School leaders can also encourage teachers to participate
in professional learning activities. In Estonia, the
2016–19 Competent and Motivated Teachers and School
Leaders programme addressed school leader capacity
for motivating teachers ‘to approach each student
individually, to participate in the development work of the
school and in various forms of teacher training’ (Estonia
Ministry of Education and Research, 2014, p.11).
Special schools can play a new role in an inclusive
education system
Special schools are increasingly regarded as a potential
resource in the effort mainstream schools are making to
offer appropriate support to high-risk learners and families.
While this is broadly acknowledged, school leaders need
to ensure that specialist support does not incite new
exclusionary practices for some, but leads to a broader
learner support for all within mainstream schools. Some
countries focus on barriers in the learning environment,
through counselling and professional development, while
others focus on remedial teaching, special classroom
support or other separate education provision (European
Agency, 2019b). Collaboration with learning support
assistants is increasing in mainstream classrooms, but
their deployment does not always support diversity and
inclusive school development and therefore needs careful
consideration (Webster et al., 2013).
As in-school preventive and support activities develop,
most mainstream schools cannot employ special
pedagogues, psychologists, speech therapists or other
professionals who work in special schools.
Thus, instead, they use resource centres for counselling.
In undertaking reforms, schools are developing a new
role for special provision. In Azerbaijan, hybrid special
schools will provide services such as rehabilitation and
family counselling with an inclusive component to
support deinstitutionalization. In Hungary, pedagogical
support institutions are being redefined as ‘unified
special education, conductive education methodological
institutions’ to assist the education of children with
special needs together with other learners. They offer
units that provide education from the pre-primary to the
secondary levels, developmental education for children
with special education needs and a network of mobile
special educators for schools lacking such experts.
Kosovo
2
is working to convert attached classrooms to
resource rooms to facilitate inclusion and develop support
teachers’ role. Mongolia will establish child development
support centres for individual or small groups of schools,
with teams to provide support services. Poland is
developing specialized centres to support mainstream
schools (
Box 7.1
). In Serbia, the Action Plan for Inclusive
Education aims to transform special schools into
resource centres. Slovakia and Slovenia are developing
psychological-pedagogical support centres and resource
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