Privilege and disadvantage
Course Description
Migrant students’ backgrounds vary, but it is safe to say that all of them share the experience of uprootedness, especially when they leave their home country when they are already old enough to have had their own circle of friends, and they have participated in community life. Refugee children, or children who have had to emigrate for their own safety and protection are doubly vulnerable, as they also have experienced the trauma of fleeing their home country through illicit or legitimate means. Thus, in our classes, we have layers upon layers of privilege and disadvantage and for this reason, we cannot operate on the notion of sameness. During this session, the participants explore firstly their own privileges and disadvantages (if any). From the personal, we move on to the classroom situation. Who are the privileged children? Why are they so? Why do we consider others disadvantaged? How can we address these disadvantages to provide as much an equitable educational experience as possible?
Estimated Lesson Duration: 40 minutes

Learning Outcomes
By the end of the session participants will be able to:
- Explain what privilege and disadvantage entail, and why it matters;
- Recognise their own privileges and disadvantages vis-à-vis their peers;
- Identify types of privilege and disadvantages their students bring with them to school;
- Develop strategies to address disadvantages in the classroom.
The Session
Introduction
Watch Video The privilege cartoon which is found in resources. It explains privilege in a nutshell.