The resources from the EIS, Scotland’s largest teaching union, have been released to mark World Refugee Day today.
The Tale o’ the Glasgow Girls is a narrative poem written in Scots language by former English as an additional language (EAL) teacher at Drumchapel High School and career-long EIS member Euan Girvan. He worked with the Glasgow Girls both as their teacher and their “campaign manager”, as they fought to highlight the poor treatment of asylum seekers and against dawn raids and the detention of children.
The poem tells of how the Glasgow Girls came together when one of their friends - an asylum seeker - and her family were detained. It describes how they organised a community campaign against Home Office dawn raids and child detention, which received national and international attention (see the Education Scotland video interview with two of the Glasgow Girls below).
World Refugee Day: The story of the Glasgow Girls
Aimed at P6-S3 pupils, the new resources cover reading and writing, art activities and Scots language. They include illustrations by Glasgow-based artist Jamie Squire.
EIS assistant secretary Andrea Bradley said the new resources “reflect the commitment that the EIS has to anti-racist education and to supporting and including young people from refugee and migrant backgrounds”.