CONCLUSION
The COVID-19 pandemic represents a major setback
for inclusion in education, although the magnitude of
its impact is not yet clear. The crisis has shown that
ensuring learning for all during a pandemic is not simply
a matter of tackling the digital divide. Education systems
have been subjected to a test of their ability to ensure
education continuity by adjusting instructional design,
curriculum content, education delivery and assessment,
teacher preparation, and support and guidance at
home, especially for academically challenged and less
motivated students who risk falling further behind.
Although the focus has inevitably been on distance
learning, countries are not fully prepared to address the
full range of pedagogical challenges for all students that
online approaches to teaching and learning entail. It is
necessary to focus not only on academic learning but
also on the socio-emotional aspects that help develop
independent, self-sufficient, motivated and contented
students. Most children and youth are suffering a
direct, although hopefully temporary, loss of learning.
But concerns remain about the indirect effects of the
associated recession, which is throwing millions of
people into poverty. Governments need to take a close
look at the inclusion challenges posed by the pandemic
to reconstruct a better education system accessible to
all learners.
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A public school in Maradisi, a village in a region of
Georgia populated by ethnic minorities.
CREDIT: Natela Grigalashvili
CHAPTER
10
Conclusion and
recommendations
All countries committed in 2015 to achieve Sustainable
Development Goal 4 and ‘ensure inclusive and equitable
quality education’ by 2030. However, inclusive
education arguably meant different things to different
people at the time.
The right to inclusive education had been established
in the landmark Article 24 of the 2006 United Nations
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
(CRPD), which shaped perceptions of inclusive education
as associated with a single group. But it was the
UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
itself, in its General Comment No. 4 on Article 24 in
2016, that offered a new interpretation, arguing that
inclusion should not be associated with only one group.
Rather, the mindset and mechanisms that generate
discrimination and rejection in education participation
and experience are the same for all who are excluded,
whether due to disability or to gender, age, location,
poverty, ethnicity, language, religion, migration,
displacement, sexual orientation, gender identity and
expression, incarceration, beliefs or attitudes. Every
society needs to own up to the mechanisms within it
that exclude people – which is also the premise on which
this report is based.
Inclusion in education is a process consisting of actions
that embrace diversity, build a sense of belonging and
are rooted in the belief that every person has value
and potential and should be respected. Education
systems need to be responsive to all learners’ needs
and to consider learner diversity not as a problem but
as a resource. Inclusive education is the foundation
of an education system of good quality that enables
every child, youth and adult to learn and fulfil their
potential. Inclusion cannot be achieved if it is seen as
an inconvenience or if people harbour the belief that
learners’ ability levels are fixed. Inclusion in education
ensures that differences of opinion are freely expressed
and different voices are heard so as to help achieve
cohesion and build inclusive societies.
Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central
Asia has made progress towards a rights-based approach
to inclusive education. In the past 20 years, education
levels, already among the world’s highest, have increased
rapidly. Out-of-school rates have fallen by half. Adoption
of the CRPD and the influence of international bodies,
such as the Council of Europe and European Union, have
led to important reforms. From Estonia to Slovenia and
from Armenia to Ukraine, countries have been moving
away from a medical model in pedagogical discourse and
thus improving identification of special education needs,
as in Bulgaria. The percentage of children with disabilities
in special schools fell from 78% in 2005/06 to 53% in
2015/16. The percentage of children without parental
care in residential institutions, who are more likely to
be barred from mainstream education, fell by 30% in
the same period.
Two in three education systems have adopted a definition
of inclusion that embraces marginalized groups beyond
learners with special education needs or disabilities.
Tajikistan’s inclusive education strategy addresses
disability, ethnicity, migration and gender. Turkey, which
hosts more refugees than any other country in the world,
has absorbed more than 600,000 Syrians in its public
schools and adopted flexible support and assistance.
In countries including Poland, schools are also making
their support systems broader and more flexible. Of the
30 education systems reviewed, 23 offer counselling and
mentoring, 22 learning assistance and 21 specialist and
therapist support.
But the shift to inclusion is far from complete. Many
countries in the region have yet to shed one of the most
poignant legacies of the second half of the 20th century:
segregated education, once wrongly regarded as an
efficient solution. In 15 of the 30 education systems,
school admission depends on medical-psychological
assessment and other selection procedures. Overall,
one in three students with special needs in Central and
Eastern Europe is placed in a special school. Even those
no longer enrolled in such schools may be placed in other
non-inclusive arrangements, such as special classes or
home schooling.
Support measures, at heart, may still follow the targeted
and exclusionary approach that traditionally dominated.
What is considered in some countries to be inclusive
pedagogy may instead be a medically defined focus on
disability. In Belarus, integrated classes use two curricula:
a standard one for general education and another for
special education; joint instruction is limited to a narrow
list of subjects. Even in countries with high levels of
commitment, such as Albania, implementation of laws
and policies can lag due to capacity and resource gaps in
school organization and teacher education. In Uzbekistan,
where the shift towards inclusive education is at a very
early stage, a survey found that 70% of people believed
children with disabilities should be in special schools.
Other forms of segregation and discrimination persist,
hindering inclusion. About 60% of Roma, Ashkali and
Egyptian youth in the Balkans do not attend upper
secondary school; just 3% complete it in Montenegro.
