it’s not fair!' exploring social justice through fairtrade with younger children april 2015
TRANSCRIPT
'It’s not fair!' Exploring social justice through Fairtrade with younger
children
April 2015
Aims:•To explore the challenges of global education with younger children
•To introduce the World from our Doorstep project•To explore what Fairtrade means, and how it can contribute to geography learning in early years and KS1•To experience some practical activities exploring fairness in a global context
•To meet 'Fairtrade Thea'
Overview of FAIRTRADE
• Fairtrade works to benefit small-scale farmers and workers through trade rather than aid.
• Development of thriving farming and worker communities that have more control over their futures and protecting the environment in which they live and work.
• The Mark means that the Fairtrade ingredients in the product have been produced by small-scale farmer organisations or plantations that meet Fairtrade social, economic and environmental standards.
FAIRTRADE means:
Farmers receive a fair and stable price for their products
Producers groups receive a premium to invest in improving their communities and businesses
Greater respect for the environment
Small farmers have a stronger position in world markets
A closer link between shoppers and producers
Challenges:• Big complex ideas - how to explore them without over-
simplifying• Making it real - "glocal", exploring global learning themes
through local activities and examples• Relevant - thinking about the food in our cupboards,
supermarkets, where it's from, what is the journey from field to plate
• Make it fun! Experiential, participatory, creativity, games, stories, toys
• Deep learning through dialogue (question & enquiry, P4C, Sustained Shared Thinking)
The World from our DoorstepProject Aim – to raise the awareness and change the attitudes of young children towards development issues, and ensure they can take action to support sustainable ways of living
Project themes – the concept of interconnectedness (local-global links), sustainability, and fairness (through Fairtrade)
Participants – infant teachers, pre-school practitioners, teaching assistants and other adult helpers
Methodologies and approaches – stories and artefacts, games, enabling critical thinking (P4C, Sustained Shared Thinking), links with local and international food producers and craftspeople