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Human rights principles are not platitudes; they must be honoured, because thousands have died for them.

Peter Fraser 1944

Nelson Central School showed in 2009 how applying a human rights and responsibilities lens to the curriculum can enable children to develop as local and global citizens.

Nelson Central School joined Human Rights in Education after trustees and principal attended presentations in 2008. Following a whole-staff workshop at the beginning of the year, ‘human rights’ became a key strand of the school’s inquiry learning approach, linked to the 2009 school theme of ‘Citizenship is everybody’s business’.

Five year olds make school a better place for children with disabilities

‘This term we have been thinking about rights for everyone. We have particularly thought about the rights of those with disabilities. As part of the last stage in our inquiry model we had to communicate with others all the things that made Nelson Central School disable- friendly and things that didn't make Nelson Central disable-friendly. We also had to come up with new ideas that would make Nelson Central even more disable friendly. We have made a movie to communicate this with others. Sally showed us about storyboarding and then with Sally's help we planned out our movie. It was also very exciting because Sally and Tania taught us how to take little movies using the digital camera.’
From a Year 1 blog

School democracy reviewed by 9-10 year olds

The senior Syndicate examined the purposes and functions of the student council based on the key idea that “As a member of a community we all have the right to be involved in the decision making process”.  The culmination of the process saw each class create a proposal for how our student council should be structured and elected so that it better represented all children at NCS. The classes held an expo where all the children at NCS were able to hear the different presentations and proposals and then had the opportunity to vote (by secret ballot) on which proposal should to be implemented. The result was a restructured student council with stronger ‘ambassador’ links with junior classes.

7-8 year olds learn to appreciate what they have and enlist help for children in Sierra Leone

Year 2-4 classes decided to explore the human rights of children by comparing how rights are observed at Nelson Central School with those at another school in a different time or place. They found a Save the Children website introducing them to a community of children in Kroo Bay, a slum area of Freetown in Sierra Leone. The children researched how basic children’s rights were realised (or not) in Kroo Bay and ultimately made movies to highlight the differences. (see, for example, http://ncschildrensrights.wikispaces.com/room3).
Their next topic was about ‘ways we express ourselves’, with the final task being to perform or present an item which expresses an idea or opinion.’ The children converted their knowledge into speeches which were then presented to members of the congregation from the church next door in an effort to persuade them to support Save the Children Fund. When the Samoan tsunami led the congregation to reprioritise its fundraising efforts, the children addressed the student council which agreed to join the effort.

Students take the lead at Motueka High School

Students have been leading human rights initiatives at Motueka High School, with the support of senior staff, since they volunteered for a workshop before the beginning of term 1 2009. A revised code of conduct and discipline policy have been their major priorities. More 

Bluestone School -- a year on

A year after joining the Human Rights in Education initiative, the principal of Bluestone School (Timaru) observed that there had an improvement in classroom and school atmosphere, higher personal expectations regarding behaviour and a reduction in bullying and the need for school rules. More 

UN Declaration on right to know about human rights

‘Everyone has the right to know, seek and receive information about all human rights and fundamental freedoms and should have access to human rights education’, according to article 1 of the UN Declaration on Human Rights Education and Training adopted on 19 Dec 2011. More 

Tackling bullying

Bullying was in the headlines during 2011 with the Ombudman's report on the handling of incidents at a Hutt Valley school in 2007. How can schools best safeguard young people's rights to safety, education, effective remedy and fair treatment? More 

HRiE Forum

Participation is essential to the development of this Initiative – and is one of the human rights principles we live by! This is the key collaboration space for Human Rights in Education. Here you will find colleagues’ ideas and experiences in implementing human rights-based education. More