This audio was recorded by SLN in conjunction with Education Bradford Rewind Project. The audio was used as part of a larger project: Many Faces, Many Voices which culminated in an exhibition held at Cartwright Hall Art Gallery during WDWTWA Week which was opened by schools’ minister Jim Knight.
WDWTWA? Racism
This audio was recorded by SLN in conjunction with Education Bradford Rewind Project. The audio was used as part of a larger project: Many Faces, Many Voices which culminated in an exhibition held at Cartwright Hall Art Gallery during WDWTWA Week which was opened by schools’ minister Jim Knight
Parental Involvement
Parents from Reevy Hill and St Phillips met up at the Positive Lifestyle Centre at Bradford City Football Club.
Bradford has been chosen to launch the UK’s first national identity week among children and young people – seven years after the city was the subject of race riots.
A series of events running throughout the district from Monday will explore the themes of identity, diversity and citizenship as part of Who Do We Think We Are? week.
Schools minister Jim Knight will officially launch the initiative during a visit to three exhibitions at Cartwright Hall Art Gallery created by Bradford schoolchildren.
Themed as Many Voices, Many Faces and the Garden Gallery, the exhibitions aim to reflect the objectives of the week by giving children’s views of what the issue of identity means to them.
Racial segregation divides schools and communities, but that doesn't have to be the case. Nick Morrison meets the children and teachers who are working together