District staff
SANASE members
Ladies and Gentlemen
My sincere thanks to you for inviting me to open this very important meeting. Thank you also for your kind words of welcome.
Inclusive education is a dynamic, unending process with increasing participation by all learners. The route of the journey is mapped by the support needs of the learners: the destination being quality education and appropriate support for all - not only to address the literacy and numeracy crisis, but also to ensure that all learners can become competent citizens in a diverse society.
Our Constitution founded our democratic state and common citizenship on the values of human dignity, the achievement of equality and the advancement of human rights and freedoms.
These values summon all of us to take up the responsibility and challenge of building an equitable, just, humane and caring society. In establishing an education and training system for the 21st Century, we carry a special responsibility to implement these values and to ensure that all learners pursue their learning potential to the fullest.
An inclusive system of education and training includes a preventative and developmental approach to support. As described in Education White Paper 6, which deals with special needs education and the building of an inclusive education and training system.
It aims to reduce and/or prevent learning and developmental barriers, which learners may encounter at any stage in their learning careers. The emphasis is on learners who have been, or who are, disadvantaged in terms of educational provision and support.
At the Inclusive Education Colloquium presented by the Directorate: Specialised Education Support Services in October 2004, I said that "The WCED is determined to implement inclusive education. Important to note is that inclusive education is a gradual step-by-step process based on responsibility, consideration and contemplation." Where are we now in this process?
Field-testing outcomes:
The HEDCOM Sub-committee on Inclusive Education is responsible for implementing the National Inclusive Education Field Test. The Directorate: Inclusive Education liaises with provincial departments in a co-ordinating capacity to facilitate the programme.
Inclusive education co-ordinators of all the provincial departments of education meet quarterly in Pretoria as the National Co-ordinating Committee for Inclusive Education to review the following field-testing outcomes:
- Procedures and organisation for special schools and resource centres functioning as part of the district-based support team
- Procedures to determine intensity and level of support needed
- Assessment indicators to determine the intensity and level of support
- Procedures to translate the level of support into resourcing formulae for programmes
- Provision of intervention programmes, material resources and assistive devices
- An operational framework for support services, in line with the proposals in Education White Paper 6
- Diagnostic assessment tools in line with the principles of outcomes-based education and the National Curriculum Statement
- Indicators to assess contextual and systemic barriers
- A protocol for the administration of the assessment and identification procedures, focusing on the roles of teachers, schools, districts, parents and learners
- Specifications for the role functions of the district-based support team members within an integrated and holistic system
- Admission procedures to ensure that access is provided to learners who have been excluded from facilities and support; and
- A national inclusive education funding formulae.
National and provincial training programmes
The National Department of Education - with donor funding from Sweden and Finland - implemented the human resource development component of the field test.
This field test was based on the Strategies for Screening, Identification, Assessment and Support (which use the level of intensity of support needs as a determinant for funding and support provisioning) and the Guidelines for Inclusive Learning Programmes (for the purpose of curriculum adaptation and alternative assessment) so that all learners can be accommodated within the framework of the National Curriculum Statement.
Curriculum support has been identified as a key area urgently in need of strengthening, especially as regards the management of the National Curriculum Statement and assessment.
The WCED's focus in its 2007-2008 Strengthening of Special Schools Programme is the enabling of these special schools to function as resource centres that provide curriculum support to mainstream schools.
The WCED Directorate: Specialised Education Support Services has received a sum of R951,000 from the national Department of Education to be used specifically for this purpose. Workshops are being held for all special schools, including teachers from units at primary schools. Schools are grouped for workshops according to types of disability, specialisation and band.
Many questions about curriculum in special schools have been asked at these workshops, and some of them still need to be answered. These questions have been communicated to the national Department. However, the outcomes to be achieved through this Special Schools' Strengthening Project are the following:
- Special school principals are equipped to manage the National Curriculum Statement in their schools.
- Special school teachers are equipped to implement the National Curriculum Statement in their classrooms and to assist colleagues in mainstream schools with curriculum implementation for learners experiencing barriers to learning.
- Curriculum officials gain insight into the particular challenges faced by teachers and learners in special schools.
- Suggestions for adaptations of teaching methodology and assessment are compiled in order to contribute to the national process.
- Special school staffs have an opportunity to network with one another and with WCED curriculum officials to strengthen support mechanisms.
