Schools minister rebuffs calls to decolonise English curriculum

Nick Gibb says no reason why children from ethnic minorities should not study work of a ‘dead white man’

The Schools minister, Nick Gibb, has pushed back against calls to decolonise the curriculum in England and has warned that what pupils learn in the classroom should not be tailored to any one particular group.

Amid mounting pressure to make the teaching of black history mandatory in schools and to diversify the national curriculum, the minister said there was no reason why children from ethnic minorities should not study the work of dead white men.

In a speech to the Social Market Foundation thinktank on Wednesday, Gibb said a “knowledge-rich” curriculum taught well was “inclusive and diverse” and would ensure that pupils learned about the struggles and achievements of people from all races.

He said: “We will not create a more harmonious, tolerant and equal society through promoting a curriculum based on relevance to or representativeness of any one group. Nor will we do so by being ashamed of who we are and where we came from.

“A curriculum based on relevance to pupils is to deny them an introduction to the ‘best that has been thought and said’. And, of course, there is no reason why the work of a ‘dead white man’ is not appropriate for children from ethnic minorities to learn about.”

The Department for Education has resisted calls to make the teaching of black history mandatory, insisting that the curriculum already allows for teaching black history and includes black and ethnic minority voices and experiences. Black history will be be mandatory in Welsh schools from next year to help pupils become “informed citizens of the world”.

Gibb also expressed concern about reports of what he described as “violent and angry protests” in schools around the country, sparked by recent events in Gaza. Escalation in the Middle East conflict triggered a wave of pro-Palestinian protests by pupils, some of whom later complained they were accused of antisemitism and subjected to disciplinary action.

He said young people should be given all the facts to help them understand the situation in Israel and Palestine and warned: “We must be on our guard to ensure that schools don’t become centres of one-sided propaganda, or a hostile environment for young people of any faith or religion.”

Contributor

Sally Weale Education correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Hundreds of schools in England sign up for anti-racist curriculum
Grassroots groups, teachers and councils helping to update syllabus after young people demand change

David Batty, Nazia Parveen and Tobi Thomas

26, Mar, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
Many GCSE pupils never study a book by a black author
Exam board AQA features no black writers on GCSE English literature syllabus

Sally Weale and Lanre Bakare

30, Sep, 2020 @5:00 AM

Article image
English schools must not teach ‘white privilege’ as fact, government warns
Comments ahead of new guidance ‘simplistic and unhelpful’, say teaching unions

Rachel Hall

21, Oct, 2021 @5:44 PM

Article image
Troy Deeney calls for more diversity in English schools’ curriculum
Footballer and father says children should be given a ‘balanced and inclusive understanding’ of Britain

Richard Adams Education editor

22, Feb, 2022 @10:00 PM

Article image
National curriculum in England ‘systematically omits' Black British history
The Black Curriculum report says England’s ‘white, Eurocentric curriculum’ fails to reflect UK society

Sally Weale

25, Nov, 2020 @12:01 AM

Article image
'Students need to know the harrowing truth': teachers on black history in the curriculum
Should black history be compulsory in England’s schools? We talk to educators

Donna Ferguson

03, Oct, 2020 @7:00 AM

Article image
'I was shielded from my history': the changes young black Britons are calling for
Exclusive: from schools to policing, 50 people share their experiences of growing up in the UK

Lucy Campbell

30, Jul, 2020 @9:48 AM

Article image
Quarter of English state primary schools are 'ethnically segregated'
‘Significant fails’ in percentage of white British children attending local schools in some areas, according to study

Sally Weale Education correspondent

22, Mar, 2017 @6:53 PM

Article image
Calls grow for black history to be taught to all English school pupils
Campaigners are collecting support for open letter and want to meet education secretary

Sally Weale , Lanre Bakare and Saima Mir

08, Jun, 2020 @4:55 PM

Article image
Almost half of English schools have no BAME teachers, study finds
Researchers from UCL also found that even in diverse schools, leadership teams are almost always white

Sally Weale Education correspondent

14, Dec, 2020 @12:01 AM