Inclusive Education
Admin September 21, 2024
Inclusive education is schooling for all children in a mainstream system. All children – including those with disabilities – have the opportunity and support to learn together in the same classroom. Inclusive education is proven to deliver better outcomes for all learners and is often cheaper to implement. Yet it is still not a reality. From the importance of teachers to the impact on the UN Sustainable Development Goals, here are 8 things to know about inclusive education.
8 things to know about inclusive
education
1. Access to education is a human right
Every child deserves the chance to
go to school. Access to education shouldn’t be based on geography, financial
means or whether a child has a disability.
But, despite the commitments in the Convention on the Rights
of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD, Art. 24), children with
disabilities are often excluded from education. In sub-Saharan
Africa, the number of children with disabilities is estimated at 70 million.
Many are denied their right to education because of physical, social,
technological, financial or other barriers.
Denying children with disabilities
this right can have a lifelong impact on learning, social interactions,
achievements and employment opportunities.
2.
Inclusive education benefits all children
By removing barriers and
accommodating diversity, inclusive education systems promote access,
acceptance, participation and achievement of all children. Inclusive
education systems teach all learners the value of diversity. They lay the
groundwork for a more open, democratic and equal society.
Inclusive education also makes
financial sense. Creating parallel education structures, such as schools
specifically for children with disabilities, in lower-income countries is
costly, inefficient and reinforces stigma and discrimination.
3.
Inclusive education breaks the cycle of discrimination
Children with disabilities often
face a vicious cycle of discrimination, poverty and exclusion from society.
Education is one of the most effective ways to break this cycle.Poverty, family
life and community discrimination can keep children with disabilities,
especially girls, out of school. This is why Light for the World’s
approach to inclusive education is rooted in holistic behavioral change at
community level. We advocate to community leaders that children with
disabilities have a right to an education. We use role models to show parents
their children with disabilities deserve an education as much as everyone
else.
When children with disabilities are
included in education, they receive a gateway to fully participate in
society.
4.
Girls with disabilities are less likely to enrol in school
Girls with disabilities face even
more discrimination. They are less likely to enrol and stay in school than boys
with disabilities or girls without disabilities. Girls with disabilities
are often hidden from official statistics, so schools and communities do not
realise they are denied their right to education.
At Light for the World, 57% of the
children with disabilities we reached between 2019 and 2022 were girls. But we
know there are many more.
We call for disaggregation of data
by gender and disability, so governments and development actors have reliable
data to plan and implement education policies.
5.
The earlier inclusive education begins, the better the outcomes for learners
In sub-Saharan Africa, one in five
primary school-age children are out of school, according to UNESCO.
Exclusion, segregation and
discrimination start at an early age. So Inclusive Early Childhood Development
(iECD) is at the heart of a more equal education system.
Quality iECD improves learning
outcomes of children with disabilities and helps to keep them in school for
longer. Because of this, Light for the World urges donors and governments to
quadruple their investments in iECD.
Nafisa Baboo, Director of Inclusive
Education at Light for the World, says: “All education programmes,
including education in emergencies, need to
be disability inclusive. More equitable financing is needed to channel funding
to those most in need.”
6.
Technology and teachers have a crucial role
Assistive technology and accessible
digital media can be a game changer for learners with disabilities.
Together with our partners, Light
for the World provides accessible technologies in the classroom and trains
teachers on how to use them. Our Bookshare project in Burkina Faso,
for example, provides access to a vast digital library of accessible books for
people who are blind or have a visual impairment.
While assistive technology offers
potential benefits, well-trained and qualified teachers are at the
forefront of inclusive education. Technology can
never replace the connection that supports learning and the wellbeing that
comes from children being together and the mentorship of a teacher.
Brothers
Natenael and Amanueal, who are both Deaf, attend school with support from
Rehabilitation Services for the Deaf (RSDA). RSDA is a partner of Light for the
World that implements inclusive education in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Light for
the World
7.
Inclusive education will help the world achieve SDG 4
The commitment of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) is to
“ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning
opportunities for all”.
Mathilde Umuraza, Gender Expert at
Light for the World, says: “Investing in inclusive Early Childhood Development
(iECD) is all we need to achieve the SDG 4.
“iECD unlocks the potential of all
children as it allows early disability detection and rehabilitation, and it
leverages the constraints of late enrolment, which compromise the attainment of
quality education for all! All for SDG 4? Let us all mobilise for iECD for all
girls and boys with and without disabilities.”
8.
Inclusive education can promote lasting change
Our vision at Light for the World is
a future where every child, including those with disabilities, can go to school
together.
Light for the World and our partners
identify children with disabilities, build community awareness on the
importance of education and design accessible schools. We train teachers to lead
inclusive classes and anchor these changes in national policies.
We advocate at local, national and
international level for One Class for All — where all
children learn together and from each other, regardless of their
disability.
Inclusive education is not a
nice-to-have. It is a necessary precondition for an inclusive society in which
all people can equally and fully participate. By embracing inclusive education,
we can promote lasting change and a more equal society for all.