specialists focused on rehabilitation.
Romania reported
a particular lack of qualified and competent support
personnel in rural areas. In Ukraine, special educators can
be invited to a mainstream school if students’ individualized
education plans identify a need for such support.
The transformation of special schools into support or
resource centres is seen as an opportunity to make more
equitable the availability of professionals to support
mainstream schools. In Belarus, newly created resource
centres within the regional Centres of Correctional and
Developmental Education and Rehabilitation offer training
and mentoring to schools and teachers
upon request and
could become inclusive education knowledge hubs with the
support of international organizations. In Slovakia, centres
for special pedagogical counselling are being established
within special schools (Slovakia Ministry of Education, Science,
Research and Sports, 2017
). It is envisaged that special
education teachers will share their expertise with other
teachers in inclusive schools. Over two phases of the More
Successful in Primary School project, Slovakia has also
attempted to set up inclusive teams
in mainstream schools,
composed of a school psychologist, a school special
pedagogue, a social pedagogue and a teacher assistant.
Overall, while specialists should support mainstream
schools’ teachers, in practice their support is often not as
planned. In some cases, they are assigned other tasks. In
North Macedonia, support personnel are overburdened
with administrative tasks, and little of their work time is
dedicated to teacher and student support. In other cases,
their work with students does not take place as intended.
In particular, students with disabilities
are often pulled
out of their mainstream classroom to receive individual or
small group support provided by a specialist, as in Armenia
(UNICEF, 2016). In other words, the education, training and
employment policies targeting support personnel are not
aligned with the inclusive approach to education.
The role of teaching assistants remains to be defined
Teaching assistants are available at similar rates to
professionals. Among the 10 education systems
providing detailed data, there was 1 teaching assistant per
30 teachers.
In some countries, teaching assistants have
long been part of the education system. The Czech Republic
has the highest number: one for every nine teachers. In
Slovakia, where pedagogical assistants were introduced in
the early 2000s, their number in mainstream primary and
secondary education increased from 664 in 2005 to 3,195 in
2018. By contrast, teaching assistants are virtually absent
in Bulgaria, while in Kosovo
3
and Poland, the post of teacher
assistant is just being piloted (Figure 6.4).
The introduction of teaching assistants in the region is
being presented as an opportunity to increase education
systems’ inclusiveness.
In Albania and North Macedonia,
the employment and countrywide roll-out of personal and
teaching assistants for children with special education
needs are expected to take some of the burden off
mainstream teachers, who have felt anxious about
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