鶹Լ

Video summary

Artist Anna Nguyen talks to 11 year-old Vincent about the Vietnamese migration to Britain after the Vietnam war.

Anna explains how in 1954, a war started in Vietnam between the North of the country and the South. The war lasted for 20 years. After the war, lots of Vietnamese people moved to other countries around the world, like America and the UK.

Anna talks about how she returned to Vietnam in 2016 to learn more about her roots and found that the war was still very much present in people's minds and people's hearts, but that Vietnam also had a thriving community of artists and creatives.

She now feels very much at peace with both her British and Vietnamese identity.

This short film is from the 鶹Լ Teach series British Asian History.

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Teacher Notes

Learning point

  • To learn about the reasons why people have emigrated to Britain from Asia over time.

Key Vocabulary

This film gives you the chance to explore and learn this vocabulary in the context of a personal story.

  • Vocabulary used in the film:

    • War and Civil War
    • Community
    • Culture
    • Rule
    • Community producer
  • Vocabulary useful for discussing the film:

    • Immigration and immigrants - coming to live permanently in another country.
    • Emigration - leaving one's own country in order to settle permanently in another.
    • Asia/Asian - the largest and most populous continent on earth.**
    • Britain/ British - "Great Britain" is often used to refer to England, Scotland and Wales, including their component adjoining islands.Great Britain and Northern Ireland now constitute the United Kingdom.
    • Community - a group of people living in the same place or having a particular characteristic in common.
    • Culture - a pattern of behaviour shared by a society, or group of people.
    • Discrimination - the unjust or prejudicial treatment of different categories of people.
    • Diversity - differences in racial and ethnic, socioeconomic, geographic and academic backgrounds.
    • Equality - when people are treated the same, regardless of what they look like or where they come from.
    • Inclusion - being a part of what everyone else is, being welcomed and embraced as a member who belongs.
    • Legacy - something we inherit from past generations and pass to our future generations.
    • Prejudice - a preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual experience.
    • Racism - the belief that people of different races or ethnic groups have different value in society, and using this against them.
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Before watching the film

You may want to discuss what your pupils understand by the word ‘immigrant’ and what they already know about people who have come to live in the UK, over time. Pupils could discuss what they understand by the term ‘community’ and whether they identify as being part of any communities.

Please note that in the film, the reasons for the Vietnam War starting are discussed, as well as the emotional impact on Anna’s family. Her father having nightmares after the war is mentioned. You should consider the needs of any children in your class who have lived experience of war, as part of your preparation.

Questions to consider

Depending on the focus of your lesson, you may wish to pause the short film at certain points to check for understanding, asking questions such as:

  • Why did some people move to Britain from Vietnam after the war there? Can you make any connections with the other films in this collection?
  • Why do you think Anna wanted to visit Vietnam when she grew up?
  • Anna says that even years after the war had ended, she felt that the war was ‘still present’ in the minds and hearts of the Vietnamese people. What do you think she means by this?
  • Anna says she can be both Vietnamese and British, and she talks about having more than one part to her identity. How does this compare with your identity?

Activities to further explore learning

  • Pupils could compare and contrast this film with other films in the collection in examining the reasons why people emigrate.
  • Pupils could learn about Anna’s art work in art lessons.
  • Having watched the film, pupils could write down any questions they would ask Anna if they had the opportunity.
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How this film meets the aims of the National Curriculum in England:

  • History

This film will help you to ensure your pupils understand the history of these places as a coherent, chronological narrative, focusing on the 19th Century to the present day. Through this personal story, pupils will learn about the diversity of people who have shaped this nation and how Britain has influenced and been influenced by the wider world.

Pupils will develop deeper understanding of historical concepts such as continuity and change, cause and consequence, similarity, difference and significance, and use them to make connections, draw contrasts, analyse trends, and frame historically-valid questions.

They will also gain historical perspective by placing their growing knowledge into different contexts, understanding the connections between local, regional, national and international history; between cultural, economic, military, political, religious and social history; and between short- and long-term timescales.

How this film meets the aims of the Scottish Curriculum:

  • Social Studies
    This film will enable pupils to compare and contrast communities and the lives of people in the past with their own, and to contribute to a discussion of the similarities and differences.

    They will find out why people and events from a particular time in the past were important, placing them within a historical sequence.

  • Health and Welbeing Across the Curriculum

This film will help pupils to develop self-awareness, self-worth and respect for others, understanding diversity and that it is everyone’s responsibility to challenge discrimination.

How this film meets the aims of the The Northern Ireland Curriculum:

  • The World Around Us

This film will enable pupils to learn about how people and places have changed over time, the causes and effects of people moving from one place to another, and the positive and negative impacts of people on places. Exploring the lives and memories of people from the past is part of the history non-statutory guidance and this film provides an ideal starting point for this.

  • Personal Development

This film will enable pupils to appreciate the similarities and differences between themselves and others by providing a starting point for discussing cultural heritage, community and the diversity of people living in Britain.

How this film meets the aims of the National Curriculum in Wales:

  • History
    This film will enable pupils to place events chronologically, identify similarities and differences between ways of life in different places during the 20th Century, and to discuss the consequences to people of historic events.

  • Personal and Social Education Framework
    This film will help pupils to see people who have been active citizen and help them to develop respect for others. Through personal stories, pupils will learn the value of diversity and recognise the importance of equality of opportunity.

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