Books Magazine

Betty Campbell Taught Black British History Every Month

Posted on the 14 October 2021 by Angela Young @AngelaYoung4

On September 29, 2021, in Cardiff, a statue was unveiled to Betty Campbell, the first Black British headteacher in Wales, and the first to teach Black British History all the time (not just in Black History Monthwhich began in October 1987 in the UK, and is celebrated, in the UK, every October.)

Betty Campbell taught Black British history every month

Picture from this Guardian article

This article, published when Betty Campbell died in 2017 (and partly reproduced here), appeared in the Independent. It tells the story of Campbell’s life and work. She was born Betty Johnson in 1934, and grew up in Butetown (also known as Tiger Bay, from the fierce currents on the River Severn) south Cardiff. She won a scholarship to Lady Margaret High School for Girls, where most of the other students were white. When Campbell told the headmistress she’d like to teach one day, she was told: ‘The problems would be insurmountable.’ She never forgot those words. ‘They made me more determined,’ she said. ‘I would be a teacher by hook or by crook.’

In 1960, Campbell went to Cardiff Teacher Training College, which had begun taking female students for the first time and, when a position opened up at Mount Stuart Primary School, in Butetown, she applied. ‘They hadn’t seen a black teacher before,’ she said. ‘It was as if you could do a job, but if you’re black you’re weren’t quite as good.’

Betty Campbell taught Black British history every month

Picture form the Independent article, here

Despite this, in the 1970s, Campbell became the first Black headteacher in Wales and promoted a diverse curriculum, one that included Black people’s experiences and their positive contribution to British society. Pupils have spoken of how every month was Black History Month. ‘Children,’ Campbell said, ‘should be made aware.’

Campbell taught a series of workshops for Black History Month to raise awareness of the role of Butetown’s citizens in the Second World War, and the involvement of their countries of origin, right up to her death. But Betty Campbell is a deplorable rarity in our education system. The numbers of Black headteachers in England (from a 2019 government School Teacher Workforce study) is a miserable 1% of the total in England (200 of 22,300). The numbers of Black teachers is not much better (2.5% of the total in England). And Black history is only taught during this month, October.

A Black woman I’ve recently met told a story about how, when she was Chair of Governors of a school, she suggested they employ a Black headteacher. The reply was: ‘We intend to recruit the best teachers.’ Of course any school would intend to recruit the best teachers, but this reply dismissed the need for teachers not only to be properly qualified and to teach well, but also to represent their communities well, so that Black students would see someone who looked like them, leading them. So that Black history might be taught, as Betty Campbell taught it, every month, not just in Black History Month.


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog