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There is a vital conversation taking place about race and representation in the curriculum, and our ‘Race and PSHE education’ twilight session will explore what it means for PSHE education.

PSHE Association CEO Jonathan Baggaley is joined by author and teacher Jeffrey Boakye to discuss what education – and PSHE education specifically – can do to challenge racism; what more can be done to ensure all young people are represented and supported by the PSHE curriculum and materials; and, how to ensure teachers from a diversity of backgrounds are supported to teach the subject.
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Jeffrey Boakye is a writer and teacher originally from Brixton in south London, now living in Yorkshire with his wife and two sons. He has a particular interest in issues surrounding education, race and popular culture. Jeffrey has taught English in secondary schools and sixth form colleges since 2007. His books include, Hold Tight: Black Masculinity, Millennials, and the Meaning of Grime (Influx Press, 2017), Black, Listed: Black British Culture Explored (Dialogue Books, 2019), Musical Truth: A Musical History of Modern Black Britain in 27 Songs (Faber Children’s, 2021) and I Heard What You Said (Picador, 2022).