Title: Towards Inclusive Education: a view from South Africa'
1Towards Inclusive Education a view from South
Africa.
Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Global Forum on
Education The challenges for Education in a
Global Economy. 24th October 2005 Santiago, Chile
2Inclusive Education
- Is gaining ground globally.
- Teachers others involved in education are
working to develop positive educational
experiences that all children can enjoy benefit
from, together. - For children with disabilities those
experiencing difficulties in learning, this means
inclusion in mainstream schools classrooms
alongside their non-disabled peers. - For all children adults it means a more
enriching and rewarding educational experience.
3Barriers in the South African context
- Inequalities in society, lack of access to basic
services poverty are factors which place
children at risk, contribute to learning
breakdown exclusion. - Inequalities resulting from apartheid economic
deprivation have had a great impact on the
education system, especially on those learners
who face barriers to learning. - The provision the distribution of resources
reflect the inequalities of the apartheid past.
4The Face of Exclusion
- Children who have never attended school those
who have dropped out. - Inappropriate education for a learners
categorised as having special needs. - No support available for those learners who are
outside the system. - Existing provision after primary school is
inadequate to meet the needs.
5The Scene of Exclusion
- Socio-economic factors which place learners at
risk - Inadequacies inequalities in the education
system its contribution to learning breakdown
are most evident in areas which have the lowest
level of basic service provision, the highest
levels of unemployment sustained poverty.
6Scene of Exclusion
- Violence Abuse in society have impacted
significant numbers of learners. - HIV/AIDS continues to place large numbers of
learners at risk.
7The Scene of Exclusion
- Attitudes
- Negative attitudes towards differences the
resulting discrimination prejudice in the
society manifests itself as a serious barrier to
learning. - Curriculum
- The curriculum has been unable to meet the needs
of a wide range of different learners.
8The Scene of Exclusion
- Environment-Many of centres of learning are
physically inaccessible to many learners,
especially to those who have physical
disabilities. This is often worse in poorer
rural areas. - Infrastructure- buildings are rundown or poorly
maintained. They are unhealthy and unsafe for all
learners.
9The Scene of Exclusion
- Governance school management
- Centralised education system has left a legacy of
restrictive control which inhibits change
initiative. - Legal responsibility for decisions tends to be
located at the highest level the focus of
management remains oriented towards employees
complying with rules rather than on ensuring
quality service delivery.
10More Barriers
- Language Communication
- Teaching learning takes place through a
language which is not the first language of many
South African learners. This places these
learners at a disadvantage it often leads to
significant linguistic difficulties which
contribute to learning breakdown. Second language
learners are particularly subject to low
expectations, discrimination lack of role
models cultural peers. - There have been some advancements in this regard.
11More Barriers
- Training
- Training tends to be fragmented, uncoordinated,
inadequate, unequal and often inappropriate to
the context. - Little, or no training and capacity building
opportunities exist for community resource
persons, particularly carers.
12International Legal Framework
- Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989)
- UN Standard Rules on the Equalisation of
Opportunities for Persons with Disabilities
(1993) - UNESCO Salamanca Statement (1994).
- EFA Dakar (2000)
- Together, these documents recognise the human
right of all children to education which is
inclusive.
13New Developments
- The UN General Assembly adopted the resolution
56/168 of 19 December 2001 that established an Ad
Hoc Committee to consider proposals for a
comprehensive and integral international
convention to promote and protect the rights and
dignity of persons with disabilities. - The Convention is premised on the fundamental
human rights values of dignity, equality, social
justice self-determination.
14An enabling legal environment
- The S A Constitution of 1996
- Section 9 refers specifically to disability
- Sign language is recognised as an official
language - Section 29- the right to basic education
- Basic education is thus a legal entitlement to
which every person has a claim. For children, the
right would be satisfied by the availability of
schooling facilities sufficient to enable every
child to begin and complete a basic education
programme of acceptable quality.
15An Enabling Environment
- South African Schools Act of 1996
- Provides for the inclusion of learners with
special educational needs. Public schools are
required by law to admit all learners. - The Integrated National Disability Strategy
(1997). - Provides a blueprint for integration inclusion
into every aspect of governance.
16The National Commission on Special Needs in
Education Training DOE 1997
- This report challenged the conceptualisation of
special needs highlighted the limitations - It introduces the concept Barriers to learning
development - Argues that historically in South Africa, the
notion of special educational needs has been used
to categorize all learners who for various
reasons did not fit into the mainstream system
identified deficits within these learners. - Little effort made to explore the causes of
learning breakdown that may be embedded in the
system.
17Quality Education for All
- The report involved extensive consultation with
all the key stake-holders in special needs
education took one year to complete. - The report formed the basis of a new national
policy on special needs education, which is
directly in line with general education
transformation initiatives.
18The principles for educational transformation
- human rights and justice for all learners, equal
access to a single, inclusive education system, - removing past inequalities,
- the development of strong links between the
community the centres of learning,
cost-effectiveness. -
19Principles of reform
- Educational provision support for all learners
must be appropriate, effective, affordable,
implementable sustainable. - It is responsive to diversity.
20The White Paper No.6 (2001)
- Acknowledges that all children youth can learn,
that all children youth need support - Accepts respects that all learners are
different in some way have different but
equally valued learning needs - The need to enable education structures, systems
learning methodologies to meet the needs of all
learners
21White Paper No.6
- Acknowledges respects differences among
learners, whether due to age, gender, ethnicity,
language, class, disability or HIV status - Looks beyond formal schooling, acknowledging
learning also occurs in the home community,
within formal informal settings structures - Changing attitudes, behaviour, teaching methods,
curricula the environment to meet the needs of
all learners
22A paradigm shift
- Inclusive education incorporates the principle of
access for all disadvantaged learners, and not
merely for those with disabilities. - Inclusive education is therefore a shift from
disability-specific theories, assumptions,
practices models to a non-disability specific
inclusive system of education. - It is a shift to a more child centered approach.
23Who are the Players?
- Governments, international agencies, local
authorities, nongovernmental and community-based
organizations the private sector - Parents/care givers
- Children
- Teachers
- The media
-
24What This Means
- The development of knowledge on inclusive
education is essential - The need for capacity building
- The development training of resources for
educators. - The need to raise awareness within communities.
- Infrastructure accessibility.
- A legal framework is required
25What is needed?
- The need for reliable data collection systems.
- Political will to transform the education system.
- Champions
26Key Messages
- It makes economic sense.
- There is no one size fits all it is context
specific - There are good practices
- It will not happen over night
- Participation and democracy are at the heart of
inclusion. - We will not meet the EFA goals if we continue
business as usual. - Value ALL learners!!!!