Published
03 October 2024

 

It has been a difficult summer for many of us. Watching the events that have dominated the news over the last two months has been devastating but I recognise that I, a white woman, have not been impacted in the same way as people of colour will have been. It is vital that all EYFS practitioners racialised as white consider how the families of the Black and Global Majority children we support and teach are going to be navigating the beginning of term.

I have had to recognise my privileges, unlearn certain behaviours and address my biases which I may claim were unconscious, until they weren’t. This is something that all white adults working with children should be doing and let me tell you it is not easy, but do you know what else is not easy, being excluded, abused and overlooked because of the colour of your skin. 

 

 

“They are too young to recognise race.” This is a common but inaccurate comment frequently made about children in the early years.

Did you know…?

  • By 3 months of age, children are drawn to faces that share the same race as their main caregiver
  • At the age of 2 years, children use race to reason about people’s behaviours
  • By 30 months, most children use race to choose playmates
  • Expressions of racial prejudice often peak around 4 and 5 years of age

“Young children notice and think about race. Adults often worry that talking about race will encourage bias in children, but the opposite is true. Silence about race reinforces racism by letting children draw their own conclusions based on what they see. Teachers and families can play a powerful role in helping children of all ages develop positive attitudes about race and diversity and skills to promote a more just future – but only if we talk about it!” The Children’s Community School, 2018. 

 

 

“We talk about racism when an incident occurs.” This is like saying we don’t put a speed limit in place until someone gets hit by a car. Talking about racism should be seen as a preventative rather than a consequence. The challenge can be how to initiate these conversations and luckily for us, there are resources available to support this. The tiney guide to becoming an inclusive, anti-racist early educator is free to download and provides guidance on celebrating diversity, promoting inclusion, and challenging racism and all forms of prejudice.

There has been an increase in children’s texts available that explore race, culture and ethnicity both factually and through non-fiction. If you have obtained any new resources how accessible have you made them? Are you ‘saving’ them because they are shiny and new? How is that going to help start conversations if they are only pulled out periodically to expose children to this concept? Imagine having a different colour skin to your peers and the only time that you see any resources representing your community is during the ‘celebration’ topic or when someone else in the class has excluded you from a game for the way you look. This is important to remember as we approach Black History Month, which many schools and settings participate in. People are Black every day!

‘Children learn and develop well in enabling environments with teaching and support from adults, who respond to their individual interests and needs and help them to build their learning over time.’ Statutory Framework for the Early Years Foundation Stage, 2024. Therefore, resources should be available and accessible for children all the time. This will encourage children to be curious and ask questions and adults will be able to engage with children more appropriately.

“We cannot just introduce diverse books and media. We have to model these behaviours and dismantle and contest racism and ingrained biases in our own words and actions.” Pragya Agarwal, Wish We Knew What to Say: Talking with children about race, 2020. 

 

 

“We treat everyone the same.” If you gave everyone the same cake, would you expect them all to eat it? Including the person that is allergic to eggs, that you know the cake was made with. Would you offer an alternative that did not contain eggs or give them nothing at all? There is an of emphasis within the Early Statutory Framework 2024 that all adults should have a secure knowledge of the children they are working with. Whilst allergies might be difficult to identify, colour and ethnicity is much more obvious. Being ‘colourblind’ is not an option and should not be promoted. Celebrating differences whether that is skin colour, interests, hair style or skills set brings attention that to the fact that every child is unique.

“I don’t have any children of colour in my class.” Then it is even more essential that you talk about racism! There is an increased risk of radicalisation from white supremacist groups if children racialised as white are not exposed to different races and cultures of the wider world in a positive way. Learning about and experiencing difference enriches everyone’s lives from the food we eat to the music we listen to. Why would we want to deny our children this opportunity?

To ensure you are fully meeting the needs of every child you must be reflective of not only your practice but of your full being. Are your biases/stereotypical ideas impacting on how you interact with children? Is this having an impact on how you support children or the assumptions you make about their attainment? Do your cohort truly see themselves within the learning environment and not just through tokenistic displays and ‘festival/celebration’ topics? These are difficult questions to ask yourself, but they are important and require a level of honesty you might not have faced before. It is essential to feel uncomfortable and upset through this process. Consider it an internal therapy if you like. “It is not OK” is doing nothing, and by now you should know that the impact you have on children as an EYFS practitioner will make the difference as to how they see themselves in the world. 

 


Resources

tiney: Our guide to becoming an inclusive, anti-racist early educator

Share this