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Dear All,

Please see my latest blog below, bringing together a list of 17 practical
suggestions of how to get Black British History into our classrooms without
waiting for the Government to change the curriculum. I don't claim many of
them to be original (In fact, one of my main points is that we need to
learn from the history of the struggle to change history lessons), and I'm
sure to have overlooked things; this is more an attempt to gather together
ideas coming out of years' worth of discussions, including with some of
you, to make them more accessible.

I'm afraid It's so long that I've had to split it into two parts, but I
hope some of you will persevere, or at least skip to Part 2
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-2>
for
the specific ideas (as the background will no doubt be known to many of
you).

Since I first began drafting this list in July progress in some of these
areas have been accelerating, and so I've also tried to signpost existing
initiatives in the relevant areas. However, I am not privy to all of these,
so please add things I’ve missed in the comments and I’ll incorporate them.

Best wishes,

Miranda


Black History Matters: Changing what happens in our Classrooms- Part 1
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-1>

1/12/2020

2 Comments
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-1#comments>

I’m not going to spend time explaining *why* we need to teach Black British
History. Or bemoaning how little of it is currently taught. That has been
done repeatedly, eloquently and shockingly
<https://www.theguardian.com/education/2020/jul/13/black-british-history-school-curriculum-england>,
not least in a series of as yet unacted on government recommendations
<https://www.newstatesman.com/2020/06/375-government-recommendations-boris-johnson-could-use-instead-launching-yet-another>.
Though I will just quote W.E.B. DuBois’s warning of how easy it is ‘by
emphasis and omission to make children believe… that every great thought
was a white man’s thought’ and ‘every great deed…a white man’s deed’, and
draw your attention to this  brilliant spoken word performance by Samuel
King which also puts the point across very powerfully:
https://youtu.be/TNfH41-LI4w
What I want to contribute to the conversation is a* list of 17 specific
ideas* that I have picked up from many conversations over the years as to *how
we can change things, NOW*. Because solutions, not problems, are the agents
of change. Since I first began drafting this list in July progress in some
of these areas have been accelerating, and so I will also be signposting
existing initiatives in the relevant areas. However, I am not privy to all
of these, so please add things I’ve missed in the comments and I’ll
incorporate them.

*Click here
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-2>
to
skip straight to the ideas.*

It seems clear to me that *the current Government is not going to be part
of the solution anytime soon*. The Petitions Committee are currently
conducting a listening exercise in response to the fact that 268,182 people
have signed a petition to Teach Britain's colonial past as part of the UK's
compulsory curriculum <https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/324092>
created by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson of Impact of Omission
<https://impactofomission.squarespace.com/>; whilst two other petitions, Add
education on diversity and racism to all school curriculums
<https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/323808> and Making the UK
education curriculum more inclusive of BAME history
<https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/323961>, have received 115,575
signatures combined. While the evidence (watch the 5th November session here
<https://www.parliamentlive.tv/Event/Index/b8a28d7e-aadd-47bb-b0a9-6cbe5b332165>;
the 18th November session here
<https://www.parliamentlive.tv/Event/Index/1901748e-fd28-4a57-b669-902b12cbd38f>)
makes for illuminating listening, if the 20th October debate on the subject
<https://parliamentlive.tv/event/index/6d7a2177-2518-4174-a0ba-c311a6fa9488>
(text
from Hansard here
<https://hansard.parliament.uk/commons/2020-10-20/debates/5B0E393E-8778-4973-B318-C17797DFBB22/BlackHistoryMonth>)
is anything to go by, *we have a long struggle ahead if we are to convince
the current Government to change the curriculum*. The Minister for
Equalities herself asserted that the curriculum does not need to change,
and that while children ‘*can* learn about the British empire and
colonialism, the transatlantic slave trade and its abolition, and how our
history has been shaped by people of all ethnicities…we should not
apologise for the fact that British children primarily study the history of
these islands.’ This elides the fact that there have been ‘people of all
ethnicities’ in ‘these islands’ since at least the Roman period; that Black
History is British History, and extends far beyond the narrative of
enslavement and colonialism. As I told the Department for Education back in
2012
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/our-island-story-what-history-should-we-teach-our-children>,
the Edwardian ‘Our Island Story’ narrative is no longer fit for purpose.
But, our Government believe the curriculum is already ‘incredibly diverse’
<https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/black-colonial-history-schools-government_uk_5f048c3ec5b6db5967475093>.
It is revealing that Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has tweeted
approvingly
<https://twitter.com/GavinWilliamson/status/1277934025672396800?s=20> about
the frankly worrying right-wing think tank Policy Exchange’s History
Matters project
<https://policyexchange.org.uk/press-release/policy-exchange-launches-new-history-project/>,
which, concerned that British History is becoming ‘politicised, and
sometimes distorted, in the current moment’, are compiling a dossier to
record the changes being made, they suggest, ‘without proper thought and
against public opinion’. And Saturday’s *Daily Express* summed up
Williamson’s stance, and that of the ‘Common Sense’ group of Tory MPs,
under the headline:  We will NOT bow to the PC brigade! PM rejects calls
for 'woke' school curriculum
<https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1365819/prime-minister-boris-johnson-rejects-woke-school-curriculum-pc-gavin-williamsons>.
While *the fight for curriculum change must of course continue*, I for one,
am far too impatient to wait for this Government to have a change of heart
and make teaching Black British History mandatory.

