Promoting the rights of Children with disabilities innocenti digest no


towards inclusive schools and learning



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children disability rights

towards inclusive schools and learning 
environments
Inclusive education involves ensuring that meaningful 
learning opportunities are made available to all 
students within the regular educational environment. 
The ’World Conference on Special Needs Education: 
Access and Quality’ held in 1994 in Salamanca, Spain 
provided decisive support for inclusive approaches to 
education. It unanimously adopted the Statement and 
a Framework for Action on Special Needs Education 
providing guidelines for action at the national level as 
well as regional and international cooperation in the 
promotion of inclusive education. 
Ideally, inclusive education means attending the age-
appropriate class of the child’s local school, with indi-
vidually tailored support. Inclusive education means 
that schools must change to accommodate a much 
wider range of children. For example, the curriculum 
needs to be differentiated to ensure access to a wide 
range of children – not just children with disabilities – 
and should reflect the needs and interests of children 
in the local community. Children are taught in small 
groups and are helped to support one another rather 
than to compete. Inclusive schools pay particular 
attention to developing appropriate methods of as-
sessment and avoid all unnecessary segregation of 
children within the ordinary classroom. They also pay 


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Innocenti Digest No. 13
Promoting the Rights of Children with Disabilities
particular attention to school-based teacher prepara-
tion and support and to involving parents in the life of 
the school and in fostering the development of their 
child. Above all, the leadership provided by the head 
teacher/principal of the school has been shown to be 
the key to the successful management of change to 
more inclusive practice. 
Inclusive education is by no means a luxury available 
to only income-rich countries. Indeed, many of the 
most innovative and radical developments are now 
taking place in low-income countries, such Lao 
PDR, Lesotho, Morocco, Uganda, Viet Nam and 
Yemen.
97
Experience has shown that there are ways 
of developing inclusive practices at the local level 
that do not involve additional funding: collaborative 
work between students, parental involvement in 
the classroom and teacher problem-solving and 
mutual support have been shown to be effective.
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For example, until recently South Africa had a 
rigid curriculum characterized by traditional forms 
of assessment and grading. This has now been 
replaced in favour of ’outcome-based education’, 
which replaces a specification of content with one 
based on outcomes. These are accompanied by 
’assessment criteria’ and ’performance indicators’ 
against which students’ achievement of outcomes 
can be assessed.
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Existing flexible education approaches can often 
be used to promote more inclusive education for 
all children. The Colombia ’Escuela Nueva’ model, 
designed as a multigrade approach for rural areas, 
promotes active learning and provides an excellent 
opportunity to respond to individual learning rates 
and needs. Flexible promotion from one level to the 
next and individualized instruction allow students to 
advance at their own pace. Students are encouraged 
to help others; peer instruction is practised, with 
older students tutoring younger ones.
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In Brazil, 
the Child Friendly School Model and ’speed-up 
classes’ also represent important opportunities to 
expand inclusive education for all through approaches 
focused on the child or adolescent.
Many countries are now facing the challenge to set 
up new systems of basic education for all, ensuring 
that marginalized groups are included from the 
outset. This is true in countries where there is little 
or no formal schooling in place. It is also the case in 
other countries – such as in parts of South-Eastern 
Europe – where the education of children has been 
severely affected both by armed conflict involving 
the physical destruction of schools and by a large-
scale migration of teachers to other countries. 
In such situations it is important to ensure that 
all new schools are designed to be accessible to 
students with disabilities, for example by building 
ramps and ensuring that doors are wide enough to 
admit children in wheelchairs, that toilets are fully 
accessible and that classrooms can be wired for loop 
systems for children with hearing impairments. 
In contrast, where educational resources and struc-
tures are already relatively well developed, a major 
challenge is to ’unlearn’ entrenched practices based 
upon a philosophy of exclusion and to direct resourc-
es in new ways. Promoting inclusion need not mean 
losing the resources represented by special schools: 
for example, there is the opportunity for such schools 
to act as resource centres during a period of transi-
tion and staff with specific experience in the field of 
disability can become an invaluable resource in local 
schools. National support is crucial for the success of 
such processes. In Costa Rica, for example, efforts 
began in 1999–2001 to establish a National Resource 
Centre for Inclusive Education that supports schools 
for more inclusive approaches to serving children 
with disabilities, and at the same time to improve the 
quality of education for all students.
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Box 6.5 Bulgaria’s National Social 
Rehabilitation Centre
In Bulgaria, the National Social Rehabilitation 
Centre set out to establish a new model of 
care and services to change the practice of 
placement of persons with disabilities in isolated 
’social care’ homes, and so to prevent young 
persons with disabilities being overlooked 
by society.
i
This involved the provision of 
community-based services, building strategies 
to ensure the replication of good practice, and 
cooperating with the national government and 
local authorities to create conditions for equal 
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