Excerpt:
Teaching children fundamental British values is an act of "cultural supremacism", teachers have said, as members of the National Union of Teachers (NUT) vote to replace the concept with one that includes "international rights".
A legal duty on teachers to promote so-called British values was passed two years ago after the "Trojan Horse" controversy.
However, teachers argue "fundamental British values" set an "inherent cultural supremacism, particularly in the context of multicultural schools and the wider picture of migration".