The assassination of Samuel Paty, history professor, by a terrorist on October 16, 2020 near his college in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine shook the educational community in France. But paradoxically, the political and media world has little questioned the impact of the drama on teachers, focusing more on secularism, caricatures, religious separatism.
Beyond the political controversies, how can we understand the upheaval that the assassination of Samuel Paty represented for teachers? Teachers who feel more and more alone and helpless to discuss freedom of expression with their students?
During the Samuel Paty trial, which involves relatives of the killer.
With :
• Ismail Feratuniversity professor Paris-Nanterre. Project manager atNational Higher Institute of Professorship and Education (INSPE) of the Academy of Versailles, co-author with Sébastien Ledoux ofA school in shock – the world after the assassination of Samuel Paty (Editions Le Bord de l’eau).
A report from Laurence Théault in a Parisian college during a debate on secularism between 3rd grade students and their history geography teacher (Rebroadcast)
Special series from Children’s World by Charlie Dupiot : What was it like growing up in the 1930s? This week, 1st episode, growing up without a cell phone.
A CM1 class from the Anatole France primary school in Villeurbanne (a suburb of Lyon) meets Mamie Nicole, 97 years old. What was it like growing up in the 1930s? Our reporter Charlie Dupiot offers us a special series from “Children’s World”: a CM1 class from the Anatole France School in Villeurbanne, a suburb of Lyon, meets Nicole, or rather “grandma Nicole”, as she introduces herself. even… When they see her arrive, some students exclaim: “She looks young for a grandma!” And yet, Grandma Nicole was born in 1926! She grew up in a world without cell phones, long before the Internet.
A big thank you to grandma Nicole and the students of the Anatole France School in Villeurbanne, as well as their teacher Estelle Perrier.
At the end of the show, One parent, one question and the advice of the psychologist Ibrahima Girouxprofessor atGaston Berger University of Saint-Louis, Senegal. He answers the question from Bouna, a teacher in Nouakchott, Mauritania, whose student is always in a bad mood.
Musical programming :
► Samuel Paty – Kaotik
► Waxtu -Amadeus, Ashes the best.