1. Compose a 300-word essay discussing the problem of educational exclusion despite inclusive
policies. Provide five arguments to support your position and cite three recent academic sources.
The Problem of Educational Exclusion Despite Inclusive Policies
Despite the proliferation of inclusive education policies globally, educational exclusion remains
pervasive, particularly in the Global South. South Africa, with its progressive constitutional and
legislative frameworks, exemplifies this paradox where policy intent fails to translate into practice.
The persistence of exclusion despite inclusive policies stems from deeply embedded historical
legacies and implementation failures that collectively undermine even the most well-intentioned
frameworks.
Historical path dependencies from colonial and apartheid eras continue to shape educational
structures in ways that resist policy transformation. Walton (2024) argues that these path
dependencies "lock the country into historical patterns of categorisation and segregated schooling,"
creating a complex environment that confounds linear progression toward inclusivity and perpetuates
exclusionary practices beneath a veneer of policy compliance.
The policy-practice gap manifests through inadequate enforcement mechanisms and ambiguous
legislative language. Mosala and Sefotho (2026) expose a disconnect rooted in "vague legal language,
insufficient enforcement mechanisms, and medicalised understandings of disability," which
systematically fails learners with undiagnosed learning difficulties and those whose needs do not fit
neatly within prescribed categories of support.
Teacher unpreparedness fundamentally undermines inclusive implementation at the classroom level.
Research indicates that many educators feel profoundly unequipped to address diverse learning
needs, having received insufficient pre-service and in-service training in differentiated instruction,
assistive technologies, and trauma-informed pedagogies (Nomtshongwana & Manyakaza, 2025).
Fragmented policy rollout perpetuates exclusion through contradictory administrative practices. The
Basic Education Committee Chairperson observed that regulations undermining the BELA Act's
intention "perpetuate the exclusion of vulnerable learners, as was done in the past," by reinforcing
demographic homogeneity through feeder zones rather than adopting broader education districts that
might promote genuine integration.
Resource constraints systematically disadvantage vulnerable learners, particularly those in rural and
impoverished communities. The Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities
revealed that 459,000 children with disabilities were not accounted for in the basic education
database, highlighting systemic data gaps that affect planning, budgeting, and the equitable
distribution of specialised support services.
In conclusion, educational exclusion persists because policies alone cannot dismantle structural
inequalities without corresponding political will, adequate resourcing, and genuine pedagogical
transformation. South Africa's experience demonstrates that inclusive education requires not merely
legislative commitment but sustained attention to the complex interplay of historical legacies,
implementation mechanisms, and systemic support. Without addressing these foundational
challenges, inclusive policies risk becoming symbolic gestures rather than instruments of meaningful
change.