Members of these groups are also disproportionally
diagnosed with intellectual disabilities. In Slovakia, Roma
constituted 63% of all children in special classes and
42% of those in special schools in 2018. While 11% of
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15-year-old students from the bottom 25% in terms
of socio-economic status scored in the top 25% in
reading in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) countries, the share was below 8% in
Bulgaria and Hungary, among the lowest levels in the
world and less than half those in Estonia and Kazakhstan.
A rights-based commitment to national minorities has
resulted in 22 of the 30 education systems creating
separate schools or classes in the home language, with
additional content on history and culture for linguistic
minorities. However, this parallel provision often works
against inclusion; few examples provide truly inclusive
practice with ethnic majorities and minorities learning
together from one intercultural curriculum, as in Slovene-
Hungarian bilingual schools. In the extreme case of Bosnia
and Herzegovina, an education system segregated along
ethnic lines perpetuates prejudice.
Mongolia has high levels of inequality: 94% of the richest
but only 37% of the poorest complete secondary school,
despite innovative approaches to address the needs of
nomadic groups, which are disproportionately represented
among the poor. Gender equality in education has become
a highly contested topic. In Belarus, the education code
implies a traditional gender lens, and training guidelines
reinforce gender stereotypes. The Turkish curriculum,
reformed in 2016, barely mentions women’s rights. Just
7 of 23 countries have policies or action plans explicitly
addressing and prohibiting school bullying based on
sexual orientation, gender identity and expression and/
or variation in sex characteristics. Russian Federation law
prohibits talking in school about the existence of lesbian,
gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex people.
As the region enters the final decade of action to achieve
SDG 4 and fulfil the commitment to achieve ‘inclusive
and equitable quality education’ and ‘lifelong learning
opportunities for all’, the following 10 recommendations
take into account the deep roots of barriers and the wide
scope of issues related to inclusion, which threaten the
region’s chances of achieving the 2030 targets. The task
has only been made harder by COVID-19 and the resulting
recession. School closures have led to distance education
solutions, which, as forward-looking as they may be,
nevertheless risk leaving the most disadvantaged learners
further behind.
1. Widen the understanding of inclusive education:
It should include all learners – and all means all.
Inclusive education should encompass all learners.
In laws and other documents, 19 of the 30 education
systems reviewed in the region define special
education needs in relation to disability. While
12 also include a variety of other learner groups,
these tend to be mainly gifted learners. By contrast,
23 of the 30 systems have a definition of inclusion
in laws or other documents, of which 20 focus on
multiple marginalized groups, beyond learners with
special education needs or disabilities. But even this
expanded scope should be seen as just one step
towards eventually moving away from any form
of categorical or group-based definition or learner
identification. Clarity in terminology at all levels of
implementation will be critical.
Inclusive education aims to dismantle barriers by
relying on the principle that ‘every learner matters
and matters equally’. It can deliver improvement
in academic achievement, social and emotional
development, self-esteem and peer acceptance.
Ensuring student diversity in mainstream classrooms
and schools can prevent stigma, stereotyping,
discrimination and alienation. It can contribute
to social justice, recognition of difference and
representation of all groups in education policies and
programmes, counteracting tendencies that allow
exceptions and exclusions. Provision of inclusive
education of high quality is linked to social inclusion.
2. Put students at the centre: Inclusion is not just
a result; it is first and foremost a process and an
experience.
Students may feel unrepresented or stereotyped
in teaching materials. A Council of Europe review of
history, civics and geography curricula in 14 countries
found no mention of national minorities in Albania,
one in the Czech Republic, and no mention of Roma
in 9 countries, including Bulgaria, Serbia and Slovakia,
where they are a sizeable minority. Only the Republic
of Moldova reported involving students in curriculum
design. Aside from student councils in some countries,
little evidence is found of student voices being heard
and acted upon.
Yet everybody’s view should count in efforts to
provide an education of good quality, which should
not just deliver academic success; the right to be in
good physical and mental health, happy, safe and
connected with others is as important as the right to
learn. Alongside family, schools are a key environment
for development of children’s well-being. A positive
classroom atmosphere, where teachers recognize
and support students’ effort, is crucial. A sense of
belonging to the school and the peer group is vital,
especially for vulnerable children at greater risk of
exclusion. Social diversity in schools is necessary for
children to interact with peers from different social,
cultural and ethnic backgrounds and to strengthen
social cohesion.
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3. Engage in meaningful consultation with
communities and parents: Inclusion cannot be
enforced from above.
A key barrier to inclusion in education is lack of belief
that it is possible and desirable. Parents, guardians,
families and communities may have discriminatory
attitudes with respect to gender, disability, ethnicity
or religion. Negative attitudes thwart or cancel efforts
to implement inclusive education reforms, as recent
debates on gender equality indicate. When offered
the choice, parents will try to avoid disadvantaged
local schools, thus entrenching segregation, which
has reached high levels in some countries in the
region. Conversely, parents of vulnerable children
may opt out of mainstream schools if they feel these
do not cater for their children’s needs.
Governments should open space for parents and
communities to voice their preferences as equals in
the design of policies on inclusion in education. In
total, 25 out of 30 education systems in the region
have policies supporting parental involvement
in school governance. Such involvement has
helped provide feedback on curriculum and annual
programme plans in Croatia and manage additional
financial resources in the Russian Federation. But
many efforts in the region to encourage parental
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