THE EIGHTH ANNUAL HUNTLEY CONFERENCE
EDUCATING OUR CHILDREN LIBERATING OUR FUTURES
INCORPORATING THE YOUTH FORUM 23 February 2013 9.30am–4.30pm £8 – Booking essential
LIBERATING OUR FUTURES
23 FEBRUARY 2013
Education is not a guarantee of great wealth or riches, but it is the guarantee against abject poverty.
Michael Amos
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9.30 - 10.00
Arrival and registration
10.00 - 10.10 Welcome 10.10 - 10.20 Words and Song 10.20 - 11.20 Groundings Sessions
THE YOUTH TE FORUM DEBA
For [young people] who are bombarded with negative images of our community, the Huntley Archives provides a personal, positive record of our community’s activities and achievements in London during the 1970s and 80s. Like the Sankofa bird, the Huntley Archives looks back in order to guide our future progress. The Friends of the Huntley Archives at LMA (FHALMA) is the group that organises the annual Huntley conference. Clyde Williams, FHALMA Trustee
“We are better educated than our parents!”
This year’s conference will be pulling the Youth Forum into the very heart of the main conference day. After the morning Groundings Sessions and coffee break our young people will be having a debate with us. They are saying, “We are better educated than our parents!” and they intend to challenge and explore this by discussing Availability and Access to education; What’s happening in our schools; The gender issue; The class issue and the family.
THE GS GROUNSDIOINNS SES
11.20 - 11.30
Coffee/Tea Break
Couldn’t We Start 1 “Why a Free School?”
11.30 - 1.00
The Youth Forum Debate
Anne Broni and others
1.00 - 2.30
Lunch
2.30 - 2.40
The Amos Bursary
2.40 - 2.50
Introduction of Guest Speaker
2.50 - 4.00
Guest Speaker Professor Beverley Bryan
4.00 - 4.15
Closing Words
4.15 - 4.30
Refreshments
4.30 - 5.00
Cultural Close
What are the challenges and problems, what solutions can be adopted, how can parents assist?
Parents 2 Programmes Should Know About! Afua Kudom of The Challenge and Naomi Jane of SEO Scholars School can’t do everything. Learn about programmes which will give your child an edge in the education game. Summer camps, summer schools, and evening classes.
New 3 Engaging Generations with Old History
Anthony Warner and Ruth Fisher
CTIVITIES
CHILDREN’S A
Will include: orkshops Arts & craft wh Jane Grell it w Story telling
e: Will includ 1. Footage from a series of GLC teaching videos from the London Metropolitan Archives collection on the translation of ‘West Indian English’ in London Schools.
Meet the organiser of Black History Walks (BHW) which offers guided walking tours of London from an African/Caribbean perspective and a former education officer at Greenwich Maritime Museum.
Story of Supplementary 4 AEducation from the 1970s Richard Wiltshire, Senior Archivist and Miss Rhonda Wilson, Chair, Caribbean Parents Group Explore original items from LMA archives.
Education Better 5 IsElsewhere? Viola Paris Find out what’s happening in America from our special guest visiting American teacher, Viola.
FILM SCREENINGS 2. Dear Mr. Cameron a film by Karine Alexander of Kay Productions which evolved from a poem written by Beng Brown. Come and meet Karine and Beng to discuss this film.
3. African Mariners the Black Experience Archive Trust Group’s latest documentary film deposit at LMA.
LIBERATING OUR FUTURES
23 FEBRUARY 2013
To Book: Entry Fee: £8.00 (pre-booking essential, includes lunch) Concessions: under 16 free Call: 020 7332 3851 Email: maureen.roberts@cityoflondon.gov.uk
Getting to LMA Main entrance in Northampton Road, opposite Spa Fields Park. Tube: Farringdon (Circle, Metropolitan and Hammersmith and City lines), Chancery Lane (Central line) and Angel (Northern Line). All 10–15 minutes walk. Rail: King’s Cross (15–20 mins walk); St Pancras (15–20 mins walk); Euston (25–30 mins walk), Farringdon (10 mins walk). Bus: 19, 38, 341 to Rosebery Avenue; 63 to Farringdon Road or 55 and 243 to Clerkenwell Green. Always check weekend travel with Transport for London (TfL) at www.tfl.gov.uk
London Metropolitan Archives, 40 Northampton Road, London EC1R 0HB