having such
students in their classroom, and to promote
individualization of teaching (
Box 6.5
).
Teaching assistants’ roles and assignments vary
significantly, from supporting one student only,
or a group of students, to supporting teachers
and participating in support teams. In the Russian
Federation, an assistant is assigned to a student
with disability upon approval
by the medico-social
commission to provide support in and outside the
classroom. In Ukraine, although teaching assistants are
assigned to individual students with disabilities, they
also participate in psychological-pedagogical support
teams along with teachers, other specialists and the
child’s parents.
In
some cases, their role is still somewhat vague or
debated. For instance, in Armenia the post of teaching
assistant was recently introduced. The government
originally described its aim as supporting teachers in
developing and following up on individualized education
plans. In the job description, however, only 3 of the
14 responsibilities listed implied assisting teachers. In
Azerbaijan, some teachers consider teaching
assistants
to be fully responsible for the education of a student
with disabilities. However, the core principle should
be that every learner has the right to be taught by a
qualified teacher.
Countries report barriers to establishing teaching
assistant positions. In Azerbaijan, labour legislation
describes such a post, but mainstream schools’
administrations have limited
financial autonomy and are
not empowered to employ additional staff. In Mongolia,
although the education law specifies the role of assistant
teachers, legal provisions for hiring them are not
yet in place.
In some countries, mainstream schools employ teaching
assistants as mediators. In Bulgaria, an education
mediator acts as an
intermediary between families,
communities, students and schools, facilitating
education provision and quality. In Croatia, as part of
efforts to fulfil the right of learners with disabilities to
have access to appropriate programmes and forms of
support, as well as pedagogic and didactic adaptation
to their needs, the Ministry
of Science and Education
established a committee at the beginning of the
2019/20 school year to evaluate the real need for
teaching assistants. It recognized that such initiatives
needed to be expanded to provide, for instance, an
effective monitoring mechanism in primary and
secondary education for learners at risk of early school
leaving, such as Roma children.
In Serbia, the Roma Teaching Assistant
Programme
assigned a Roma assistant to each eligible primary
school (Box 6.5). They could allocate their time as
needed during classes and after school, e.g. collecting
information about children not enrolling or leaving
school early, gathering documents, visiting families and
cooperating with the community. An
evaluation found
the programme helped increase grade 1 Roma student
attendance (Battaglia and Lebediniski, 2015, 2017).
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