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ITE session

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To examine the work of one school's approach to including refugee children ... Next to it hung the maroon prayer-mat which had come with them on their travels. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ITE session


1
ITE session
  • Making refugee issues a core part of the
    curriculum

2
Aims
  • To examine the work of one schools approach to
    including refugee children
  • To look at what makes effective practice for
    promoting race equality and developing a
    culturally inclusive curriculum
  • To consider how literacy lessons can based around
    a text about a refugee

3
Woodberry Down Community Primary School
  • Much of this session is based on work done at
    Woodberry Down Community Primary School in the
    London Borough of Hackney.

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The school and context
Woodberry Down is in the top half of 1 of the
worst housing conditions in England.
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The school and context
  • Over 25 of children are refugees
  • Over 60 have free school meals
  • Over 90 of pupils are from minority ethnic
    groups
  • Over 70 of children do not have English as their
    first language
  • There is a high level of pupil mobility -
    children joining and leaving the school during
    the year

10
About Woodberry Down Community Primary School
  • Ofsted (2008) An outstanding school
  • Own training programmes Effective Marking,
    literacy, race equality, ICT
  • Developed own schemes of work
  • Take part in conferences and courses across the
    UK and internationally
  • Lots of positive press coverage
  • Federation with London Fields Primary School
    (Hackney)

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www.woodberrydown.net
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An inclusive curriculum
  • The National Curriculum inclusion statement
    describes schools responsibilities to provide a
    curriculum that meets the specific needs of
    individuals and groups of pupils. To ensure the
    curriculum is inclusive, schools and teachers
    must
  • Set suitable learning challenges
  • Respond to pupils diverse learning needs
  • Overcome potential barriers to learning and
    assessment for individuals and groups

15
Key questions to consider
  • Is the curriculum delivered in a way that is
    appropriate to the needs of all children?
  • Does it draw on the cultural backgrounds and
    experiences of all children?
  • Do we help equip children to identify and
    challenge bias, prejudice, racism and
    stereotyping?
  • Are pupils cultures reflected in displays and
    the wider learning environment?

16
Activity 1
  • What is a culturally inclusive curriculum?

17
Activity 1
  • What are the criteria for a culturally inclusive
    curriculum?
  • Sort the statements into a judgement table with
    four categories.
  • INADEQUATE
  • SATISFACTORY
  • GOOD
  • OUTSTANDING

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  • Challenging and changing racist attitudes and
    behaviour in young people (2005)
  • Refugees and asylum-seekers were prominent
    amongst groups identified as being 'disliked'.
  • Projects that successfully challenged racist
    attitudes benefited from well-defined
    objectives, a clear structure, a range of inputs,
    sustained activities over a period of time, and a
    focus on encouraging reflection on personal
    attitudes and experiences.
  • The researchers conclude that if current policy
    aspirations to combat racial and religious
    prejudice and to build social capital between
    communities are to be met, a sustained
    educational initiative is required.

21
Inclusion through the curriculum
Long termHigh profileNon-negotiable, non-stop
Fighting discrimination
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Refugee Week is important because it reminds us
that refugees are not just statistics to be used
and abused, they are living, breathing people. I
am British, I was born here and I have no
intention of leaving here, so I want to create a
society here where compassion is built into our
culture, in this society we will be so aware of
the world around us that we will not need a
Refugee Week. Until then this is how we do it".
24
The Other Side of Truth by Beverley Naidoo
25
The Other Side of Truth PODCAST
  • Listen to a podcast by Woodberry Down children
    about their study of The Other Side of Truth by
    Beverley Naidoo.

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Activity 2
  • Jigsaw reading activity Identifying key themes
    and principles

28
What key themes and principles can you identify?
29
The Colour of Home by Mary Hoffman
  • The Colour of Home tells the story of Hassan, a
    young Somali refugee struggling to adapt to his
    new life in England. At school, he escapes from
    the drab greyness around him by drawing a
    sun-splashed picture of his old home in Somalia.
    It is full of the colour of his village. But soon
    other colours invade the picture. The colours of
    war, and suffering.
  • Through painting, and words and colours, Hassan
    retraces his dangerous journey from Somalia to
    England, thus embarking on a healing journey of
    self-discovery. The book ends on an uplifting and
    positive note as Hassan starts to recognise the
    exciting colours of his new home.

30
The Colour of Home PODCAST
  • Listen to Year 3 children at Woodberry Down
    Primary read The Colour of Home.

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Activity 3
  • The Colour of Home

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How would you use this text in the classroom?
  • Discuss ideas
  • Share ideas

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Some more ideas for using The Colour of Home
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How do the characters relate to each other?
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How do the characters feel about each other?
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  • He painted a blue, blue sky, without any clouds.
    Then a white house, a yellow sun and mimosa
    trees. Outside the house he made stick figures
    himself, his father, his mother holding a bundle
    that was his baby sister, his grandparents, his
    uncle, his two cousins. There were nine people
    outside the house, who all lived inside it.
  • Then Hassan took more paint and put in the
    animals a flock of white sheep, some brown
    goats and a small sandy creature who was supposed
    to be his cat.
  • What a lovely picture, Hassan, said Miss
    Kelly. What beautiful bright colours!

What can you see? Draw it.
37
Use visual images before drawing.
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Think about the role of colours in the story
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At home, they showed the picture to his father,
who stuck it on the wall. The blue, yellow and
white looked bright against the grey paint. Next
to it hung the maroon prayer-mat which had come
with them on their travels. And as Hassan looked
around the room, he saw other colours things
his mother had made a green cushion, an orange
tablecloth and a pink dress she was sewing for
Naima. Just then the sun came out, and there was
blue sky outside their window. The Colour of Home
40
Act sections out
  • What did you do at school today? asked his
    mother, when she brought his little sister Naima
    to collect him.
  • Painting, said Hassan.
  • Can I see? she said. All around them, other
    children were showing their pictures to their
    mothers.
  • No, said Hassan. The paint is still wet. He
    didnt want his mother to be sad. You can see it
    tomorrow.

41
Revise compound words all these are in the story
outside
midday
football
classroom
paintbrush
playground
pushchair
42
Writing activities (1)
  • Write a letter to Miss Kelly as Hassan now you
    are at secondary school. How has life changed?
  • Pretend you are a child in Hassans class. Write
    a diary entry about his first few days at school.

43
Writing activities (2)
  • Who is Mary Hoffman? Write a biography or write
    her CV

www.maryhoffman.co.uk
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Key factors for promoting race equality and
developing a culturally inclusive curriculum
  • Innovative teachers
  • Relentlessness
  • Immersion
  • A strong belief that equality matters
  • An equally strong belief that including all
    children - and challenging discrimination -
    matters too

46
QTS standards
  • Teaching and Learning
  • Q10 Have a knowledge and understanding of a
    range of teaching, learning and behaviour
    management strategies and know how to use and
    adapt them, including how to personalise learning
    and provide opportunities for all learners to
    achieve their potential.
  • Achievement and diversity
  • Q19 Know how to make effective personalised
    provision for those they teach, including EAL
    learners, and how to take account of diversity
    and teach inclusively
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