Understanding Diversity: Assignment 01 Unique No. 578478 Diversity, Pedagogy and Practice DPP1501
Understanding Diversity: Assignment 01 Unique No. 578478 Diversity, Pedagogy and Practice DPP1501
Understanding Diversity: Assignment 01 Unique No. 578478 Diversity, Pedagogy and Practice DPP1501
Assignment 01
Unique no. 578478
Name: Genevieve
Surname: Paul
Unique Number: 01
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Table of Contents
UNDERSTANDING DIVERSITY .............................................................................. 1
Assignment 01 ........................................................................................................... 1
Unique no. 578478 .................................................................................................... 1
Diversity, Pedagogy and Practice DPP1501....................................................... 1
INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 3
THE MEANING OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION ...................................................... 4
1.1. My understanding of Inclusive Education in the learning
environment. ........................................................................................................ 4
BARRIERS TO LEARNING ...................................................................................... 5
1.2. Barriers that can hinder teaching and learning for students in inclusive
education environments. .......................................................................................... 5
1.2.1. Inherent barriers to learning: ............................................................. 5
1.2.2. External barriers to learning: ............................................................. 5
DIVERSITY IN THE EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENT........................................ 7
1.3. The concept of diversity and its implications in an education
environment. ............................................................................................................. 7
IDENTIFING BARRIERS WITHIN SCHOOLS ....................................................... 8
1.4. Recognising and identifying barriers that exist within a school .................. 8
1.4.1. Inflexible curriculum ............................................................................ 8
1.4.2. Negative and discriminating attitudes to and stereotyping of
differences ............................................................................................................ 8
PERSONAL VIEWS OF INCLUSIVITY IN EDUCATION ................................... 11
1.5. My view of the ethos of inclusivity. Considering the following variables,
what does it imply and mean for the education system ....................................... 11
CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................... 12
LIST OF REFERENCES .......................................................................................... 12
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INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this assignment is to understand and discuss the principles
that identify the connections between culture and human development in
relation to education. The theory in practice and suggested application
settings will be highlighted. The ideal is to create a universal learning
framework that offer the necessary foundations, tools, and structures to an
inclusive education where diversity is embraced and is used as a support tool
to education and development for all learners, educators, and parents alike.
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THE MEANING OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
1.1. My understanding of Inclusive Education in the learning
environment.
My view of the concept of inclusive teaching is that it is an approach to ensure
that needs of students from all walks of life and social skills are provided equal
access to learn. It is a learning environment or system that allows students to
feel valued in their contributions. This learning approach allows diverse groups
to work together, learning, and growing side by side so that everyone benefits.
When we develop and design our schools and classrooms, our programs, and
activities as well as equipping teachers, educational faculty members and
parents within the framework of inclusive education will ensure all students
learn and participate together.
The idea of inclusive education is to benefit all and not a select group,
irrespective student backgrounds or challenges they may face. Placing
students in general education classes within the appropriate age groups
allows for the impartation of high-quality education and support. However, it is
a principle that must be fulfilled by the educators and the environment in
which the students are meant to learn. This also includes the education facility
as a whole and parents. Everyone plays a part, large or small in a child’s
education, whether it is in the classroom, on the sports field, or at home at the
dinner table.
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BARRIERS TO LEARNING
1.2. Barriers that can hinder teaching and learning for students in
inclusive education environments.
First, we must understand what are barriers to learning? A barrier to learning,
is anything that is blocking or standing in the way of a child or student being
able to learn efficiently. This can be anything negative within the life of the
child or student that that hinders their learning.
Factors such as these are not a fault of the learner and is not in their control.
In addition, there are few accessible support mechanisms to assist in these
impediments if at all possible. Unfortunately, in society and within the
educational system, these barriers are not generally provided for. Especially in
relation to personality challenges and emotional instabilities.
These factors hinder teaching and learning in the sense that learners,
educational environments including the teachers and staff are not set up in a
manner that students with these varying factors can learn through. From
visual, hearing, or other physical and emotional impairments, it is very difficult
to find the means, have the training and resources to mitigate these factors.
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With poverty as one of the key factors in South Africa, it leads to the lack of
food, shelter, basic living services and education. This is one of the main
starting points that have ripple effect leading to poor development of social
and educational skills. These factors hinder teaching and learning in the
sense that from an early age, we start to develop are learning from an
emotional, physical, and intellectual level and if that is blocked by any of these
external factors, it negatively affects the journey into adulthood and beyond.
