Learn history! Buy this!
Awesome small and beautiful photo-zine. 36 pages, staple-bound.
100% ESSENTIAL!
Fantastic new photozine documenting Black Britain in the 1970s.
About the photos:
The London Borough of Waltham Forest’s West Indian Supplementary Service was an intervention to support children from families of Caribbean origin in the borough’s primary and secondary schools. Bernard Coard’s critique “How the West Indian Child is made Educationally Sub-Normal in the British School System” (1971) made a significant contribution to debates around the apparent relative failure of black children to thrive in mainstream education. Though not simply a response to Coard’s publication, the Supplementary Service aimed to enable black children to negotiate the demands of the school curriculum more successfully — by explicitly encouraging an understanding of language variation (dialects in relation to ‘standard’ English) and by teaching about Caribbean culture and black history.
The photographs here were selected from two series. Some were taken at Downsell Junior School through November 1974 – February 1975. The building, a Victorian elementary school, no longer exists. Others were taken at Leyton Senior High School for Boys, mostly in a ‘temporary’ classroom outside the school’s main building, and at the headquarters of the Supplementary Service when a small group worked on a black magazine — “Uptight” — in the Summer of 1975. The series runs from March to December.
Originally the Supplementary Service addressed the needs of children brought over from the Caribbean at school age but, by the mid 1970s, they were a tiny minority. With very few exceptions the children in these photographs were born in England.
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