Title: INCLUSIVE EDUCATION: THE PHILIPPINE PERSPECTIVE
1INCLUSIVE EDUCATION THE PHILIPPINE PERSPECTIVE
Dr. YOLANDA S. QUIJANO Undersecretary of Programs
and Projects Department of Education Philippines
2OUTLINE
- General Information on Inclusive Education
- Facts and Figures, Policies, Strategies for
Disadvantaged Learners Children with
Disabilities, IPs, Muslim Children, Street
Children, Abused children - Current Difficulties and Challenges
- Lessons Learned
- Proposed Initiatives/Recommendations
3GENERAL INFORMATION onINCLUSIVE EDUCATION
Children with disabilities
Children of Indigenous peoples and Muslim children
Child labourers
Street children
Abused children
4FACTS and FIGURES
- Children with disabilities who are in school are
about 101, 762 (2011-2011). - Children with disabilities are still combating
educational exclusion - 97.3 of them are still unreached.
- About 5,916 are mainstreamed in regular classes
5Facts and Figures
- Children of Indigenous peoples number about 12-15
million across the country. - These are spread in seven ethnographic areas with
117 ethno-linguistic groups. - Those in the elementary schools total 639, 483
while 158, 550 are in the secondary schools
(2010-2011).
6Facts and Figures
- 140,570 Muslim elementary and secondary pupils
are attending ALIVE (Arabic Language and Islamic
Values Education) in public schools
7Facts and Figures
- Street children are about 246, 000 thousand-
- 75 are children on the streets
- 25 are children of the streets
- 70 are boys
- Working children are growing in
- number
- Number of abused children
- is being tracked down
-
-
8EDUCATION POLICIES
- The right to education is a basic human right.
- All children and youth shall have access to
quality education. - Inclusive education shall be concerned with all
learners, with focus on those who have
traditionally been excluded from educational
opportunities. - Support system shall be organized and delivered
holistically.
9PUBLIC POLICY SUPPORT on INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
- The 1987 Philippine Constitution
- P.D. 603 - The Child and Youth Welfare Code
- RA. 7610 Special Protection of Children against
Child Abuse, Exploitation and Discrimination Act - R.A. 7277- The Magna Carta for Disabled Persons
amended by R.A 9442 - Policies and Guidelines in Special Education
10PHILIPPINES ADOPTS INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTS on
INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
- UN Conventions on the Rights of the Child (1989)
- World Declaration on Education for All (1990)
- UNESCO Salamanca Statement and Framework for
Action (1994)
11INCLUSION DEFINED
- Reaching out to all learners
- Addressing and responding to diversity of needs
of all children, youth and adults - Involves changes and modification in content,
approaches, structures and strategies
12STRATEGIES in INCLUSIVE EDUCATION for
DISADVANTAGED LEARNERS
The program, curriculum, learning materials,
facilities, equipment
13CHILDREN WITH DISABILITES
14Education system has full responsibility to
ensure right to education
Assessment
Support System
It is equipped and ready to handle diversity
through
Flexible modified curriculum , teaching and
learning methods Adaptation Augmentation Alteratio
n
Remediation/ enrichment
Involvement of peers, parents and the community
Flexible teaching methods with innovative approach
es to teaching aids, and equipment assistive
devices and learning resources
PROCESS of INCLUSION
Responsive, child-friendly environment
Professional environment working deliberately
and actively to promote inclusion for all
15PHILIPPINE MODEL of INCLUSION
- Partial mainstreaming towards inclusion
- - students are educated in regular classes at
least half the day - - receive additional help or specialized
services - - pull-out
-
16- Full mainstreaming or inclusion
- - complete regular instruction
- - receive all special services
- in general classroom
-
17SUSTAINING PROGRAMS for CHILDREN with DISABILITIES
- Establishment of 276 Special Education Centers
nationwide - Provision of SPED items
- Downloading of funds
18Sustaining Programs for Children with
Disabilities
- Conduct of training programs for teachers
handling children with various disabilities - Conduct of training for school heads and
supervisors - Development of instructional materials for
children with disabilities
19Sustaining Programs for Children with
Disabilities
- Conduct of advocacy strategies like the SPED
caravan in regions and divisions without SPED
centers or without SPED programs
