What racism is, how it works, where it comes from, and what we can all do to challenge it — at school, in our communities, and in society.
Research shows that children notice race and skin colour from a very young age — often earlier than adults expect. Avoiding the topic does not protect children; it can leave them without the language or values to respond when they encounter racism. At Early Years level, the focus is simple and positive: people look different, and that is something to celebrate. Being unkind to someone because of how they look is wrong. Every person deserves kindness and respect. You do not need to use the word 'racism' at this stage. Focus on fairness, kindness, and celebrating difference. Be aware that some children in your class may have personal experience of racism — create a safe and supportive environment.
Noticing that people look different is the same as being racist.
Noticing difference is natural and not wrong. Racism is when we treat people unfairly or unkindly because of those differences. We can notice and celebrate difference while treating everyone equally well.
If we do not talk about race, children will not notice it.
Research shows children notice race from a very young age. Not talking about it leaves children without the values and language they need to respond fairly. Positive conversations about difference and equality help children develop healthy attitudes.
Racism is the belief that some racial groups are superior or inferior to others, and the behaviour, systems, and structures that result from this belief. It is important to distinguish between individual racism (when a person treats someone badly because of their race) and institutional or systemic racism (when organisations, systems, or societies produce unequal outcomes for different racial groups, even without conscious intent). Stereotypes are oversimplified, fixed ideas about groups of people. Racial stereotypes are a key part of how racism works — they reduce complex human beings to simple, often negative categories. Prejudice is a negative attitude formed without good reason, often based on stereotypes. Discrimination is when prejudice leads to unfair treatment. The history of racism includes slavery, colonialism, apartheid, the Holocaust, and many other systems that caused enormous suffering. This history is important context — racism is not a new or minor problem.
Not just avoiding racist behaviour but actively working to challenge racism wherever it appears.
This is a topic where students may have personal experience, either as targets of racism or as people who have witnessed or participated in it.
Focus on understanding and empathy, not blame. Be sensitive to the cultural context of your school.
Racism is always obvious and intentional.
Racism can be subtle, unintentional, and even unconscious. A person can hold racial biases without being aware of them. Institutional racism produces unequal outcomes without any individual necessarily choosing to discriminate. This is why anti-racism requires awareness and active effort, not just good intentions.
Race is a biological fact — people really do belong to different races.
Modern science shows that there is more genetic variation within so-called racial groups than between them. Race is primarily a social and political category, not a biological one. It was often constructed and used to justify discrimination and inequality.
Talking about racism makes it worse.
Research consistently shows the opposite. Avoiding conversations about race does not reduce prejudice — it leaves people without the tools to recognise and challenge it. Open, honest, and age-appropriate conversations help build more equal and empathetic communities.
At secondary level, students can engage with racism as a systemic and historical phenomenon, not just a matter of individual prejudice. Systemic racism refers to how racial inequality is reproduced through institutions — criminal justice systems, housing markets, healthcare, and education — producing unequal outcomes even without deliberate discrimination. Implicit bias refers to unconscious attitudes and stereotypes that affect decisions and behaviour. Research using CV studies (sending identical CVs with different names) and other methods has demonstrated that implicit racial bias affects hiring, healthcare, and criminal justice decisions in measurable ways. The legacy of colonialism is central to understanding contemporary racism. European colonialism involved the subjugation, exploitation, and often destruction of non-European peoples, justified by racist ideologies. Its economic, social, and psychological effects are still felt today in both former colonies and former colonial powers.
The US civil rights movement; the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa; the Windrush generation's experience in the UK; and the Black Lives Matter movement. Each offers important lessons about how change happens and what obstacles it faces.
This is a topic that may provoke strong feelings. Some students may have personal experience of racism. Some students may feel defensive or accused. The goal is not to assign personal blame but to understand how systems work and how they can be changed. Focus on evidence, empathy, and constructive thinking.
If you are not personally prejudiced, you cannot contribute to racism.
Systemic racism operates through institutions and structures, not just individual intentions. A person can participate in and benefit from racially unequal systems without holding consciously racist views. This is why anti-racism requires attention to systems and outcomes, not just personal attitudes.
Racism against majority groups (such as white people) is just as serious a problem as racism against minority groups.
While any person can experience prejudice based on race, racism as a systemic phenomenon involves power. Racism against historically marginalised groups is backed by centuries of structural inequality and continues to produce measurable disadvantage. This does not mean prejudice against majority groups is acceptable, but the scale and impact are different.
The solution to racism is to stop seeing race and treat everyone the same.
Research shows that 'colour blindness' — refusing to acknowledge race — does not reduce racial bias and can prevent people from recognising and addressing inequality. Anti-racism requires seeing and naming racial disparities in order to address them. Treating everyone 'the same' when systems produce unequal starting points does not produce equal outcomes.
Key resources: Reni Eddo-Lodge's 'Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race' is accessible and widely used in schools. Ibram X. Kendi's 'How to Be an Antiracist' provides a clear framework. For research on implicit bias, the Kirwan Institute at Ohio State University publishes accessible summaries. For colonialism's legacy, the Reparations debate offers a useful focus for classroom discussion — the BBC and Guardian have good explainers.
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