Curriculum in action

National Disability Movement Archive and Collection: Paper Theatre - The Battle of Westminster Bridge

Author
Jeff Rowlings
Role
Head of Programme
Region
London
School name
Shape Arts
School info
We are an arts charity supporting disabled people #279184

What did we want to achieve?

digitally drawn image of protestors on either side of theatre curtains overlooking a 3D model of a paper theatre with cut-out figures enacting the protests
The Battle of Westminster Bridge

National Disability Movement Archive and Collection (NDMAC) is funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, supporting educational engagement with a new project telling personal stories from the UK disability rights movement. As its centrepiece, we have created a unique and fun paper theatre about disabled people and rights which we are distributing FREE in both digital and print copies: see attached flyer and paper theatre sample.

Our starting point was considering ways in which to tell a little-known story of rights and protest that has had a gigantic impact on millions of lives. We want this story to reach the generation currently in secondary, higher and further education who may not be familiar with the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA) and its significance in UK social history, and for whom disability rights have not been fought for so visibly, spectacularly, and consequentially, during their lifetime.

To this end, among a range of creative tools, we devised our Paper Theatre, titled The Battle of Westminster Bridge. It is designed as a fun and engaging learning tool, in which pupils and students can recreate the iconic protests against inaccessible public transport held on Westminster Bridge by the Disability Rights Movement in the 1990s, which helped achieve civil rights for disabled people. The paper theatre is a way of learning both UK history and some empowering disability stories and could be a starting point for a theatre design and disability focus.

How did we organise learning?

In considering the medium of the theatre stage, our decision to use a low-fi paper-and-scissors approach to activism was partly in response to a resurgent interest in analogue craft-based practices we find today, whether though zine culture or, for example, among disabled people in digital poverty. Although the Paper Theatre contains information and steers the participant in a direction based on an existing narrative, it is designed to be jumping-off point for further research, investigation, design and discussion and to encourage users to visit ndmac.org.

There are learning opportunities linked to art, design and making, as well as social history and sociology, and anywhere that students can reflect on how ideas about our ‘rights’ can be transformed into actionable law that influences how we behave and treat others.

To support this, we created a robust design that, while minimal in form, contains complex ideas and dynamics to be understood and ‘unpacked’ in a variety of ways. It is accessible to students of different learning styles and backgrounds, and designed to stimulate engagement with those for whom ‘disability’ might seem an off-putting or irrelevant term, imbued as it is with generational stigma.

Digitally drawn diagram illustrating how to slot parts fo the Paper Theatre together
National Disability Movement Archive and Collection Paper Theatre - diagram view

Did we achieve our aims?

The good news is that by utilising our resource you will be helping NDMAC to achieve our aims and being part of the change.

We invite educators and students alike to utilise this resource in any setting where ideas about rights, social change and identity are being tackled and discussed, and very much welcome you to contact us with snippets and stories about how the Paper Theatre made things work and the conversations and creativity to flow.

Digital downloads are available on Etsy and itch – go to this link.  The only fee being 50p to cover Etsy costs.  The paper theatre will also join the ndmac.org website in summer 2026.

Free print copies:

We can supply professionally printed, die-cut copies of the paper theatre with - for FREE. Order by emailing liam@shapearts.org.uk with the subject line: NDMAC Paper Theatre Print Version requesting as many free copies as you wish – up to 50 per organisation and up to 15 per individual – and for which you can charge as you see fit (to cover/recover your costs).  You would also be welcome to use the digital version online, again FREE.

For more information visit ndmac.org

wn diagram illustrating how to slot parts of the Paper Theatre together
ational Disability Movement Archive and Collection Paper Theatre - diagram view

References & resources

National Disability Movement Archive and Collection(2026)Shape Arts https://ndmac.org/
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