Resources for teachers
Woman making Nikes in a factory in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Clean Clothes Campaign. Inexpensive resources:
Looking Behind the Logo
Oxfam has produced this resource for teachers to help young people learn about workers’ rights in the sportswear industry.
Sweatshop Curricula
The Intercommunity Peace and Justice Centre (IPJC) has put together this useful list of anti-sweatshop curriculum resources.
This Fairwear video tells the inside story of fashion from the workers' perspective.
Free resources:
Fairwear’s “Home Truths” curriculum kit
A set of lesson plans for schools that covers the key learning areas of English, Design and Technology, Visual Arts, Legal Studies and more.
Globalisation: Fair vs Cool
Global Education has prepared this Global Learning Quest. The quest encourages students to ask themselves whether it's possible to care about fashion and global issues at the same time.
Sim Sweatshop
This free online interactive game invites you to enter the world of the sports shoe worker. Work hard and you will be paid your full wage. Make a mistake and you will be punished accordingly.
Offside! Interactive game, pics, radio interviews, press articles …
Just before the World Cup in Germany in 2006, we launched our Offside! report into sneaker sweatshops. Your students can play the interactive game linked to the report’s release, download free pics and access radio interviews and other press coverage.
Trading Trainers – A simulation game about working hard for a living and staying poor
Christian Aid and CAFOD in the UK designed this highly recommended simulation game for between 16 and 40 students (aged 13 and up). It is currently out of print but, until it is reprinted, CAFOD have given us permission to distribute free copies of the game to interested teachers. Download the 4MB file of the game here or if you would like a hard copy please email us your postal address.
Rethinking Schools site
The Summer 1997 edition of Rethinking Schools Online includes a great lead article and some excellent resources suggesting innovative ways to teach the issue of workers’ rights in the sportswear industry.
Doonesbury's cartoon series on Nike
This great resource can be found on the Alberta Nike Campaign site.
A play by Blair Francey of Cardinal Newman High School in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada. Blair's play is ideal for use in schools and at educational events.
Inside Your Threads (video and teaching activities)
Canadian teachers only can order free copies of this fantastic video produced by Canadian music television station MuchMusic. Viewers follow three Canadian recording artists, Sam Roberts, Hawksley Workman, and Jully Black, as they encounter Mexican and Bangladeshi youth struggling to earn a living wage at a variety of clothing factories.
Sports brands’ web pages on workers’ rights:
The following websites give sports brands’ perspectives on the sweatshop issue:
