Quakers in Britain develop resources to support children and young people to develop the skills and understanding we all need to be peacemakers, whether in our own lives or in the wider world. Linking to the curricula of England, Scotland and Wales these lessons and resources combine fun with critical thinking about issues of peace and justice. Produced by Quaker Peace & Social Witness
Quakers in Britain develop resources to support children and young people to develop the skills and understanding we all need to be peacemakers, whether in our own lives or in the wider world. Linking to the curricula of England, Scotland and Wales these lessons and resources combine fun with critical thinking about issues of peace and justice. Produced by Quaker Peace & Social Witness
**Aim: **To gain an understanding of drones and how they affect childrenâs rights.
This circle time lesson explores the life of Aymel, a boy from the village of Dadal in Afghanistan. Pupils will learn about human rights and the effect armed drones had on Aymelâs life. The true story behind this lesson was shared by Raz, a member of the Afghan Peace Volunteers.
This is Workshop 1 of Fly Kites Not Drones and can be run as one session or as two shorter sessions. See more at flykitesnotdrones.org
**Objectives **
to understand a number of rights from the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
to practise spoken language skills, listening and cooperation in their group
to explore empathy with people from a different culture
to understand what an armed drone is and be able to explain how it can affect
childrenâs rights
to recognise that a moral choice is made when a drone is used to attack people.
UPDATED FOR 2018
A primary school-focused teachersâ resource. Through contemporary stories, told through real sources, classes can use Conscience to reveal the dilemmas people faced 1914-18. Accompanying lesson plans reveal not only what happened, but moral questions which remain relevant today.
CONTENTS:
1: Conscience in WWI
2: Albert French (boy soldier)
3: Conscientious objection
4: The Friends Ambulance Unit
Print copies available from the Quaker bookshop.
UPDATED FOR 2018
A secondary school teaching resource. Through contemporary stories, told through real sources, classes can use Conviction to reveal the dilemmas people faced 1914-18 such as conscientious objection. Accompanying lesson plans explore not only what happened, but moral questions which remain relevant today.
Features lessons on:
Emily Hobhouse- Hero or traitor who tried to make peace
Albert French, 15 ear old sodldier
Harold Stanton, âabsolutist Conscientious objectorâ
Women and Families
Corder Catchpool, pacifist
Henry Williamson, the nature loving soldier
This is the sister pack to the primary-focused Conscience.
Order hard copies from the Quaker bookshop.
âThe Two Mulesâ is a simple cartoon that can be used in education to explore the themes of conflict and co-operation. Here we provide suggestions and guidance on using the story interactively online or in-person. The content can be used at primary and secondary level.
Learn about:
the need for communication in conflict
win:win solutions
Deeper questions of power in conflict
What rules would you give an armed drone if it could think for itself?
Drawing inspiration from robots in science fiction and the
real world, this workshop explores the ethics of robots and ultimately of of automating warfare.
It uses Isaac Asimovâs Laws of Robotics to pose the question, what rules would you give a robot? Should drones be allowed to decide when to kill?
The theme:
This lesson asks a simple question: should we make polluters pay? In exploring this global citizenship question, students will encounter a wealth of cross-curricular learning experiences and outcomes with learning for sustainability at the heart.
Teachers can curate a lesson by choosing from 24 activities covering numeracy, literacy, speaking and listening, creative expression, science, geography, critical thinking, mapped onto the curricula of England and Scotland and Wales.
Learners will encounter concepts including the polluter pays principle established at the Rio Earth Summit in 1990 and the loss and damage fund established at COP27, and use images and data to understand how these ideas apply around the world.
Structure:
The activites are structured in four sections:
Introductory stimulus | by encountering the Make Polluters Pay exhibition and forming personal responses, students begin to consider the themes of the lesson.
Teacher explanation | a series of explanatory activities helps students formulate enquiries and understand the background issues such as climate change, loss and damage and the âpolluter paysâ principle.
Developing understanding | a menu of activities help learners consolidate and deepen their understanding of the difference in responsibility for greenhouse gas emissions, evaluating who should pay.
Conclusion and expression | students use their own judgement and creativity to express their views on a fair way to help people facing loss and damage.
Why teach this lesson?
In 2022, governments across the world agreed to establish a loss and damage fund to compensate those on the frontlines of the climate crisis. The term âloss and damageâ describes the irreversible harm climate change is causing to people and communities. To this day the loss and damage fund remains significantly underfunded; this is why campaigners are on the streets chanting âmake polluters payâ.
Campaigners are calling for the fund to be filled with money from those that caused the climate crisis. Based on the âpolluter pays principleâ, the idea is to tax polluting companies, utilise this revenue to fill the fund and help those facing climate catastrophe.
These lesson materials are based on an exhibition that has toured the UK and has helped people understand and engage with the issue of loss and damage. This exhibition uses examples from around the world to illustrate communities facing painful loss and damage alongside exemplifying voices that have inspired hope and lead to positive change in the face of the climate crisis.
This lesson will enable cross-curricular learning of sustainability , unpacking the polluter pays principle which signifies an opportunity of hope and justice during difficult and uncertain times, discussing and evaluating the polluter pays principle can provide a starting point in helping to tackle climate anxiety among students.