BOX 1.1:
The evolving interpretation of disability has shaped education provision
Evolving perceptions of people with disabilities shaped three approaches
to their education (Al Ju’beh, 2015). The charity model viewed people
with disabilities as victims or objects of pity. They were considered
uneducable and excluded from education, although some religious
institutions provided education alongside care.
The medical model saw disability as a problem stemming from
impairment that made some people differ from what society widely
considered normal and need treatment to meet societal expectations.
The perceived challenges of learners with disabilities arose from their
deficits rather than school and classroom organization, curriculum and
teaching approaches that might be inadequate and lack the flexibility
to offer needed opportunities and support. Consequently, such learners
are often categorized and labelled by type and severity of disability
and placed in separate provision, where they are educated through
specialized approaches. The medical model can give rise to the idea that
medical personnel should lead assessment of such learners and that
only teachers with training in special education can provide for them.
This reinforces the perceived need for separate provision and individual
approaches that often carry lower expectations throughout learners’
school career. The language associated with the medical model includes
terms such as special needs, therapy, rehabilitation, handicap, defect,
disorder and diagnosis.
Starting in the 1970s, the social model contrasted the biological
condition (impairment) with the social condition (disability).
In this approach, disability is not an individual attribute. It emerges
because individuals face barriers they cannot overcome in certain
environments. It is the system and context that do not take the
diversity and multiplicity of needs into account (Norwich, 2014).
The social model is linked to the rights-based approach to inclusion
and the idea that education needs to be available, accessible,
acceptable and adaptable (Tomaševski, 2001). Functioning and
capability approaches are central to its focus on what a person has
difficulty doing. Society and culture determine rules, define normality
and treat difference as deviance.
In 2001, the World Health Organization issued the International
Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, which synthesized
the medical and social models of disability. Although it listed
1,500 disability codes, it stated that disability resulted not only from
physical conditions and biological endowment but also from personal
or environmental contexts (WHO, 2001). A shift towards the social
model must be accompanied by a change in language, which moves
from medical and needs-based terms towards language placing
learners’ rights at the centre of planning and decision making in a
model that prioritizes identification and removal of attitudinal, physical
and organizational barriers.
All stakeholders need to understand the underlying thinking related to
inclusion. The concept of barriers suggests many people are at risk of
education exclusion, not just people with disabilities. Social and cultural
mechanisms drive exclusion on the basis of ethnicity or poverty, for
instance. In education, the concept of barriers to participation and
learning is replacing that of special needs and difficulties.
Yet awareness raising remains a challenge in many countries.
An ‘inclusive and equitable’ education is at
the core of the SDG 4 ambition
18
GLOBAL EDUCATION MONITORING REPORT 2021
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