Inclusive education in the wider system
During 2007, intensive EMDC orientation workshops focused on implementing Booth & Ainscow's Index for Inclusion and the Individual Support Plan for learners experiencing barriers to learning.
The index provides clear indicators for the joint district-based support team and school planning, as well as assistance to schools to enable them to (a) take control of their own development, and (b) ensure sustainable inclusive education implementation that accords with their own values.
Inclusive education is widely implemented in learning institutions. It is essential, therefore, that the process of whole school evaluation, implemented by the Directorate: Quality Assurance, includes inclusive education as one of its focuses. Each and every school development plan must be based on inclusive practices.
Accessible and appropriate support for all learners
All WCED special schools are developed so as to eventually function as resource centres to full-service schools.
The provincial plan makes provision for the expansion of the number of units at mainstream schools in order to ensure that there will be a full-service school in each circuit, and that it is situated close to where learners reside. The rationalisation process is being implemented and the number of schools of skill will increase annually.
Redesign and support service delivery
Roles and responsibilities of Head Office and district officials in the establishment and maintenance of district-based support teams, resource centres, special schools, full-service schools and institutional level support teams are vital for the organisation of effective service.
They include the need for clarity on the respective roles and functions of therapists, special school staff, school psychologists, school social workers and learning support staff.
The challenge is to make support services available to all learners and to promote curriculum accessibility for all learners experiencing barriers to learning - bearing in mind that in South Africa there are approximately six times more learners experiencing barriers to learning than there are in the so-called developed world.
Uitdagings
Die inklusiewe atmosfeer in 'n skool - spesiale skole ingesluit - word beheer deur die skoolhoof en skoolbestuurspan. Dit is verblydend om te sien dat die meeste skole inklusie sien as 'n integrale aspek en nie as 'n aangelapte funksie nie.
Inklusiewe onderwys is die rigtinggewende faktor in alle besluitnemingsprosesse, hetsy of dit handel oor kurrikulum, toelatings of ondersteuningsdienste.
Die grootste uitdaging bly die verspreiding van die ondersteunings-dienste op so 'n wyse dat geografiese, finansiële, personeel- en logistieke kwessies soos vervoer en lang waglyste effektief hanteer sal word.
Sekere aspekte is van kardinale belang. Daar is reeds genoem dat die skoolontwikkelingsplan, die distriksontwikkelingsplan en die heelskoolevaluering (en ontwikkeling) inklusiewe beginsels insluit.
Daarbenewens is dit uiters belangrik om ter wille van effektiewe dienslewering te verseker dat elke hoofstroomskool 'n funksionele onderwysondersteuningspan het.
Voorts is dit belangrik om daarop te wys dat effektiewe inklusiewe onderwys gebaseer is op vertroue, respek, gesamentlike beplanning, 'n gedeelde visie en 'n strewe na 'n voorkomende ontwikkelings benadering tot ondersteuningsdienste.
To summarise: The key strategies required for the realisation of an integrated education system are the following:
- The infusion of support services throughout the system through the development of special schools as resource centres, full-service schools, institutional-based support teams and multifunctional district-based support teams
- Early identification of learners experiencing barriers
- Curriculum accessibility for all learners
- The holistic development of centres of learning to ensure accessible buildings and a learning environment free from barriers to learning and development
- The provision of training programmes for educators
- The fostering of integrated support through inter-sectoral collaboration
- The development of a community-based support system
- Mobilisation of vulnerable out-of-school youth
- Orientation of management and governing bodies and communication of the rights, responsibilities and obligations contained in Education White Paper 6 to increase awareness and to ensure that every educator, lecturer, parent, caregiver and community member understands his or her role, rights and responsibilities in respect of the system-wide implementation of inclusive education
Conclusion
A systemic response is needed if we are serious about turning the effect of apartheid around by actively facing the challenges in an open, honest, democratic and transparent manner. Inter-group and interpersonal dynamics may not interfere with collaborative cultures and co-operation.
Inclusion happens as soon as the process of increasing participation is started by a change of heart and mind, by inclusive collaborative planning and prioritisation, by the mobilisation of existing resources and networks, and by the communication of needs, challenges and successes. It is dedicated people like you who will make this possible.
For this, I thank you?
Enquiries:
Gert Witbooi
Media Liaison Officer
Office of the MEC for Education
Western Cape
Tel: 021 467 2523
Cell: 082 550 3938
Fax: 021 425 5689
Email: gwitbooi@pgwc.gov.za
Visit our website: http://wced.wcape.gov.za
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