KEY MESSAGES
Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia has made progress towards a rights-based approach
to inclusive education.
•
In the past 20 years, out-of-school rates fell by half.
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Two in three education systems have a definition of inclusion that embraces multiple marginalized groups.
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Countries have been moving away from the medical model. The percentage of children with disabilities
in special schools fell from 78% in 2005/06 to 53% in 2015/16. The percentage of children in residential
institutions fell by 30% in the same period.
•
Schools are making their support systems broader and more flexible. Among the 30 education systems
reviewed, 23 offer counselling
and mentoring, 22 learning assistance and 21 specialist and therapist support.
But the shift to inclusion is far from complete.
•
One in three students with special needs in Central and Eastern Europe is still placed in special schools.
•
In Georgia, Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia, the share of youth with disabilities in the out-of-school population is
twice as large as the share of the in-school population.
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In 15 of the 30 education systems, school admission depends on medical-psychological assessment and
other selection procedures.
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What is considered in some countries to be inclusive pedagogy may instead be a medically defined focus
on disability. In Belarus, integrated classes use two curricula: a standard one for general education and
another for special education; joint instruction is limited to a narrow list of subjects.
Other forms of segregation
and discrimination persist, hindering inclusion.
•
About 60% of Roma, Ashkali and Egyptian youth in the Balkans do not attend upper secondary school.
Members of these groups are also disproportionally diagnosed with intellectual disabilities. In Slovakia,
Roma constituted 42% of those in special schools in 2018.
•
In Mongolia, 94% of the richest but only 37% of the poorest complete secondary school.
•
Turkey, which has the world’s highest number of refugees, absorbed more than 600,000 Syrians in its
public schools but 37% of Syrian refugees are still out of school.
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In 22 of the 30 education systems, there are separate schools or classes for linguistic minorities. This
parallel provision often works against inclusion.
•
In several countries, a traditional gender lens reinforces gender stereotypes.
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Just 7 of 23 countries have policies or action plans explicitly addressing and prohibiting school bullying
based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
Countries must deploy a range of policies boosting inclusion.
•
Policies to accelerate a move towards inclusion in education are particularly urgent, as the COVID-19
education crisis, which
fed on existing inequality, is creating new gaps.
•
Inter-ministerial collaboration on data exchange needs to be strengthened.
•
Management responsibilities for local authorities and schools promote efficient resource use but require
clear mandates and adequate resources.
•
Only one in two teachers in the region feels prepared to teach in mixed-ability settings and one in three in
multicultural settings. The ageing of the teaching force makes this need more pressing.
•
Students and parents need to be involved more; only the Republic of Moldova reported engaging students
in curriculum design. Students’ voices are rarely accommodated in policy design.
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C E N T R A L A N D E A S T E R N E U R O P E , C A U C A S U S A N D C E N T R A L A S I A
Students participate in a German lesson at a school with Roma and
non-Roma students in Nagyecsed, Hungary, on 22 September 2016.
CREDIT: Akos Stiller/Open
Society Foundations