training teachers for inclusive education
In any country, and especially where material resourc-
es are scarce, the key resource in the learning envi-
ronment is teachers themselves. It is important that
teachers have a commitment to teaching all children.
Where teachers can receive relevant pre-service and
in-service training and have access to continuing
support, they are well placed to become leaders and
pacesetters in inclusive education.
Inclusive teaching at the level of the classroom
is no more than good teaching anywhere. Many
teachers are already teaching inclusively without the
benefit of additional specialist training (see box 6.8
for an example from Lesotho). But faced with the
challenge of admitting children with disabilities into
their class, it is understandable that teachers may
doubt their ability to meet all needs. But what they
lack is not competence but confidence – because the
skills required to teach children with disabilities are
essentially those already possessed by all competent
teachers. These include:
the ability to assess pupils’ strengths and needs;
•
the skill to individualize teaching procedures to
•
suit a wide range of abilities;
the flexibility to adapt the content of subject mat-
•
ter to pupils’ interests and abilities and ensure its
relevance to the social and cultural context;
teamwork within the school and with outside
•
professionals, linking with other learning environ-
ments for reinforcement;
a working partnership with parents;
•
using available technologies capable of support-
•
ing learning, and monitoring the success of ap-
proaches being employed.
102
Even so, teachers need to be able to call on specialist
help from teachers with experience of teaching
children with disabilities, particularly children with
sensory or intellectual impairments. For example,
specialists can advise on lighting conditions and low
vision aids, as well as the use of Braille materials
and computer-based instruction where this might be
made available. Similarly, it is helpful to have informed
advice on sound amplification, the use and repair of
hearing aids and the use of sign language for children
with different types of hearing impairment and, on
occasion, for the class as a whole to ensure the
inclusion of a child with a severe hearing impairment.
Advice and support can sometimes be found in special
schools and classes or from strategically placed
resource centres in the community. It is important to
ensure that such specialist support gives teachers in
ordinary schools the skills and confidence to assume
some elements of a specialist role themselves.
The same principle applies to the advice that can
be provided by speech and language therapists,
physiotherapists and psychologists.
With the aim of increasing the confidence of teach-
ers and promoting their sensitivity to the individual
needs of children, UNESCO has prepared a range of
useful resources, including teacher-training materials
in a Teacher Education Resource Pack that includes
both written and video material. This pack has been
used and adapted in over 90 countries and translated
into more than 30 languages. It is supported by an
international resource team engaged in national, re-
gional and international training and dissemination.
The resource pack includes a Guide for Teachers,
103
which is particularly useful in countries where spe-
cialist resources are scarce. The guide can be used
for self-study or in the context of a workshop led by
a facilitator. In addition, UNESCO provides accounts
of developments from individual countries
104
and
schools around the world.
105
It also publishes the
Open File on Inclusive Education
, which provides
materials for managers and administrators and is in-
tended to facilitate the implementation of inclusion.
106
Box 6.8 Empowering teachers in Lesotho
In Lesotho, a project was initiated in which
intensive training workshops on inclusion were
provided to local teachers.
i
Despite large classes
and an absence of basic resources in the 10 pilot
schools that were selected, most teachers were
found to be already teaching along inclusive lines
by ensuring that all children − even those in the
largest classes − were participating, understanding
instructions or getting appropriate support from
other children.
Additional training received by these teachers
provided them with basic information about
impairments and helped them to develop positive
attitudes towards children with disabilities. This
training gave teachers the confidence to refer
children to local health workers for treatment of
common eye and ear infections that can affect a
child’s learning. The success of the pilot schools
encouraged the government to adopt the inclusion
of children with disabilities as a national policy and
to expand the number of schools involved.
Source:
i
As quoted in Mittler, Peter, ’International Experience in
Including Children with Disabilities in Ordinary Schools’,
paper prepared for UNICEF seminars in Tunisia and
Italy, October 2002,
internat_exp.shtml>.
31
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
Innocenti Digest No. 13
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