Monday, September 26, 2011

What absolute hogwash!

Dress Witches in Pink and Avoid White Paper to Prevent Racism in Nuseries, Expert Says
By Julie Henry

Teachers should censor the toy box to replace witches' black hats with a pink ones and dress fairies in darker shades, according to a consultant who has issued advice to local authorities.

From the Wicked Witch of the West in the Wizard of Oz to Meg, the good witch from the Meg and Mog children's books, witches have always dressed in black. But their traditional attire has now come in for criticism from equality experts who claim it could send a negative message to toddlers in nursery and lead to racism.

Instead, teachers should censor the toy box and replace the pointy black hat with a pink one, while dressing fairies, generally resplendent in pale pastels, in darker shades. Another staple of the classroom - white paper - has also been questioned by Anne O'Connor, an early years consultant who advises local authorities on equality and diversity.

Children should be provided with paper other than white to drawn on and paints and crayons should come in "the full range of flesh tones", reflecting the diversity of the human race, according to the former teacher. Finally, staff should be prepared to be economical with the truth when asked by pupils what their favourite colour is and, in the interests of good race relations, answer "black" or "brown".

The measures, outlined in a series of guides in Nursery World magazine, are aimed at avoiding racial bias in toddlers as young as two. According to the guides, very young children may begin to express negative and discriminatory views about skin colour and appearance that nursery staff must help them "unlearn". If children develop positive associations with dark colours, the greater the likelihood that the attitude will be generalised to people, it says.

The advice is based on an “anti-bias” approach to education which developed in the United States as part of multiculturalism. It challenges prejudices such as racism, sexism and ageism through the whole curriculum and teaches children about tolerance and respect and to critically analyse what they are taught and think.

Ms O'Connor, who has worked with Newham and Tower Hamlets councils and recently devised equality material for Lancashire council's childcare service, said the approach, based on an "anti-bias" model of education, developed children's empathy and helped early years teachers to explore their own conditioning and possible prejudices.

"This is an incredibly complex subject that can easily become simplified and inaccurately portrayed," she said. "There is a tendency in education to say 'here are normal people and here are different people and we have to be kind to those different people', whether it's race, gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, age or faith.

"People who are feeling defensive can say 'well there's nothing wrong with white paper', but in reality there could be if you don't see yourself reflected in the things around you. “As an early years teacher, the minute you start thinking, 'well actually, if I give everyone green paper, what happens’, you have a teaching potential...


(Ribbet!)

I know this came out yesterday, but everyone needs to see where this lunacy has gone. Who knew?

7 comments:

  1. It's precisely things like this that drove me to yank my son out of school and homeschool him. Liberals are completely insane.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Umm, what about priests and nuns? Does a nun's habit make children prejudiced against penguins? Unless you have special light colored crayons drawing on darker colors is nearly impossible and if black children draw on white paper will that make them draw on white people? My favorite color is orange what does that make me?
    Mrs. Cow

    ReplyDelete
  3. I tend towards fucia--though you have to be careful how much you use. I guess that makes me raspberry sherbet and you orange sherbet, Mrs. Cow!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Mrs. Cow, that's the funniest reply to this absurdity! I have to repeat it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. When my girls were babies as we held them they would look back and forth back and forth They described their grand parents as brown Gma and orange Gma. As they got older 2 exclusively date Black 2 date White, 1 dates the United Nations and one prefers hispanic or Asian. I have grand children that can check all the boxes for ethnicity. We sure didn't believe in PC crap but we ended up with a lot of happy diversity

    ReplyDelete
  6. My son has a thing for ethnic women. His first big love was black and his second (current) big love is Korean. So long as the girl he winds up with loves him and treats him well, I'm all in.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I think I've mentioned before that my family is like the UN, we're a very colorful bunch. It never ceases to amaze me how far the libs will go to prove that white people can't get along with people with other colors of skin. My lib cousins are always gasping with horror when my unPC statements are made, we have the Asian Contingent, the Black Caucus, the Hispanic Quarter and the Reservationists (Native American). Oddly enough all the youngsters hang around with me-even the most radical. I am mobbed at family reunions with hugs and kisses and I know what all of the kids are doing, who they're dating, what their grades are and just how much they hate their parents from day to day from e-mails and FB postings. After much thought I have decided that these kids don't care if I'm not PC, they just love that they are loved without condition and that I treat them all the same no matter what they do. I know it's an alien concept, but there it is.
    Mrs. Cow

    ReplyDelete