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HED4810 Assignment 2 (COMPLETE ANSWERS) 2026 - DUE 16 July 2026

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Exam study book Inclusive Education of S. J. Pijl, Cor J. W. Meijer, Seamus Hegarty - ISBN: 9780415147484 (error)

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HED4810
Assignment 2 2026
Unique number: 173665
Due Date: 16 July 2026

QUESTION 1 (2 different answers provided)

Educational exclusion refers to the process through which some learners are denied full and
meaningful participation in schooling, even when they are formally allowed to attend school.
It can happen when learners are kept out of school, placed in unsuitable learning settings,
ignored in class, denied support, or pushed through a system that does not meet their
learning needs. Although inclusive education policies promise equal access and
participation, many learners still experience exclusion because policy ideas are not always
matched by real support in schools.

The first argument is that inclusive policies often fail because implementation remains weak.
South Africa has strong policy commitments to inclusive education, but many schools still
follow old patterns of separating, labelling and categorising learners according to disability or
learning difficulty. This means that learners may be accepted on paper, but still treated as
outsiders in the ordinary classroom (Walton and Engelbrecht, 2024).


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QUESTION 1 (2 different answers provided)

Educational exclusion refers to the process through which some learners are denied
full and meaningful participation in schooling, even when they are formally allowed to
attend school. It can happen when learners are kept out of school, placed in
unsuitable learning settings, ignored in class, denied support, or pushed through a
system that does not meet their learning needs. Although inclusive education policies
promise equal access and participation, many learners still experience exclusion
because policy ideas are not always matched by real support in schools.

The first argument is that inclusive policies often fail because implementation
remains weak. South Africa has strong policy commitments to inclusive education,
but many schools still follow old patterns of separating, labelling and categorising
learners according to disability or learning difficulty. This means that learners may be
accepted on paper, but still treated as outsiders in the ordinary classroom (Walton
and Engelbrecht, 2024).

The second argument is that poor teacher preparation keeps exclusion alive. Many
teachers are expected to teach learners with different disabilities, language needs
and learning barriers without enough training or practical classroom guidance. When
teachers do not know how to adapt lessons, assessment and discipline, learners
who need support may be blamed for not coping instead of being helped properly
(Motitswe, 2025).

The third argument is that lack of resources makes inclusion difficult in daily school
life. Some schools do not have assistive devices, accessible classrooms, learning
support staff, adapted materials, or enough time to give individual attention. As a
result, learners with disabilities may attend school but still struggle to learn,
communicate, move around, or take part in normal classroom activities
(Chirowamhangu, 2024).

The fourth argument is that educational exclusion is also linked to poverty and
inequality. Poor learners often attend overcrowded and under-resourced schools,
where teachers already face heavy workloads. In such schools, inclusive education
becomes difficult because basic teaching and learning conditions are already weak.

Disclaimer
Great care has been taken in the preparation of this document; however, the contents are provided "as is"
without any express or implied representations or warranties. The author accepts no responsibility or
liability for any actions taken based on the information contained within this document. This document is
intended solely for comparison, research, and reference purposes. Reproduction, resale, or transmission
of any part of this document, in any form or by any means, is strictly prohibited.

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