Racism in education: How truth pages helped students fight back

Date:

The killing of George Floyd was a catalyst moment for social justice movements across the world. But after the coronavirus pandemic worsened some of those movements were pushed aside.

One which hasn’t is an online reckoning orchestrated by students, known as ‘Truth Pages’. In the summer following George Floyd’s death, racism exposé pages became more popular across both sides of the Atlantic, primarily on Instagram, allowing Black, Asian and minority ethnic students to share their experiences online.

The result was a wave of call to actions, some more successful than others, enlisting the cooperation of institutions in tackling racism and racial inequality.

The BBC’s Lorna Acquah investigates the racism experienced by students in the UK and the US and how the movement snowballed.

Filmed and edited by Samantha Everett

Illustrations by Zoë Slatter

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

U.S. Travel Trends February 2025: Visitor Arrivals Drop, Departures Rise

U.S. travel trends for February 2025 reveal a dynamic...

Game-changing challenge room and social entertainment experience BRKTHROUGH opens near The Woodlands

HOUSTON – A new adrenaline-fueled, social entertainment experience opened...

Belpre baseball falls to Southern | News, Sports, Jobs

<!-- SHOW ARTICLE --> Belpre's Chris Copen worked five innings...

Morgan Wallen Label Big Loud Sells Stake in Catalog for $200 Million

Big Loud, the Nashville record label that’s home to...