The most common forms of curriculum adaptation in the
region are individualized education plans and adaptation
for learners belonging to ethnic minorities, such as Central
Asian pastoral communities (
Box 5.1
).
Almost all countries use individualized education plans.
Some, including Albania and Romania, specify in their
laws that curriculum and working methods should be
adapted to enable learners with special education needs
or disabilities to reach their full potential. Individualized
education plans are also used for gifted students
(e.g. in the Russian Federation) or those with specific
health conditions (e.g. in Slovakia). Other countries,
among them Bosnia and Herzegovina, do not specify for
whom such individualized education plans are intended.
In most countries, a special commission, working group
or support group is in charge of developing individualized
education plans. In Kazakhstan, a psychological-medical-
pedagogical commission leads curricular adaptation
in partnership with teachers and experts in schools. In
Mongolia, students, parents and/or teachers apply for
individualized education plans. Students and parents
can offer suggestions on the plan and its content. In the
Russian Federation, parents are involved in preparation
of individualized education plans. The school chooses an
appropriate curricular framework and adapts it to student
needs and school conditions. Adjustments tend to be
made by representatives of psychological-pedagogical
services, the deputy director and teachers commissioned
by the school director. The adapted version is submitted
for discussion with teachers and parents of children with
special needs before the pedagogical council and school
governing body adopt the final version.
Individualized education plans are mostly implemented
by a regular teacher assisted by an expert. In Albania,
for example, an assistant teacher implements the plan
in cooperation with the classroom teacher, subject
teacher, psychologist, social worker and parents. In
general, individualized education plans for students with
disabilities are used in regular schools, although in some
cases the plan may be implemented in special schools
or at home. Plans for students with health conditions
preventing school attendance are used at home.
In Kyrgyzstan, although there are individualized education
plans implemented in regular schools, students with a
disability or health condition often study at home.
The school develops a plan for a child for one school year;
if the psychological-medical-pedagogical commission
decides that the child should study at home, the parents
must transmit the decision to the school. But caution
should be exercised so that individualized plans are a
vehicle to ensure flexible adaptation to meet learner
needs in mainstream classes, not a basis for segregating
learners or fitting them to the system.
Curriculum flexibility also applies in adaptations for children
belonging to ethnic minorities. Some 70% of the region’s
education systems provide schools or classes using the
Some 70% of the region’s education systems provide schools or classes
using the home language of the largest national minority groups
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