20Sustaining Programs for Children with
Disabilities
- Implementation of various intervention programs,
like - Early Intervention
- Transition program
- Headstart program
21INDIGENOUS PEOPLES EDUCATION
- Policy actions
- To provide access to quality basic education
- To ensure the preservation, recognition,
promotion and protection of the rights of
indigenous peoples to ancestral domain, cultural
identity and heritage - Objective
- The National IP Education Policy
- Framework operationalized in
- all schools
22Indigenous Peoples Education Activities
- Launching of the Philippines Response to
Indigenous Peoples and Muslim Education (PRIME)-
a facility for IP and ME - Conduct of implementation planning activities for
the national, regional clusters - Celebrating IP month in
- October
23MADRASAH EDUCATIONfor Muslim Children
- Policy action
- To provide acess to quality education
- To ensure the preservation, recognition,
promotion, and protection of the rights of Muslim
learners to religious identity and heritage - Objective
- Institutionalization of the Madrasah
Education Program at all levels in basic
education
24Madrasah Education for Muslim Children
- Development of Madrasah Currriculum for
Kindergarten (Tahderiyyah) - Implementation of the Madrasah Curriculum in the
elementary level - Development of the Curriculum in the secondary
level - Professionalizing the Asatidz through the
Accelerated Teacher Education Program now on its
fourth cycle
25STREET CHILDREN EDUCATION
- Enhancing the implementation of the Kariton
Klasrum project in partnership with the Dynamic
Teen Company - Street educator, Efren Penaflorida awarded by
CNN as Hero of the Year - Conducting stock-taking activities in selected
sites that will implement the program
26EDUCATION for CHILDREN SEXUALLY ABUSED
- Institutionalization of Personal Safety Lessons
in both elementary and secondary schools
nationwide - On-going training of trainers for the basic
education levels - Coordination with the agencies to ensure the
welfare of the sector
27ALTERNATIVE DELIVERY MODES for DISADVANTAGED
CHILDREN
- MISOSA- (Modified In-School and Off-School
Approach for elementary) - Open High School Program for secondary
- Distance Learning
- Modular learning
- On-line learning
- Home-based learning
28Alternative Delivery Modes in pictures
29Alternative Delivery Modes in pictures
30Alternative Delivery Modes in pictures
31CURRENT ISSUES and CHALLENGES
- Increasing the holding power of schools over
these children - Making existing resources and other support
systems adaptable and suitable to the needs of
inclusive education
32Current Issues and Challenges
- Mobilizing parents and other duty bearers in
supporting inclusive education - Providing post-school support to fully integrate
and enable disadvantaged children to participate
in gainful employment or productive work.
33LESSONS LEARNED
Social, Economic, and Financial Aspects
34SOCIAL BENEFITS
- Creates positive social and attitudinal changes
in both regular and disadvantaged chidren such
as - Reducing and eliminating prejudices against
disabled children - Improving self-concept or self-esteem
35Social Benefits
- c. Growth in social cognition
- Encouraging greater participation in social
progress - Challenge
- Inclusion may result in overcrowding and
- lowering of quality of education
36ECONOMIC BENEFITS
- Leads to higher participation rate,
cohort-survival or completion rate - There is higher simple and functional literacy
rates. - There is higher employment participation rate.
- Enable children to become independent and
productive in later years
37CHALLENGES
- Inclusion education entails additional resources
over and above those provided to regular schools. - Per pupil cost is relatively higher than the
regular pupil.
38PROPOSED INITIATIVES/RECOMMENDATIONS
- Ensuring education through early learning
intervention - Rationalizing the establishment of more centers
special education centers, community centers,
drop-in centers - Capability building for teachers of diverse
learners at pre service levels - Adopting equivalency, testing and acceleration
programs to diverse learners
39Inclusion means
I ntegration
N etworking
C ollaboration
L iving, learning, loving
U tilizing all available resources
S upport and social services
I mplementation of appropriate programs
O rganization of appropriate services
N on stop services to all
40 The challenge for educators is to find ways of
sharing expertise and provide wider educational
opportunities for the full implementation of
inclusive education.
41Thank You!
Maraming Salamat!