Forum Topic

Decolonising the curriculum?!

We learn from Ealing Today that the borough is involved in a drive to ‘decolonize the curriculum and to replace it with anti-racist learning’. Are teachers surprised to be told that their current teaching has been ‘racist’? What is going on in Ealing? Who is messing with the curriculum in our secondary schools and on what authority?  The school curriculum is established in law. It’s intended beneficiaries are pupils and parents.   If change to the curriculum is envisaged, these are the “stakeholders” who need first to be considered and who should lead the conversation, not the Ealing Learning Partnership, a quango condescending from above.  And not unions.   One wonders how loudly the voices of parents and pupils are heard in the ELP, directly even, rather than mediated by headteachers.  What does the ELP do?  Six committees have been established.  How often do they meet?  Are minutes kept?  Unfortunately, if I want to read more, “full access is only available to registered users from schools and settings that subscribe to the Ealing Learning Partnership” and user accounts are currently only available for Ealing maintained schools and academies staff and Ealing LA staff.  Why Ealing LA staff?   Why not parents and pupils?  Why not concerned council-tax payers who are funding the enterprise?  The idea that the ELP can operate in secrecy, without scrutiny by those most concerned, is outrageous.  If this organisation is publicly funded, its papers should be publicly available. The ELP also provides information and guidance relating to Black Lives Matter and anti-racism, and presentations addressing George Floyd’s murder and the Black Lives Matter protests.  It is produced by the Hackney Learning Trust and shared with Ealing in the spirit of collaboration, but of course not shared with Ealing Council council-tax payers.  Sadly, I can’t ask the date of the next demo and what to take along to throw at a policeman.  Is it a LA’s role to give advice about protests, particularly one with a politically motivated agenda and violent reputation?What, as council-tax payers are we getting for our money in funding the ELP?  The recent contribution of Ms Julie Lewis (Ealing’s director learning, standards and school partnerships) to Ealing Today suggests not much. She tells Ealing Today a ‘huge amount’ is being done to tackle the under achievement of Black Caribbean students in the borough and that the ‘learning outcome of this work is ……of much wider and greater significance.’ Ms Lewis had the opportunity to tell Ealing Today’s reporter something specific, but her comments amount to little more than amorphous guff. In this she is matched by the contribution from Stefan Simms, secretary of Ealing’s National Education Union. He is another master of vague superlatives, ‘immense amount of enthusiasm and willingness’. Is that really worth saying?    The whole of the ELP’s literature is couched in this embarrassing mission-statement drivel because of course it has A VISION.  Don’t they all!  Mr Simms goes further than Ms Lewis. He takes on the current curriculum in English in schools: ‘Michael Gove insisted that the English curriculum has a lot of dead white men in it’. Well, he didn’t actually. It was Mary Bousted, General Secretary of the National Education Union, thinking, no doubt, of Fevre and Bancroft’s Dead White Men and Other Important People (2010, 2016). She said, 'schools must look beyond dead white men to make the curriculum more diverse'.   Leaving that aside, Mr Simms goes on to say ‘there is a wealth of other authors and poets that can be studied that would be just as good, just as relevant, and perhaps more engaging for our population.’   The idea, in that last phrase, that literature can be better studied because it mirrors the consumer’s own culture and, thereby, becomes more engaging defeats the object of teaching which is to extend the pupil’s awareness from the familiar to the less familiar. Did it not cross Mr Simms’ mind that, if Shakespeare were not still relevant today, he would long ago have joined the ranks of the dead forgotten? I recently saw young children in a production of The Tempest in a London primary school, simplified and abbreviated and incorporating additional songs and dances but performed with huge vigour, enthusiasm and excitement by a cast of widely differing ethnicities. They also gave us Macbeth (another of that dead white man’s efforts) with several Macbeths and Lady Macbeths from a variety of races. A clever way of making long roles more manageable and the whole thing very enjoyable for actors and audience.  Mr Simms and those who think like him fail to appreciate just how alive those dead white men are for kids and would seek to deprive them of the opportunity of finding out. It is noticeable that pressure for change to the curriculum does not come from kids. It comes from adults who have their own agendas. Kids do not, to my knowledge, quarrel with the curriculum qua curriculum. They get on with doing The Hunger Games or whatever and get something out of it.Pupils’ under-achievement is a complex issue. A recent article by Jonny Brooks-Bartlett, a Black Caribbean graduate in Maths with a Ph D from Oxford, in the magazine Chalkdust never once mentions deficiencies/ biases in school curricula to explain Black Caribbean under-achievement. On balance, he suggests, under achievement stems from the narrow expectations of parents, encouraging children in subjects which they think will lead to good jobs, and, mistakenly, failing to encourage proficiency in other subjects which have equally good career prospects. I do not know if he is right. But, I think, on balance the socio-economic positioning of Black Caribbean children is far more likely to explain their underachievement than a school curriculum that needs to be decolonised.           

