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Gives me some hope for the future


Gbye grey sky

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https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-30/australian-students-climate-change-protest-scott-morrison/10571168

Resources Minister Matt Canavan said the only thing children would be learn from the protest was how to collect government benefits.

"Walking off school and protesting, you don't learn anything from that," he told Sydney radio station 2GB.

"The best thing you learn about going to a protest is how to join the dole queue.

I want kids to be at school to learn about how you build a mine, how you do geology, how you drill for oil and gas, which is one of the most remarkable scientific exploits of anywhere in the world that we do," he said.

"These are the type of things excite young children."

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Or you could go to school and learn about environmental science, or alternative energy engineering. Or law. Or politics.

Having been on a few protests, I think you would achieve more by studying the above.

But it was a bit of a laugh and did make me feel better about the world.

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I was reading this morning about pre schoold kids holding up posters about Nauru.

It is ridiculous it is teachers brainwashing students to adopt their own political views. I would suspend the teacher and tell her to stick to the approved currriculum.

 

A Melbourne preschool has ­decided that children are never too young to embrace political ­advocacy, incorporating a recent Kids Off Nauru campaign into a lesson on refugee rights.

Brunswick Kindergarten, in the city’s inner north, broached the contentious topic by hosting a #BlueForNauru Day in which its children, aged four and five, were encouraged to dress in blue — ­signifying sadness, according to the campaign — to learn about the plight of children in offshore detention.

Teacher Catherine Sundbye wrote about the session in the preschool’s parent newsletter, ­detailing some of the student’s ­responses to the question: “What would you say to the politicians who won’t let the refugees in?”

 

“You are mean to the guys that can’t come and live here”, “Why aren’t they allowed in Australia? I don’t think they will destroy the country”, and “I don’t like this rule” were among the comments from the children.

Parents were advised before the session was held and were supportive of the event.

“Kids really do understand more than we given them credit for,” one parent said.

However, childhood experts warned about politicising early childhood, questioning whether children as young as four had the ­maturity to grasp the concept of asylum detention.

Political activism in schools is considered a fraught issue. Yesterday, thousands of students defied calls by Scott Morrison to remain in school and instead joined protests calling for climate change ­action.

Co-ordinated rallies were held in almost 30 cities and towns around Australia, which included all state capitals as well as large ­regional centres such as Ballarat and Newcastle.

Some children wore rebukes from the Prime Minister with pride as they went to Martin Place in Sydney armed with placards and smartphones.

The Kids Off Nauru campaign — an initiative of World Vision Australia whose ambassadors ­include former Human Rights Commissioner Gillian Triggs, previous Australian of the Year Simon McKeon and ACTU ­president Michele O’Neil — had called for Australians to “go blue” in the lead-up to Universal ­Children’s Day on November 20 “in solidarity with the children and families our nation has trapped on Nauru”.

“Blue can symbolise sadness and depression — which is appropriate given the suffering these people are enduring in our name,” the campaign’s website says.

Ms Sundbye learnt about #BlueForNauru through a primary school and said she broached the idea of introducing the concept at the kindergarten with parents first.

“It was important to approach it so that the parents are OK and the kids are OK,” Ms Sundbye said. “It’s not about running a scare campaign.”

She said children were read the Mem Fox book, I’m Australian Too, which presents a child waiting in a refugee camp hoping that one day “I will be Australian too”.

Ms Sundbye said the discussion that followed revealed that most children were clear in their view that the current situation did not seem fair.

“That was beautiful to see: how they got it on a deep level,” the teacher said.

“It’s never too early to get them to be part of the conversation. This is their world, their planet.”

Melbourne Graduate School of Education early childhood expert Kay Margetts questioned whether such young children had the ­maturity to grasp the concept.

“I don’t think what that teacher was doing was wrong, or that it could have damaged the children in any way, but it’s asking them to consider quite a developmentally advanced concept for children of that age,” Professor Margetts said.

“Kids very much see things through their own experience, their real-life experience. That’s why issues involving social justice are usually broached from the child’s personal and ­immediate experience … to teach about things like fairness, sharing and taking turns.”

Child psychologist Michael Carr Gregg questioned the need for political content to be broached in schools or preschools.

“I don’t think we should further dilute the curriculum with this ­information which is rightly the province of parents,” he said.

Centre for Independent Studies senior research fellow Jeremy Sammut said the situation was a concern and potentially risked “the emotions of impressionable children who can have no real understanding of the issues ­involved”.

Kindergarten parent Kate Rowett was pleased to see the issue tackled at the kindergarten.

She said her son Walter was familiar with the issue already as the family had made donations to the Asylum Seeker Resource ­Centre.

“We’ve talked about why we do that and I think kids really do understand more than we given them credit for,” Ms Rowett said.

“We talk about a range of issues and are generally trying to raise empathetic children.”

Edited by Parley
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