Inclusive Education is an
approach to educate all children who are at risk for neglect in education
system. It expects that all learners learn together through access to common
educational provisions. The crucial people in the system are the parents, and
community, teachers, administrators and policy makers. All these people have to
be supportive towards the diverse needs of children. It should be seen as an
experience rather than a problem.
Need of inclusive education
There are two reasons for inclusive education.
Ideologically
Technically
Ideologically-Inclusive education is needed to bring
in unity in diversity.
Technically- schools are important places for
children to develop friendships and learn social skills
It is the right of every child to get
education. The society needs variety of people for the progress of humanity.
Inclusive education becomes important to fulfill this.
Human Rights
All children have the right to learn together.
No one can discriminate children because of
their learning ability and social,
economical, cultural and family background.
Education
Research shows children do better,
academically and socially in inclusive settings.
Given commitment and support, inclusive
education is a more efficient use of educational resources.
Social
All children develop relationships
with variety of people around them and this prepares them for life in the
mainstream.
Inclusion has the potential to reduce fear and
build friendship Mutual respect,
understanding and compassion increases among the fellow individuals.
Psychological
Development of safe and secure feeling in the
group
Confidence in the individual ability
among the diversity
Inclusive education helps the development
of children in different ways. Students with specific challenges make gains in
physical, cognitive and social development and motor skills. They do well when
the general environment is adjusted to meet their needs. Children in the
schools develop higher levels of tolerance for people with diversities in
general and those who are disadvantaged. When we exclude children from the
education system, there begins a demarcation in the society. It is very
difficult to include them in the later stages for any purpose in the community.
Thus, inclusive education lays the foundation to an inclusive society
accepting, respecting and celebrating diversity (MHRD, 2005).
OTHER CONCEPTS RELATED TO INCLUSIVE
Over the years the term ‘Inclusive
Education’ has come to replace the term ‘Integrated Education’. Many people
working in the field of education consider these two terms to be meaning the
same thing. They understand it as only a change in terminology. But the term
inclusive education means much more than integrated education. Integration and
mainstreaming are the terms used over the years to denote the shift to stop the
segregation of children with disability for the purpose of education. Inclusive
education is a very broad term that calls to stop the segregation of children
for the purpose of education.
Mainstreaming
Initially an attempt was made to
implement the vision of providing education to children with disabilities in
the regular stream of education. According to this, special schools prepared the child with
disability to earn the placement option. Those children who were ‘ready’ got
shifted to the regular system of education
Integration
The term integration was used to
describe the participation of children with disabilities in the educational
programme existing for the children without disabilities. Here, the
responsibility of participation was on the child. Classrooms and schools were
not prepared to adjust to the needs and requirements of the child with regard
to material or method of teaching -learning. The placement was more of spatial
(being in the same classroom) and temporal (at the same time).
Inclusion
No doubt, all the above thoughts and
practices prepared the ground for us to implement a broader, democratic vision
– inclusive education. This refers to restructuring schools as communities
where all children can learn in a common environment without any
discrimination. The general philosophy of inclusive education provides for good
teaching practices, healthy relationship between teacher and students to
improve the quality of education for all children in a classroom. Regular
classroom environment is adjusted to meet the individual needs. The spatial and
temporal placement as per integration is utilized to the benefit of the child
through adapting curriculum, providing extra time, adapting specific methods of
teaching and giving additional adult help.
Difference between
Inclusive education and integrated education
Both have one aim in
common, that both are concerned with placement of children with disabilities in
the regular school. Other than this commonality, they are different in many
ways.
Integration is the
process of accommodating children and young people with disabilities into
mainstream schools. The emphasis within
integration is to ‘fit’ the child
into the system. In integration children with disabilities had to be equipped
to suit the existing system. The
emphasis was on preparing the child to adjust to the expectations of the
classroom. For example, children with hearing impairment will be fitted
with suitable amplification devise (hearing aids).
Auditory and speech
training will be given to the child in the resource room. A child with visual
impairment will be sent either to the resource room or to a specialized centre
to learn Braille. A child with loco- motor handicap will be provided with
mobility devices. The physical infrastructure of the school / classroom will be
modified, so that the child can have free access to the school. This was a welcome move indeed towards
changing the mindset of the people.
No doubt integration prepared us for
the implementation of inclusion.
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