*Neither is change going to happen organically, **‘as university
curriculums evolve’* as a overly-optimistic article in the *Economist*
<https://www.economist.com/britain/2020/07/04/changing-history-teaching> this
summer suggested. As the Royal Historical Society’s 2018 Race, Ethnicity
and Equality Report
<https://blog.royalhistsoc.org/2019/10/18/rhs-ree-report-one-year-on/>
highlighted,
universities have their own problems including a lack of diversity in both
the curriculum and the teaching staff. Further, a damning set of
recommendations
released in November 2020 by Universities UK
<https://www.universitiesuk.ac.uk/news/Pages/uuk-calls-urgent-action-racial-harassment-higher-education-november-2020.aspx>
concluded
that British higher education perpetuates institutional racism.  And the
pace of change would be far too slow. I don’t want to wait for another
generation of teachers to become, as the* Economist *suggested,
‘comfortable talking about topics they themselves were taught.’

Before we decide on a future strategy, it is important to recognize the *many
individuals, groups and organizations* who have been campaigning for this
vital change, and providing extra-curricular education for children since
before the first National Curriculum was written in 1988. A *history lesson
on the campaign to change history lessons*, if you will. Taking a longer
view allows us to learn from the victories and defeats along the way. The
establishment of Black History Month in 1987 was a step towards
highlighting this history in schools.  In 1991 Peter Fryer, author of the
seminal *Staying Power:* *The History of Black People in Britain*
<https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/dec/01/how-peter-fryers-staying-power-changed-the-story-fo-black-britons>
(1984),
complained alongside Julia Bush, in a pamphlet on ‘The Politics of Black
History’ that ‘the intentions of this government are to ram a
nationalistic, narrow, stereotype down children’s throats’, which sounds
strikingly familiar. The Black and Asian Studies Association
<http://www.blackandasianstudies.org/> (BASA), founded in 1991, petitioned
the National Curriculum Council, Educational Publishers, and Ofsted
throughout the 1990s and 2000s
<http://www.blackandasianstudies.org/education.doc>, and submitted detailed
feedback <http://www.blackandasianstudies.org/basanc.doc> during the
curriculum consultation period in 2013. BASA member and history teacher
Martin Spafford helped design the 2007 History National Curriculum
<https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130802142204/http:/media.education.gov.uk/assets/files/pdf/h/history%202007%20programme%20of%20study%20for%20key%20stage%203.pdf>
which
recommended the teaching of the continued ethnic diversity of the people of
Britain throughout history, precolonial African civilisations, empire and
decolonization, but sadly this progress was arrested in 2013. It’s also
worth going back to listen to the various public discussion of the subject
held over the last few years. Since 2014, education has been a recurrent
theme <https://twitter.com/BlackBritHist/status/1275366074012381185?s=20> at
the *What’s Happening in Black British History?* workshops
<https://blackbritishhistory.co.uk/> I run with Michael Ohajuru at the
Institute of Commonwealth Studies. In 2015 Hakim Adi held the History
Matters conference
<https://www.chi.ac.uk/humanities/public-humanities/reshaping-historical-knowledge/history-matters#:~:text=Representatives%20from%20History%20Matters%2C%20a,teachers%20of%20African%20and%20Caribbean>
highlighting
the alarmingly low numbers of Black history students and teachers, which is
now being combatted by the inspirational Young Historians Project
<https://www.younghistoriansproject.org/about-us>. There have also been
excellent discussions on the Justice2History podcast
<https://soundcloud.com/user-461660784>, at the 2018 Institute of
Historical Research event ‘Where do we fit in?’ Black and Asian British
History on the Curriculum
<https://www.history.ac.uk/podcasts/where-do-we-fit-black-and-asian-british-history-curriculum>,
and at the new Institute of Historical Research Black British History
Seminar in October
<https://www.history.ac.uk/events/black-british-history-schools-and-research-open-conversation-teachers-and-historians>
.

