.
This pack is segmented into four parts to support with focused learning:
This October, we’ve commissioned, from Serendipity Arts, a Black History Month teaching pack for key stage 3-4, which can be adapted for other age groups and a series of 10 podcasts to be released throughout the year.
Black History Month 2020 education pack
Key Stages 3 and 4 Download PDF
This pack is segmented into four parts to support with focused learning:
Podcasts which inspire us to learn and unlearn
Listen and share these monthly podcasts titled Black manifesto which will feature conversations with pioneering Black women within the arts and culture sector.
Black Manifesto brings together voices of Black women from around the world as a collective conversation, making the invisible visible and addressing how we work to reshape a new world in which Black women are seen and heard, and a resource for inspiring creativity, learning and unlearning. Each of the ten guests will offer their interpretation and insights.
The first podcast is here: Spotify | Apple Music
Please download and use these posters and the ideas for classroom use. The majority have been chosen to reflect migrants to the UK who have made a hugely important contribution to fairness and justice to all.
Beryl Gilroy was born in British Guiana in 1924. She was a pioneering writer, teacher and part of the ‘Windrush generation.
Born in Trinidad in 1915, Claudia Jones spent her life fighting for tolerance and equality, which led her to become a founder of the much-loved Notting Hill Carnival.
Len Kwesi Garrison was an important figure in the Black British community’s exploration and understanding of its history.
Toni Morrison was the only African American author (and one of the few women) to win the Nobel Prize for literature.
Margaret became Britain’s first Black woman book publisher – and the youngest – when she co founded a publishing company in 1967, Allison & Busby, with Clive Allison.
BHM: Lady Phyll Opoku-Gyimah poster
Lady Phyll is one of the co-founders of the UK Black Pride, which is the Europe’s largest celebration for Black LGBT people.