Lesson 1: Learning Objectives
Lesson 1: Learning Objectives
Learning Objectives
Key Concepts
UNESCO Guidelines for Inclusion has also identified the four (4)
key elements of inclusion:
1.
inclusion is a process;
2.
The conception of special needs has been redefined over time not
only to cover disabilities and cognitive functioning per se, but has
been expanded to include gender, health and nutrition status,
language, geographic location, culture, religion, economic status –
variables often associated to as barriers to achievement of
Education for All (EFA) movement. Effort to broaden the scope of
inclusion to covering all barriers to attainment of EFA was
regarded by many as transformational phase of education and
learning environment. It is indeed by welcoming and genuinely
responding to differences and diversity associated to learning will
collectively contribute towards the achievement of EFA mission. To
date inclusion is conceptualized as “a process of addressing and
responding to the diversity in the needs of all children, youth, and
adults through increasing participation in learning, cultures, and
communities, and reducing and eliminating exclusion within and
from education. It involves changes and modifications in terms of
content, approaches, structures, and strategies, with a common
vision that covers all children of the appropriate age range and a
conviction that it is the responsibility of the regular system to
educate all children” (UNESCO, 2009).
Two years later, the 1994 Salamanca statement and framework for
action on special needs education (UNESCO 1994) urged
governments to adopt the principles and practices of inclusive
education. The Convention on the rights of persons with
disabilities (United Nations 2001) called for the engagement of
people with disabilities in inclusive and accessible programmes
(Koay, 2012). Therefore, the inclusive education policy is influenced
by the UNESCO (1994) Salamanca Statement that urges schools to
provide ‘curricular opportunities to suit children with different
abilities and interests’ and ‘the success of the inclusive school
depends considerably on early identification, assessment and
stimulation of the very young child with special educational needs’
(Aida, 2019).
D. Facility
E. Teachers
F. Parents
Roxas et al. (2019) in his study mentioned that the most common
problems encountered by the school heads and teachers were the
parents in the in-denial stage and the availability of instructional
materials. The researcher also recommended orientation should
be conducted to the parents and tapping the Local Government
Units for the financial assistance to support the program were
strategies in addressing the problems encountered in the SPED
programs.