Some countries, including Azerbaijan and Belarus, have
tried to promote gender equality and inclusion through
improved textbooks (
Box 5.3
). Montenegro’s
Institute
for Textbooks and Teaching Aids is developing a new
generation of textbooks incorporating gender-sensitive
language for the nine years of basic education. A lack of
general standards and guidance, however, can lead to
unbalanced design of different textbooks for the same
curriculum. In Romania, a gender perspective is available
in some textbooks but missing from others. In Turkey,
gender roles promoted through textbooks conform to
patriarchal, traditional and religious norms (Aratemur-
Çimen, and Bayhan, 2018).
Textbooks need to be accessible to all learners
Providing free textbooks to poor and
marginalized families
is a common policy in the region. In Hungary, starting
in 2020/21, textbooks will be free for all primary and
secondary school students. In Lithuania, every school has
a Child Welfare Commission that discusses and addresses
cases of learners from disadvantaged groups who may
lack access to textbooks and learning materials. In the
Republic of Moldova, students from families at risk of
exclusion can rent textbooks.
Some countries use web platforms or software to make
electronic textbooks and learning
materials available
to all learners. In Estonia, e-learning materials are
available on the digital study material portal e-koolikott
(e-schoolbag), and students with special education
needs have access to tailor-made e-learning materials.
In Georgia, the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture
and Sport has a portal with a digital library providing
access to learning materials and cloud storage space
to all teachers and students; in addition, some special
materials are available for blind students.
In Kazakhstan,
OPIQ, an interactive library, provides access to electronic
textbooks on subjects in grades 1–11 and a collection of
tasks and tests, while BilimLand, an education portal,
has additional digital education resources. Kyrgyzstan’s
National Open Education Resources Repository provides
more than 800 school textbooks and teaching materials
for computers, tablets and smartphones.
Information and communication technology (ICT)
can support distance learning as well as learners with
disabilities. In Montenegro, the Education Information
System project has provided
all education institutions
with computers and broadband internet and has trained
school staff in their use, with the support of regional
coordinators. ICT is also used to improve access for
children with disabilities (
Box 5.4
).
Assistive technology is used to improve access to learning
materials for students with special education needs,
although special schools tend to be better equipped
than mainstream schools, as examples from Bosnia
and Herzegovina, the Russian Federation and Serbia
show. Special schools in North
Macedonia have tailored
materials, such as Braille textbooks, software and
audiobooks. Often such resources are provided through
schools’ participation in projects with NGOs. In Slovakia,
the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport
introduced a policy in 2011 to ensure that all special
school orders for textbooks would be met free of charge.
Transcriptions in Braille and electronic versions on CD for
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