There are some approaches to avoid when you teach about other countries. This list, adapted from one produced by CWDE, sums them up:
Is everything portrayed as quaint and curious? Are the local community or members of your class used merely as audio-visual aids for a project on the country they originate from?
Are people from other countries shown as existing to grow things or provide exciting holidays for people in your country? Is it implied that this is a very convenient arrangement that satisfies people on both sides?
Is everything in another country shown as absolutely desperate: people everywhere are dying of starvation, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes? Are people from your country shown as the only ones able to rescue others from such disaster?
Is it implied that people from other countries have been a bit behind, but that if they follow the example of your country they will come out all right in the end? Is it implied that high technology, fast cars, automated industry, are the things that make a country developed?
Is poverty treated as something that is simply there, though deplorable? Are some of the fundamental causes of poverty described, or only its symptoms?
And here are some useful approaches to look out for, adapted from suggestions by the World Council of Churches:
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