One area in which professional skills need to be developed
is inclusive assessment: making sure teachers can identify
learning needs and understand the challenges students
may face in the learning process. Teachers need support
in collecting data regularly and using them to develop
individualized education plans and set targets (European
Agency, 2007). Guidance on the use of curriculum-based
assessment is particularly important to ensure alignment
between learning goals and objectives, on the one hand,
and formative and summative assessments on the other.
Such alignment can help clear up ambiguities, difficulties
and complications observed in teaching and learning
practices. However, only Azerbaijan and Hungary reported
such training.
Very few in-service teacher education programmes focus
on teaching ethnic minority or immigrant students
whose home language is not the language of instruction.
In Estonia, 14% of all students in basic education are
instructed in Russian, but only one institution offers
training for Russian-language teachers. In Serbia, a
programme of teaching Serbian as a second language
was developed only after significant immigrant inflows,
although the need existed long before. In Poland, regional
in-service teacher training institutions guide teachers in
schools where the language of instruction is an ethnic
minority or regional language.
Some in-service education and training systems do
not prioritize inclusion at all. In the Russian Federation,
144 hours of in-service training is mandatory once every
three years for every school staff member, and the training
certificate is required for attestation. The 2018 TALIS and
2019 Trends in International Mathematics and Science
Study confirmed that, among participating countries,
Russian teachers spent the most time in professional
development (OECD, 2019; IEA and UNESCO, 2020).
However, the type, area and content of in-service training
is determined by whether the course is obligatory or
elective. If inclusion-related courses are available at an
in-service training centre, they are usually provided by
trainers from specialized research institutes or defectology
departments of teacher training institutions. The very
concept of inclusion is seldom discussed or defined during
such training.
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