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DIVERSITY IN THE EDUCATIONAL
ENVIRONMENT
1.3. The concept of diversity and its implications in an education
environment.
Diversity is the observation, consideration, exploration, and fusion of these
differences to enrich learning in our classrooms. It promotes an understanding
of our students and that they bring a sense of uniqueness in terms of their
strengths, ideas, and experiences into the world of others. Diversity matters. It
is a responsibility as educators to ensure our students can adapt to any
environment they are placed and collaborate well with others from both a
professional and personal perspective. Diversity in the classroom encourages
the student to see new perspectives and challenges thinking by incorporating
a safe and welcoming learning environment to everyone.
I believe students feel safer in school and in life when they are educated in a
diverse setting, there is a sense of comfort in your differences. Diversity in the
learning environment should be encouraged at all levels, in the classroom,
with the teachers and parents at home. Incorporating lessons that account for
all forms of diversity is key. Incorporating aspects that are the foundation of
diversity such as religion, gender, economic background and even learning
styles are all notable factors in improving the actual learning and critical
thinking of a student in a classroom setting.
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IDENTIFING BARRIERS WITHIN SCHOOLS
1.4. Recognising and identifying barriers that exist within a school
Subjects are taught in a specific language with no alternatives. There are not
many choices or any choice in the subjects taught. Gender inequality or
prejudice against learners for with disabilities or backgrounds of supposed
inferior origin.
Teaching materials are specific and not diverse in nature which would allow
for critical thinking. Assessment processes are focused more on memorisation
instead of memorisation and application with the ability to adapt thinking.
These are all identifying factors in recognising learning barriers within a school
system.
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People are categorized in very broad and usually baseless ways.
Discrimination however is how we behave based on these stereotypes and it
can lead to hostile attitudes towards others. Usually this sort of attitude is
unfounded and unjust. It permeates an attitude of aversion and hostility
against the members of a certain group, for the simple reason they belong to
that group and therefore those members also have those negative
characteristics.
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school body system may need to re-evaluate how they teach, how they
engage and react to their students based on their very different backgrounds.
Often, the service of teaching is focused on the problems existing within the
learner instead of the actual education system. It is resented by many that the
existing teaching methods are not sufficient or in fact, poor. These result in
removing learners from the learning environment, rather than changing the
environment. In many cases, these learners require focused and individual
attention but there is a fear among educators and similar roles to provide this
sort of attention, having to deal with learners that fit this category. It means the
educator or parent must change their way of thinking, their way of teaching
and whatever methods they use to provide learning support to a student.
Unfortunately, this mostly due to communities who suffered indignities such as
social, economic, and educational segregation and all forms of exclusion and
inequalities imposed due to the purposely indoctrinated racial divide.
Individuals are reduced to poverty, little or no parental support as well as
positioned in rural or poor residential areas. And as these vulnerabilities are
learnt as part of daily life, people from these backgrounds become
marginalised.
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PERSONAL VIEWS OF INCLUSIVITY IN
EDUCATION
1.5. My view of the ethos of inclusivity. Considering the following
variables, what does it imply and mean for the education system
Inclusive education is not an elusive concept, but it must be given diligent
attention, budget, practical change, and everyone must play their part in
making sure the turnaround of the education environment in a way that
benefits all learners is supported. In building an inclusive education we strive
to value differences of all learners and their contributions to the learning
process.
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positive ways as we track the progression and efficiency of the programs put
in place to develop our educators.
CONCLUSION
Inclusive Education should be a priority for everyone. There must be a
persevering determination in ensuring inclusive education and an
understanding of the positive impact this would provide the learner in the
education system. It is up to each individual to determine if inclusive education
is a ‘good thing’ but can the sensibility of ensuring that our future generations
are able to survive and also pass down their knowledge and education to the
next generation a sufficient reason to incorporate inclusive education? It is by
no means an easy process. It requires commitment from every sector, and we
must all do our best to bring it to fruition.
LIST OF REFERENCES
• PUGH, RICHARD. “Attitudes, Stereotypes and Anti-Discriminatory
Education: Developing Themes from Sullivan.” The British Journal of
Social Work, vol. 28, no. 6, 1998, pp. 939–959. JSTOR,
www.jstor.org/stable/23714915. Accessed 1 May 2021.
• Surty, E., 2006. Department of Education | Speeches 2004. [online]
Education.gov.za. Available at:
https://www.education.gov.za/Newsroom/Speeches2/Speeches2004/ta
bid/180/ctl/Details/mid/580/ItemID/2365/Default.aspx
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