| Theme: | Understanding prejudice |
|---|---|
| Age Group: | Primary Lower – Primary Upper |
| Learning Area: | English Life Skills – PDHPE Life Skills |
Below are a range of suggested activities to explore the concept of racism in a stage 1-3 Life Skills educational setting. Some worksheets have been differentiated to accommodate a range of learning needs, further teacher-led differentiation can be utilised, for example: pair work, small groups, peer reading, working with support staff, providing visuals which are suitable to the educational context or using assistive technologies.
Explain to students that today the class will be discussing the important topics of “diversity” and “racism.” Gauge student understanding and connections to the topic through some brief questioning or a show of hands indicating who has heard these words before.
Remind students to be respectful and steer responses away from personal experiences or individual people.
Follow on with a 5min discussion using the following prompts:
In this activity, students draw or list features about themselves that makes them unique. Encourage students to think about what makes them special, such as their hobbies, talents, family, favourite things and interests.
After completing their worksheets, invite students to share and explain their artwork with a friend or partner, asking students to consider:
In this activity, students are encouraged to explore diversity. Share images on slides 5-13 and prompt students with the following discussion points:
Use this activity to emphasise that everyone is unique and special, regardless of their appearance or background. Discuss the idea that diversity is what makes our world beautiful.
Reiterate to students that our differences are what makes our world beautiful. Introduce the concept of racism as when people treat others badly or unfairly because of the colour of their skin or where they come from. It’s important to be kind to everyone and treat them with respect, no matter what they look like.
Use these activity options to help students to better understand the concept of racism.
Illustration cards can be delivered individually, with guidance from an adult. Ask students to share their images with a small group or the class.
Sorting activity can be delivered as whole class, small groups or individually. This worksheet could be blown up to A3 and worked on in small groups or as a class.
The following websites may be helpful for further information about racism and racism in schools: