Queen Elizabeth’s Girls’ School, a junior high school in Barnet, near London, is in hot water for its curriculum on the slave trade. Rather than teaching students about slavery via textbooks and other traditional means, the Queen Elizabeth’s Girls’ School decided to have them create business plans for capturing and enslaving Africans, according to the London Evening Standard.
To make things as realistic as possible, students received imaginary tools, such as manacles, thumb screws, and even whips. Teachers then taught them lessons, such as how to carry out slave raids, bribe African chiefs with goods and alcohol, and ultimately craft the business proposals for enslavement.
Students also learned the “good” part of being slave traders: having “an affair with a beautiful African girl”.
The resulting “mixed-race” male child would then head to Africa to head the slave business while his father remained in America. (A Powerpoint presentation was also incorporated into the lessons, aspictured above.)
It wasn’t long before word got out about the slave “curriculum”: A thirteen-year-old black female student told her mother about the lessons, “expressing concern and distress”. The mother then complained to Ligali, a pan-African human rights organization, who filed a complaint against the school.
In response, Queen Elizabeth’s head teacher, Kate Webster, issued the following apology:
On behalf of the school, I apologize unreservedly for the distress and anguish caused to the student and to her mother, as well as to you and others in your community who this material may have been shared with. Now I have had the opportunity to view the presentation in its entirety, I share your concerns.Despite having taught the slave “curriculum” since September of 2010, Webster claimed she had no idea about the lessons until the girl’s mother filed her complaint. Additional steps have also been taken to discipline the staff member who devised the presentation.
15 December 2012
Apology accepted
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