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Summary - INC3701 - Inclusive Education

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Summary - INC3701 - Inclusive Education

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June 22, 2023
Number of pages
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Written in
2022/2023
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Section A: Introduction

Chapter 1: A framework understanding Inclusion



1.1 Introduction

o Inclusion is :
 complex,
 multidimensional
 controversial concept.



1.2 What is inclusion?

o Inclusion has become a buzzword,
o Can be seen in policy documents, media statements and newspapers.
o The broad principles common between definitions of inclusion are:
 Dedication to building a more democratic society
 More equitable & quality orientated educational system
 Belief that extends the responsibility of regular schools to accommodate the
diverse learning needs of all learners
o The wider sense:
 About developing inclusive community & education systems
 Based on a value system that invites and celebrates difference & diversity
 diversity = gender, nationality, race, language, socio-economic background,
cultural origin, level of educational achievement & disability
o Inclusion about ensuring the access, active participation, success of everyone
o regardless of difference
o Inclusion - expression of individual human rights & social justice
o Worldwide movement with a global agenda
o International & RSA definitions of inclusion is important to understand different
interpretations and histories

,1.3 Inclusion in an international context

1.3.1 Changing paradigms

o Schools = affected by developments & changes in society
o Society grows → schools become outdated
o response to rapidly evolving social, political & economic contexts is to create schools that
are grounded in democratic principles and constructs of social justice
o Changes in learning grows parallel to changes in thinking
o New perspectives/paradigms
o Skrtic a paradigm/worldview is:
“a shared pattern of basic beliefs and assumptions about the nature of the world and
how it works. These assumptions tell us what is real and what is not; they shape our
cultural identity and guide and justify our institutional practices”.
o Paradigms = enabling, can be restrictive towards growth


1.3.2 The medical deficit model

o 1970’s rapid paradigm shift from a medical deficit model (within-child model) to a social
systems change approach
o Model used to direct beliefs & ideas which they demonstrated in their methods, they used
the models as an explanatory framework too
o Inclusion= prominent in educational systems now, however with an explanatory framework
the medical model is predominant
o Model explained by diagnosing (ADHD/behavioural problems) & fixing (remedial
education/special class)
o useful in the medical field
o social sciences the problem is possible not only in the child but also in the community the
child functions in
o When applied there is a search for the problem within the child & then singled out (disabled)
o Process:
 assess the child’s strengths & weaknesses,
 find diagnosis
 categorize / label the child

,o Children who fell outside the norm → sent to special schools/classes to fix & alleviate their
differences
o Special staff/ curriculum aimed at fixing child
o Reasoning for using model: to benefit the problem child & normal majority
o Medical model based on positivist philosophy:
 scientific knowledge objective,
 empirical,
 observable only source of correct knowledge about reality
o A person’s disability is determined by a dynamic interaction between biological, individual
and social perspectives (Bronfenbrenner’s model)


1.3.3 The social ecological model

o The paradigm shift became when normalisation was introduced in Western society in
1960’s
o Normalisations = that all people who are disabled should enjoy patterns & conditions of
everyday living which are as close as possible to the mainstream society
o Normalisation in direct conflict with medical model
o Mainstream:
 Mainstreaming is mostly used in the US,
 Integration is used more in European countries
 Mainstreaming is the educational equivalent of normalisation principle
 it suggests that people with disabilities have a right to life experiences that are the
same /similar to those of anyone else in society
 Goal: to return learners with disabilities to mainstream of education as much as
possible, alongside normal peers
 When implemented (US) children were allowed to visit general education classes for
short periods of time, mostly in non-academic classes – it applied to learners with
mild disabilities mostly
 Supporters believed learners must earn opportunity to be mainstreamed & work
harder to keep up with the work assigned to all the normal learners in the class
 If special education was necessary it was provided in special environments such as
a resource room

,  Mainstreaming- school & class remained the same, setting never changed to accept
the child
 Criticised: because it doesn’t provide learners with sufficient support to benefit from
regular education
o Integration:
 Humanitarian & civil rights issues drove policies leading to integration
 Examples: No child left behind act 2001 US
 goal: ensure that learners with disabilities are assigned equal membership in the
community
 aims: to max the social interactions between disabled & non-disabled learners
 different interpretations of integration
 involved more extensive & holistic participation for learners with disabilities in relation
to mainstreaming (only visiting some classes, mostly non-academic), while more time
were still spent on special needs in separate settings
 Special services followed the learner to the regular school, mainstreaming the
learner was still in a special school – only visiting mainstream school classes
o Inclusion can be described as a reconceptualization of values &beliefs that welcomes &
celebrates diversity and not only a set of practices


o UNESCO (accommodate all children regardless of their disabilities): these inclusive
education systems must recognise & respond to:
 diverse needs of their students,
 accommodating different styles & rates of learning,
 ensuring quality education to all through appropriate curricula,
 organisational arrangements,
 teaching strategies,
 resource use
 partnerships with their communities
o This statement by UNESCO was based on the grounds of the following:
 The education of all learners together needs development in teaching practices that
can accommodate individual differences & benefit all learners
 Inclusive schools are non-judgemental & embrace differences which creates a non-
discriminatory society
 Educating all learners together is more cost-effective

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