appropriate curricula and examination materials. Initial
teacher education programmes are being revised or
restructured and professional development programmes
have been designed for teachers who had not received
training in this field.
Yet, while
most countries in the region are transitioning
from the medical to the social model of support to all
learners, in which needs are addressed predominantly
in mainstream schools, the rate of change is slow.
The number of special schools is falling but the number
of mainstream schools providing high-quality support to
children with special education needs is not growing at
the same rate. The role of teacher assistants is becoming
increasingly important but is not always properly defined
in national legislation or in practice.
Many changes are
happening on paper, while deep-held beliefs and actual
practices remain little altered.
Systems in the region also need to address other types
of exclusion
Education system responses to the needs of children
with disabilities is just one of several signs of government
commitment to inclusion. Many countries in the
region participate in large-scale cross-national learning
assessments, such as the Programme for International
Student Assessment (PISA). This offers another viewpoint
on the broader challenge of inclusion. Among 15-year-old
students in 23 countries in the region, 71% achieved
minimum proficiency in reading, on average, in PISA 2018.
However, the average was 57% for students in the bottom
20% of a socio-economic status index (defined in terms
of home belongings, parental education and occupation),
compared with 84% for the top 20%. In Bulgaria and the
Republic of Moldova, the gap was almost 50 percentage
points. In some countries, particular disadvantaged groups
did even worse than the bottom 20%: in the Russian
Federation and Turkey, those who did not speak the
language of the test at home averaged 12 percentage
points less than those who did, and in Slovakia the gap was
18 percentage points. In Hungary and Romania, fewer than
3 in 10 students living in rural areas achieved the minimum
level (
Figure 1.3
).
This analysis, moreover, does not include the entire
population of 15-year-olds and underestimates the extent
of inequality in learning. In their attempt to be effective
and efficient, standardized learning assessments contain
the seeds of exclusion. First and foremost, PISA excludes
those who left school before age 15 or did not manage
to reach at least grade 7 by that age. Its sample does not
include remote and special schools. It excludes students
with an intellectual disability or a moderate to severe
physical disability that would not allow them to perform
in the testing environment, along with those with limited
proficiency in the language of the test. Other exclusions
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