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Can Inclusive Education continue to be 'Special' for differently-abled
children?
Daily News, Colombo
http://www.dailynews.lk
March 28, 2005
by Padmani Mendis
THE education of children who have disability, (as with children who have
other special educational needs) has conventionally been called "Special
Education."
The term was coined in the 18th century when it was believed that these
children required "special" institutions and personnel to meet
their educational needs. The UNESCO Salamanca Statement of 1994 changed
those ideas and urges governments to "adopt as a matter of law or
policy the principle of inclusive education." It further calls for
states to recognize that "every child has unique characteristics,
interests, abilities and learning needs," and that they "must
have access to regular schools...."
Whilst many countries in keeping with the UNESCO Salamanca Statement
have adopted a policy of inclusive education for children who have disability,
the organizational framework within which such children receive their
education still continues to be called "Special Education".
The situation in Sri Lanka is an example.
It illustrates clearly the resulting confusion caused by continuing to
use the term "Special Education" whilst attempting to propagate
inclusive policies and strategies. The situation may be similar in other
countries of our region.
Sri Lanka has three ways by which children who have disability can have
"Special Education" - mainstream classrooms and special education
units (both provided by Government) and special schools run by the private
sector and NGOs. At present over 100,000 children who have disability
are in mainstream classrooms and around 10,000 are in special education
units. In the year 2000 there were 24 special schools registered with
the Ministry of Education, and they had between them a total of 2583 children.
Inclusive education for children who have disability was the implicit
policy of the Ministry of Education even before 1994, but it is still
administered by a "Special Education Department" and by "Special
Education Officials".
Recent introduction of wide-ranging reforms in Sri Lanka's Primary School
System has provided a valuable framework for inclusion. Competency-based
curricula and continuous assessment are more suitable to most such children
than the conventional end-of-semester and end-of-year examinations. Changes
in classroom teaching to be learner-centred and group and activity-based,
development of practical and technical skills, co-curricular activities,
counselling and career guidance, school-based management and new strategies
for teacher education, all benefit children who have disability in inclusive
education.
Further, assessments are made with parental involvement, of a child entering
primary school by both a medical officer and the class-teacher. These
are maintained on a continuous basis and are cumulative for each child
until, at present, they complete primary school. The assessment enables
the teacher to practice child-centred teaching methods that address each
child's particular problems. It requires however, effective, appropriate
and relevant preliminary and continuous training of all teachers. Needless
to say all these do need further development. Sri Lanka needs to give
far more attention than it does now to improve the quality of education
available to children who have disability. There are many children who
have disability who have not ever been to school. For those who have been
enrolled, attrition rates are significantly high.
Our education system however has many strategies in place to promote
the inclusion of children who have disability. And yet, there is a perception
among teachers, others in the education system and some members of the
general public that "children who have disability do not belong in
the mainstream classroom". They believe that such children belong
in "Special Education" units and special schools.
Sri Lanka's National Policy on Disability approved in 2003 recognizes
that children and parents should have the freedom to choose either the
mainstream or the segregated private system, and takes into account the
need to support also special schools. What is often forgotten however
is that even within each of these special schools, primary school reforms
should be put into place so that the concepts of inclusion will be practised
to benefit each child who has disability, recognizing that "every
child has unique characteristics, interests, abilities and learning needs".
Inclusive education is not a term that can be used to categorize schools.
Inclusive Education is about strategies which call for every school to
focus on the needs of the children who come to them. These strategies
apply equally to mainstream and to segregated schools. There may be special
schools but there can be no Special Education.
Sri Lanka's National Policy on Disability states that;-
"The use of the words "Special Education" has marginalized
children who have disability further, and tended to separate and segregate
them. In keeping with the philosophy of "one school system for all"
(to which Sri Lanka is committed), these words will be changed to "Inclusive
Education "which conveys the concepts of inclusion and of equity".
The term "Special Education" is out of date - it serves to
perpetuate old ideas about differences in educational opportunities available
to those children who have disability and those who do not. It is deprecatory,
discriminatory and a violation of children's rights. It is time for this
term to be put out of use.
(The writer has worked as a national and international adviser in disability
for the past 26 years. She chaired the committee that drafted Sri Lanka's
National Policy on Disability, is a Senior Consultant to the Department
of Special Needs Education of the Faculty of Education of The Open University
of Sri Lanka, and authored the Situation Analysis paper on "Education
of Children who have Disability" (2003) for the National Education
Commission).
http://www.dailynews.lk/2005/03/28/
Copyright 2003 The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd.
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