Inclusive education depends on fair school admissions and social recognition ...119
Inclusive education depends on access to learning and learning support ..............122
Organization of learner support is a key school responsibility ...............................122
Special schools can play a new role in an inclusive education system ................124
Inclusive education requires appropriate school buildings and facilities ..................125
Conclusion ..................................................................................................................................................127
Inclusive school development cannot be
reduced simply to improving schools’
physical accessibility or access to the
curriculum
In the move towards inclusive education, schools and
school leaders are crucial. Especially now, amid a rapid
shift towards new and diverse forms of instruction,
interaction and participation, accelerated during the
COVID-19 crisis, schools need to ensure that teachers and
learners learn collaboratively and socially. Mechanisms of
exclusion from the school community, the pedagogical
approaches schools develop to reach all learners, and how
leadership promotes inclusive school development must
be monitored.
As a school becomes inclusive, aiming to organize
equal learning opportunities and ensure equal learning
outcomes, two issues are central. The first concerns access
and accessibility. As human and financial resources to
address diversity are scarce and distributed unequally, the
transition to inclusion is often a management challenge
for schools and school networks. The second issue regards
human and technological support for learning. Specialist
support and targeted actions for vulnerable groups in
mainstream schools are essential.
Despite these elements’ importance, inclusive school
development cannot be reduced simply to improving
schools’ physical accessibility or access to the curriculum.
Access to learning requires a broader perspective
involving the organizational, pedagogical and social
conditions offered by schools and their ambitions and
effect on learners’ performance, transition and future life
opportunities (Ebersold, 2015; European Agency, 2017;
UNESCO, 2020). In other words, developing accessible
schools and improving procedures to facilitate access
to support are part of a social contract in which school
leaders and teams, as well as local stakeholders, are deeply
involved. Schools need to consider education quality
as a vehicle to enhance equal outcomes. By adopting
an inclusive ethos and responding to diversity as an
imperative for practice, school leaders can engage teachers
in developing inclusive pedagogy and providing education
of good quality for all (Artiles et al., 2010; Florian and Spratt,
2013; Florian, 2019).
A whole-school approach is needed. This chapter
focuses on schools as a community and a resource for
inclusive education, taking the perspective of schools as
organizations that manage admissions and help fulfil
the right to learning. It considers how inclusive school
leadership affects participation, equal outcomes and
a sense of belonging. It primarily regards mainstream
schools but also considers how special schools, home
schooling and various forms of support and counselling can
be involved in the process of developing inclusive learning
environments. Finally, it discusses the accessibility of the
school environment, which requires policy support beyond
the school community.
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