BOX 2.4:
Roma children are frequently segregated in education
The Roma are the largest ethnic minority in Europe, numbering
between 10 million and 12 million, of which two-thirds live in Central and
Eastern Europe (UNICEF, 2020). They often live in poverty and suffer
prejudice, intolerance and discrimination (FRA, 2014). Their education
attainment is low. Across six countries in 2016, the median early
childhood education participation rate among Roma was 36% compared
with a national average of 86%. The secondary school completion
rate of Roma aged 18 to 24 was 40% among men and just 28% among
women (FRA, 2016).
Roma children suffer various forms of segregation in education. The
share of those attending classes in which all or most learners are Roma
ranges from 29% in Romania to about 60% in Bulgaria, Hungary and
Slovakia. In Bulgaria, 27% of Roma children attended schools where
all their classmates were Roma, according to the Second Survey on
Minorities in Europe (FRA, 2016). In Hungary, segregation has increased:
the proportion of basic schools with a Roma population of at least
50% rose from 10% in 2008 to 15% in 2017 (European Commission,
2019b). Roma children were also segregated on separate floors or in
separate classes (Albert et al., 2015).
Roma children are disproportionally diagnosed with intellectual
disabilities and placed in special schools, as in Hungary (Van den
Bogaert, 2018) and Slovakia (Amnesty International and European Roma
Rights Centre, 2017). A Council of Europe position paper on fighting
school segregation through inclusive education drew attention to new
forms of discrimination, such as Roma-only private schools (Council
of Europe, 2017). In 2013, European Council recommendations on
integration measures obliged EU member states to end ‘inappropriate
placement’ of Roma students in special schools (European Council,
2013, Para. 1.3). Nevertheless, in 2016, 16% of Roma aged 6 to 15 in the
Czech Republic and 18% in Slovakia attended special schools (FRA, 2016).
In line with its 2000 Racial Equality Directive, which prohibited
discrimination in education on racial and ethnic grounds, the European
Union started infringement procedures against the Czech Republic (2015),
Slovakia (2015) and Hungary (2016), telling them to end discrimination
against Roma children in education and ensure equal access to high-
quality education (European Commission, 2016). A letter of formal
notice was sent to Slovakia in 2015, and the European Commission
concluded in October 2019 that measures taken had been insufficient
to redress the situation and warned the country that if it did not take
further action by the end of 2019, the matter could be referred to the
European Court of Justice (European Commission, 2019c).
The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has
raised concerns about segregation in education of Roma children in
the Czech Republic, Croatia, Hungary and Slovakia. In 2019, Croatia,
Lithuania and Slovakia updated their action plans for implementation
of national Roma integration strategies, and implemented some
measures targeting specific aspects of segregation in education.
Litigation is increasingly used to fight discrimination and inequality.
The European Court of Human Rights adopted a vulnerability
approach to redress structural inequality on grounds of sex, sexual
orientation, disability, race and ethnicity. D.H. and Others vs
Czech Republic was brought in 2000 by 18 Czech Roma students
assigned to special primary schools with simplified curricula. The
court ruled the students had been denied their right to education
because enrolment criteria did not take into account characteristics
specific to Roma, resulting in racial discrimination and segregation
(European Court of Human Rights, 2007). Later rulings included
Oršuš and Others vs Croatia, which called for the state to provide
linguistic support enabling Roma children to enter mainstream
classes, and Horváth and Kiss vs Hungary, which found that
Roma children were misdiagnosed because of ‘socio-economic
disadvantage and cultural differences’ (Broderick, 2019). The
ruling obliged the country to ‘undo a history of racial segregation’
(European Court of Human Rights, 2013, p. 34), but local actors have
been trying to undermine the decision (Zemandl, 2018).
A joint EU and Council of Europe project, Inclusive Schools: Making
a Difference for Roma Children, targets schools attended by Roma
children in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and
the United Kingdom. It aims to increase understanding of the
benefits of inclusive education among teachers and the public, set
up support mechanisms and resources for pilot inclusive schools,
provide support to teachers to practice inclusive teaching, and
support removal of barriers for vulnerable groups, including through
legislative changes (Council of Europe, 2019).
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GLOBAL EDUCATION MONITORING REPORT 2021
In the Russian Federation, the Education 2019–2024 project
contains a roadmap with indicators and key objectives
for the development of the education system in priority
areas. It includes 10 federal projects addressing areas
including school upgrading; extracurricular activities,
including online courses, for students with special needs;
networks of support centres; psychological, pedagogical
and consulting assistance to parents provided by regional
non-government organizations (NGOs); and digital
opportunities for rural schools.
Strategies or action plans for inclusive education exist
in 21 of the 30 education systems, with target areas
including non-discrimination, equal opportunity and
school dropout. Examples include the 2019–23 Kyrgyz
concepts and programmes for development of
inclusive education and the Republic of Moldova’s
2011–20 development programme for inclusive education.
Other countries are moving in this direction. Armenia is
developing an action plan on universal inclusive education
in two regions. The policy framework is expected to
be revised by 2025 to enable inclusive education in all
regions. The US Agency for International Development
has supported a draft strategic vision and roadmap on
inclusive education for 2019–25. In Tajikistan, the Ministry
of Education and Science and the Academy of Pedagogical
Sciences are developing a strategy for inclusive education
provision taking into account an expanded understanding
of the terms ‘inclusive’ and ‘vulnerable’. The strategy
addresses disability, ethnicity, migration and gender.
Does all mean all?
A key dilemma in inclusive education involves maintaining
a focus on all learners while addressing the needs of
specific groups that may be particularly vulnerable to
marginalization and exclusion. While attaching labels
to particular groups can have negative consequences,
countries risk not responding to the education interests
of the most disadvantaged if they emphasize only what
learners have in common (Norwich, 2002). The Learning
Slovakia plan notes that ‘the so-called ordinary pupils and
their needs are often overlooked … at the same time, they
are also unique individuals with diverse potential’ (p. 16).
There is often a perception that learners from
disadvantaged groups cannot benefit from mainstream
school organization, curricula and teaching approaches.
Approaches focused on individual support for learners
with disabilities and special education needs, often based
on a medical diagnosis, can result in individual teaching,
separate interventions and segregated provision,
Strategies or action plans
for inclusive education exist in
21
30
21
of the
30
education systems
in Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia
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which reduce opportunities and lead to fragmented,
resource-intensive initiatives that cannot be sustained
in the longer term. The individual focus becomes a way
to manage diversity in an inflexible system in which
differences are seen as problems to be fixed. In some
systems, learners may be excluded through a ‘readiness’
approach that requires them to have particular skills
or levels of independence that will enable them to ‘fit
into’ the system.
Many governments focus efforts on groups at high risk
of exclusion: 27 of the 30 education systems reviewed
have plans focusing on disability and special education
needs, while 18 focus on Roma or other ethnic minorities.
Some, influenced by EU policies, focus on learners at
risk of dropping out or leaving education early (Albania,
Kosovo,
2
the Republic of Moldova, Serbia). In Hungary,
a medium-term 2014–20 strategy for early school
leaving aimed to reduce the number of school leavers
without a qualification and improve transition to the
labour market for socially disadvantaged learners,
especially those from the Roma community. Actions to
support vulnerable groups include providing assistants,
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