The rights ribbon: Learning child rights

Promote child rights across the whole school by displaying them visibly, exploring them in lessons, and engaging parents and carers in learning about them.

Display child rights around the school

Hang posters of the CRC in each classroom. 

Create a display board in the hall with the Rights Ribbon. 
Create a child rights mural inside or outside the school.
Identify how child rights are enjoyed at school by labelling things in the classroom, for example:

Article 17 Access to Information – computers or the class library
Article 24 Health, Water, Food, Environment – water taps, school lunches
Article 31 Rest, Play, Culture, Arts – the school yard,  classroom games, art cupboard, music box
Get involved

Explore child rights in different subjects

ome patron programmes explicitly reference rights, but this is not the only curricular area to examine rights.

Develop language skills by reading, discussing and writing about child rights.

Look at curricular areas through a child rights lens. For example, when reading a storybook or class novel, discuss how the rights of the character were enjoyed/denied.

If exploring the Industrial Revolution in History, examine how children’s rights were affected. When teaching éadaí in Gaeilge, or homes in Geography link the lessons to Article 27 Food, Clothing, A Safe Home.

These Article in Focus resources suggest activities for exploring the different rights.

Focus on a different article of the CRC in each school assembly. Check out these 20 assembly ideas.

Teach parents and carers about child rights

Educate parents and carers about rights by challenging these myths and misconceptions.

Organise an evening to tell parents and carers about child rights. 

Include a child rights update in the school newsletter or website.

Include a representative from the parents’ association on the student council.
 
Involve parents in homework about child rights.

Get your activism Toolkit

Learn about the Sustainable Development Goals and take action in your school or community. Use this activism toolkit to plan your action.

What are you looking for?

UNICEF provides all the support you need to help build a better world for children. Use the menu below to find all our child rights pages.