To succeed, we must combine the *passion and energy of young campaigners* such
as the Black Curriculum <https://www.theblackcurriculum.com/>, Fill in the
Blanks <https://twitter.com/fillinthblanks> and Impact of Omission
<https://impactofomission.squarespace.com/>, and a new cohort of innovative
young history teachers with the *experience and wisdom of stalwarts* including
BASA veterans Marika Sherwood
<https://research.sas.ac.uk/search/fellow/181/ms-marika-sherwood/>, Hakim
Adi <https://www.chi.ac.uk/staff/professor-hakim-adi>, Stephen Bourne
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Bourne_(writer)>,  Sean Creighton
<http://historyandsocialaction.blogspot.com/2020/02/reflections-on-current-state-of-british.html>;
campaigners like Arthur Torrington
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Torrington>, co-founder of the
Equiano Society and the Windrush Foundation; Angelina Osborne and Patrick
Vernon, who have developed the 100 Great Black Britons
<https://www.100greatblackbritons.co.uk/> project from a poll in 2003 to a
nice fat book, out this year; history teachers like Martin Spafford
<https://twitter.com/mcps54?lang=en>, Nick Dennis
<https://www.history.org.uk/publications/resource/9040/beyond-tokenism-diverse-history-post-14>
and
Dan Lyndon (who started his BlackHistory4Schools website
<http://www.blackhistory4schools.com/> back in 2006, and has recently
written Colonial Countryside Project
<https://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/creativewriting/centre/colonial-countryside-project>
teaching
materials); and those who train teachers and act as educational consultants
like Justice2History <https://justice2history.org/about/>’s Adbullah
Mohamud and Robin Whitburn of UCL’s Institute of Education, Jason Todd
<http://www.education.ox.ac.uk/people/jason-todd/> at Oxford’s Education
Department, Will Bailey-Watson <https://twitter.com/mrwbw> in Reading; Black
History Studies
<https://blackhistorystudies.com/our-courses-2/families-courses/childrens-workshops/>
; Robin Walker <http://www.blackhistoryman.com/schools-2/> (who co-wrote *Black
British History: Black Influences on British Culture (1948 to 2016)*
<https://ebonyonline.net/black-british-history-black-influences-on-british-culture/>
with
the requirements of the current National Curriculum in mind); the *Thinking
Black* <https://www.thinkingblack.co.uk/about> educational project and Black
History Walks
<https://www.blackhistorywalks.co.uk/index.php/teachers-resources>, to name
a few.

It is also vital to *include teachers and educational specialists (*Mohamud
and Whitburn’s ‘choreographers’) *themselves in the conversation *alongside
‘pugilists’(activists/campaigners) and ‘diggers’(historians): we *cannot
change anything without considering the many constraints placed upon our
teachers and a detailed knowledge of how our schools actually operate*.
This oversight is nowhere more apparent than in the exclusive focus on
curriculum change. Nearly a third of publicly-funded schools in England are
now ‘academies’
<http://www.lse.ac.uk/social-policy/Assets/Documents/PDF/Research-reports/Academies-Vision-Report.pdf>
(22
per cent of primary and 68 per cent of secondary schools), which no longer
have to follow the curriculum (though many still do). Schools are also
still implementing a vast array of changes imposed upon them over the last
few years, including the 2019 Ofsted regulations, not to mention the
unprecedented challenges of operating during a pandemic. While curriculum
change should continue to be a goal, I fear that demanding this happen
under the present Government will only lead to heads bloodied from repeated
impact with the proverbial brick wall.

With this in mind, *we need to be inventive, and attack the problem from
all conceivable angles*.

*Go to my next blog
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-2>*to
find my running list of proactive ideas to change what happens in our
classrooms, besides maintaining the pressure on the Government to change
the National Curriculum.

*This blog is the result of many conversations over several years, made
urgent once more by the events of this year. These have at times been hard
to keep up with, so if I’ve missed anything, please let me know in the
comments and I’ll add/edit accordingly.*

* I would particularly like to thank the following people for their input
and feedback on this blog, while emphasising that any errors remain my own:
Shahmima Akhtar, Kerry Apps, Sean Creighton, Hannah Elias, Corinne Fowler,
Tim Jenner, Abdul Mohamud, Michael Ohajuru, Helen Sanson, Martin Spafford
and Robin Whitburn.*
2 Comments
<http://www.mirandakaufmann.com/blog/black-history-matters-changing-what-happens-in-our-classrooms-part-1#comments>

---

Dr. Miranda Kaufmann

Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Commonwealth Studies

www.mirandakaufmann.com

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