vincent paul wrigley ● 2088d11 Comments

This decolonising project raises several questions, not least about council officer Ms Lewis, the star-chamber organisation-within-an organisation the ELP, and the deputy council leader, Yvonne Johnson, who is a prominent member of it. What needs decolonising first is the top team of senior council officers.  All white.  About as inclusive as an expat club in a former outpost of the Empire.  Ms Lewis is one of them.  Is she at all embarrassed as a white privileged female to be presiding over this particular project! She has “welcomed the steps from the unions”.  What other organisations has she consulted so that she can take into account a spectrum of political opinion in respect of matters educational? She refers to government data in which “black Caribbean students’ attainment was below the average for England in all subjects and at all key stages.”  Previous contributors have pointed to evidence that white working-class boys are underachieving.  It was discussed in Parliament on 12.3.20.  Statistics were reeled off and the opening speaker concluded by saying: “I am concerned that this issue has been brushed under the carpet … by modern society, which refuses to see the plight of young white males, even those from disadvantaged backgrounds.” Ms Lewis needs to look under her carpet and explain why she is she concerned with one racial group and not another?  Her behaviour, if not RACIST, is manifestly RACIALLY-DISCRIMINATORY. Which schools in Ealing are operating the curriculum to the disadvantage of black Caribbean pupils so that it is necessary to “decolonise” their curricula?  If there is no evidence they are, it is inappropriate to burden them with this issue at a time that is difficult enough as they prepare to reopen.  Why is she not investigating the local situation rather than proceeding on the basis of generalised data, mere assumption or unevidenced assertions by pressure groups?  Lewis turns the spotlight on Twyford High School.  It is an Academy.  It is free within the law to determine its own curriculum.  It is not the business of Ms Lewis to seek to pressure this or any school into going along with her decolonising agenda.  I say “pressure” because head-teachers may well feel intimidated into going along with her for fear of being called racists, which is the bullying ploy of left-wing agitators.  Lewis does not turn the spotlight onto Twyford High School because of a communication from the school itself but from a “union rep” who has “revealed” that a letter has been received from 700 current and former pupils urging the school to “decolonise” the curriculum and support Black Lives Matter.  A working group is being set up at the school for September. The suspicion is that the union rep is behind organising the letter and setting up the working group.  If the union rep is a teacher, Lewis appears to be supporting a teacher who is distracting pupils from their education at a time when concentration upon it is particularly difficult and attempting to set up a posse of left-wing BLM activists.  Setting aside the question of a teacher’s obligations, I am not clear how the activity described here conforms to the proper purpose of a student union as defined in legislation (a matter for Mr Williamson, perhaps).  Twyford School has an excellent report from Ofsted.  It does particularly well in respect of black pupils. “A well-above-average proportion of pupils are from minority ethnic backgrounds, mainly Black or Black British, mixed race, Asian or Asian British, and White other than British  ---  Pupils of all backgrounds and abilities make excellent progress in their studies and achieve well in almost all their lessons  --- The gap is also narrowing significantly between the performance of certain minority ethnic groups, such as Black African and Caribbean pupils, and their peers at Twyford. They have done well in the past compared with national averages for their heritage group, and are now catching up with national norms for all pupils …. Exclusions of Black Caribbean boys has been higher than for other groups in the past but a specific focus on these pupils’ needs, responding with an effective curriculum, has reduced the number of incidents.There is no reason to interfere with the curriculum in this school.  Schools in general do not need to be distracted from their primary functions at this difficult time by being drawn into an unnecessary virtue-signalling exercise by a white-privileged, interfering, racially-discriminating, politically- motivated local government officer and an unnamed union “rep”, both eager to get aboard the BLM bandwagon.  This project is floated on the back of the enthusiasm for the “Black Lives Matter” movement.  The ELP “provides information and guidance relating to Black Lives Matter and anti-racism, and presentations addressing George Floyd’s murder and the Black Lives Matters protests”.  We are not talking about BLM as a slogan or sentiment but as an organisation.  But which version are the EC, Ms Lewis and Councillor Johnson behind?  Would it be the original organisation formed by three black feminist lesbians?  Or is it the present USA organisation with its Defund the Police agenda and devoted at the moment to the political purpose of influencing the election?  An English version?  Or is the Black Lives Matter we have seen in action, rioting in Central London, injuring members of the police force, attacking and abusing black officers, committing acts of criminal damage in Bristol, rioting again in Brixton, whose members interviewed on TV have stated that its aim is to destroy capitalism and whose “poster-boy” was a drug-dealing armed house-breaker, who stuck a gun in a pregnant (black) lady’s stomach?  Council officers are allowed to reflect council policy - the Local Plan - in considering planning applications for instance.  In respect of education, neutrality is their obligation.  This attempt to foist the Council’s political opinions into school curricula is not a respectable educational aim.  It is intended to facilitate the political indoctrination of pupils.  A teacher who indoctrinates rather than educates pupils should be sacked as should a local government officer with responsibility for education who seeks to manipulate schools in a party-political direction.  I feel a formal complaint against Ms Lewis coming on.

Andrew Farmer ● 2084d