In three-quarters of education systems, national
strategies support monitoring and evaluation of
education outcomes and inclusive education practices.
Mongolia intends to ensure that education standards,
focused on a child-centred approach and addressing
individual learning needs, are
used flexibly to support
learning appropriate to local contexts. Montenegro
identified a need for quality assurance and monitoring
with development of standards. North Macedonia has
prioritized development of a national standard for
each primary education cycle, with a special focus on
inclusiveness and respect for differences. The Republic
of Moldova plans to review and draft minimum quality
standards for support services in education institutions.
Tajikistan cites a lack of standards as a constraint on
further development.
In Bulgaria, a 2018 decree on a joint mechanism to address
early school leaving ensures that institutions involved in
education carry out coordinated follow-up of children.
Municipalities and regional governments take part in
the process. Municipalities determine coverage areas,
coordinate municipal outreach teams, designate municipal
staff to
participate in these teams, and support parents in
fulfilling their legal obligation to enrol children in school.
In Serbia, every municipality has an inter-sectoral
committee that evaluates children’s needs for support
to overcome physical and social barriers in everyday
activities important for education, community life and
development. Each committee member monitors the
proposed support measures’ effects on a child from their
field’s perspective. The committee submits mandatory
reports on its work at least twice a year.
Ukraine is developing quality assurance mechanisms
at the central level. The 2017 education law introduced
the concept of institutional audits to assess schools’
activities and internal quality provision system according
to standards related to school environment, assessment
system, teacher work, management processes and
organization of education processes based on learner-
centred principles.
Coherence in quality assurance
mechanisms for inclusive
education remains a challenge in some countries.
Romania’s Ministry of National
Education, County
School Inspectorates and Agency for Quality Assurance
in School Education have different procedures for
externally assessing schools. These bodies sometimes
duplicate each other’s efforts, and schools must deal
with multiple expectations (World Bank, 2017).
Several governments engage non-government
actors to varying degrees
Cooperation between governments and non-government
actors can greatly support implementation of inclusive
education programmes. However, the degree to which
NGOs participate in governance varies by country.
Education ministries have shown varying levels of support
for NGO activities. In Albania, Roma and Egyptian NGOs
were involved in the design and implementation of
the National Action Plan for Integration of Roma and
Egyptians, while associations
representing children with
disabilities contributed to the Action Plan for People with
Disabilities. The Coalition of NGOs for Child Protection
in Kosovo, established in June 2011, consists of 27 local
and international NGOs working in child protection.
1
The Kosova Education Center, an NGO, played a leading
role in producing key strategic documents in education,
which the government approved.
In the Russian Federation, a non-profit social organization,
the Center for Curative Pedagogy, has been a pioneer
in the promotion of inclusion in education. A group of
teachers and parents of children with special education
needs established it in 1989, at a time when government
agencies proclaimed its target group of children
‘unteachable’. In Serbia, NGOs were involved in developing
a policy on teaching assistants (
Box 4.3
). In Ukraine, NGOs
initiate and implement projects
at the national level after
submitting a request for administrative support to the
Ministry of Education and Science.
In some countries, the scope of collaboration is limited.
In Bulgaria, for instance, NGOs are not directly involved in
governance, although they are involved in policymaking
In three-quarters of education systems,
national strategies support monitoring
and evaluation of education outcomes
and inclusive education practices
1
References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).
78
GLOBAL EDUCATION MONITORING REPORT 2021
and in piloting models for inclusive education in education
institutions. Depending on the outcomes of such models,
the legislation and documents that define inclusion
policies are amended. In Montenegro, cooperation with
NGOs is mostly on a project basis rather than through
long-term commitment to
include them in decision
making and governance.
In yet other countries, there is almost no collaboration
with NGOs in governance. The Belarus alternative report
on implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the
Child states that legislation revision often happens behind
closed doors and is not open to civil society organizations.
In Hungary, NGO involvement in strategy making is
limited. NGO representatives sometimes participate,
as invited guests, in advisory bodies established by
the government.
International organizations play a key role in
inclusive education provision
International organizations can influence the setting of
the inclusive agenda at a more advanced level than local
associations. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the concept of
inclusive education was introduced in Education Reform
Strategy:
Five Pledges on Education, a document of the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe that
later became the basis for policies, laws and regulations
in education.
In conjunction with the EU Structural Reform Support
Programme, Lithuania has formed a working group with
representatives from disabled people’s organizations,
education support specialist associations, school
associations, municipal associations and the Ombudsman
for Children, along with researchers. The group will make
suggestions for improving the action plan for children’s
inclusion in learning and multidisciplinary education.
In North Macedonia, representatives of UNICEF, the
US Agency for International Development (USAID) and
the Macedonian Civic Education Center were involved
in drafting the new Law on Primary Education and
the Law on Teachers and Associates in Primary and
Secondary Education, as well as bylaws derived from
them. The legislation provides for major changes in
inclusive education.
In Turkey, international organizations’ involvement in
funding refugee education has led to improvement in
the quality of data collected. Such examples suggest
that, increasingly, these stakeholders have a strong
positive impact on the decision-making process and the
transparency of inclusive education governance.
International organizations can influence
the setting of the inclusive agenda
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: