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Due to the sensitive nature of the subject matter, we strongly advise teacher viewing before watching with your pupils. Careful preparation should be undertaken to prepare pupils before playing them this potentially traumatic and triggering story. The film includes descriptions of the racism black children and their families experienced in Britain, as well as the scientific racism that influenced policies such as segregating children in ESN schools.

Video summary

This short film for secondary schools examines how black children in the 1960s and 1970s were disproportionately sent to schools for the so-called ‘educationally subnormal’.

Shanequa Paris tells the story of how a generation of West Indian migrants moved their families to the UK in hope of providing better opportunities and education for their children.

However, in a white-dominated country, where politics was becoming increasingly racialised, there was a question of how society saw these black British children.

Led by the influential theories of psychologists such as Hans Eysenck, who wrongly believed that black people were genetically less intelligent than white people, IQ tests were devised to target black children and move them to educationally subnormal schools (ESN schools) that taught only the basics of reading and writing.

Youth worker Bernard Coard wrote a book exposing the truth about the number of black children in ESN schools which led to the Government taking action, including banning the term 'educationally subnormal' as a category.

This ý Teach film uses extracts from the ý One documentary, 'Subnormal: A British Scandal'.

Due to the sensitive nature of the subject matter, we strongly advise teacher viewing before watching with your pupils. Careful preparation should be undertaken to prepare pupils before playing them this potentially traumatic and triggering story. The film includes descriptions of the racism black children and their families experienced in Britain, as well as the scientific racism that influenced policies such as segregating children in ESN schools.

You can also download , which were created for another ý Teach series but contain relevant information for using videos in the classroom.

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Teacher Notes

Before watching the film:

Prior to this lesson you may wish to introduce your students to some of the events mentioned in this short film to provide context. For example:

  • The arrival of the Empire Windrush in 1948.
  • The 1948 British Nationality Act, which conferred equal citizenship status to people in Britain and her colonies.
  • The changing nature of migration (at first it was mostly young, single adults but over time more families and children moved to Britain from the Commonwealth).
  • The discriminatory bussing of black and Asian students in the 1960s and 1970s in an attempt to disperse them.

During watching the film:

You may wish to pause the short film at certain points to check for understanding. Alternatively, you could wait until the end and pose questions such as:

  • What were many black Caribbean parents hoping for their children?
  • Why did the Department for Education recommend only 30% of pupils should come from an ‘immigrant background’ and what were the consequences of this recommendation?
  • Why were children sent to ‘Educationally Subnormal Schools’?
  • How was the West Indian community discriminated against by the education system?
  • How did the black community respond to being let down by the education system?
  • What was taught in Supplementary Schools?
  • What is the situation today?

Following on:

You could ask students to summarise the key points of the video. This could be done in various different ways, through storyboarding or via bullet points. At KS4 this short film may serve as a case study in a lesson about West Indian migration to post-war Britain.

ESN teacher and activist, Bernard Coard features in the film. He wrote the seminal book ‘How the West Indian Child is made Educationally Sub-Normal in the British School System’ in 1971. One option is to use the film as part of a lesson looking at why Bernard Coard wrote the book and what impact it had, with a focus on parental activism. A range of relevant primary source material exists. The George Padmore Institute has a selection of sources available on its website, such as letters about ‘How the West Indian Child is made Educationally Sub-Normal in the British School System’ and campaign leaflets.

If using this short film in citizenship or PSHE, you may wish to focus more on contemporary issues. The end of the video considers the educational experiences of students with black Caribbean heritage today. This could lead to a lesson about school exclusion and educational inequality. Another contemporary angle is that the recent Windrush scandal has primarily affected children who arrived in Britain in this period. You may wish to draw attention to this and use the film as an opportunity to explore what the Windrush scandal is, what caused it and how the government has responded.

This short film is suitable for teaching KS3 and KS4 students.

It could be used as part of citizenship or PSHE, when looking at how education has changed over time, or to spark discussion about educational inequality.

It could fit as part of a KS3 history curriculum when looking at ‘social, cultural and technological change in post-war British society.’ For example, it could be integrated into an enquiry or scheme of work looking at migration to Britain or black British history.

At KS4, this short film could be used to illustrate the experiences and treatment of migrants to Britain after World War Two as part of the AQA ‘Empire, Migration and the People’ course, the OCR ‘Migrants to Britain’ course or the forthcoming Edexcel Migration course.

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Useful follow-on content:

Black Power - A British Story of Resistance. video

This short film for secondary schools looks at the Black Power movement in the 1960s in the UK, surveying both the individuals and the cultural forces that defined the era.

Black Power - A British Story of Resistance

Uprising. video

This short film for secondary schools looks at the New Cross house fire of 1981, and the protests, unrest and accusations of indifference that followed and defined race relations for a generation.

Uprising

Educationally Subnormal Schools. video

Kenyah Sandy, who plays Kingsley Smith in Steve McQueen's Small Axe, tells the story of how hundreds of children were taken out of mainstream schools and sent to Educationally Subnormal Schools (ESN schools) in the 1970's.

Educationally Subnormal Schools
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