Understanding Inclusive Practice and Community Initiatives to Make Education Accessible to All |
Executive Summary The study project was taken up to understand the initiatives and existing scenario of Inclusive Education(IE) in Karnataka in the context of its long history of implementing integrated and IE for children with disabilities through the scheme of IEDC and other governmental projects as DPEP, Janshala, & UNDP. Nevertheless, the knowledge about IE at the ground level remains scattered and untapped there is a need for collective critical engagement among practitioners of IE. The resulting gap in knowledge and collaborative practice leaves open several questions about the achievements and obstacles in using IE as an approach, about the role of various stakeholders such as the teachers, schools, peers, parents, communities and other social institutions, about the diversity and commonality in educational practices in IE, and the ground level response of the educational system to the needs and concerns of children with impairments. Future development in Inclusive Education depends on how well we understand these issues and understand the real barriers that children face in accessing their fundamental right and also our review of whether the general education system is equipped to and how is it responding to the challenges of educating children with disabilities in general schools. The objectives of the project are:-
Methodology This research project used a participatory research methodology for understanding the problems in the practice of IE by interacting with stake holders like teachers, NGOs DIETs through focus group discussions. There were field visits to selected blocks, group discussions and interviews and triangulation of data collected. Therefore the entire thrust of the project was to enable stakeholders to reflect on the issue of inclusion and their own role with respect to inclusion and also to help them reflect on the constraints and opportunities and contribute for future developments in this area. In addition, as this research was envisaged as a ‘participatory’ process, the interim findings were fed into three processes that were simultaneously carried out by the SSA, namely the teleconference on IE, the Task Force on IE meeting, the DIET principals meeting and the Master Plan for IE at state level. The broad and recurring trends and issues observed were triangulated with responses from various stakeholders and form the basis of analysis. Thus, the discussion/analysis pertains to our specific observations from these sources and does not necessarily reflect the situation in each and every corner of the State, which we have been unable to physically observe first-hand given the time and resource constraints.
Findings and Recommendations The study concludes with the findings and recommendations that although the state has been at the forefront in the implementation of IEDC scheme since over last two decades and also being a pioneer in teacher trainings on IE which started with developing resource teachers for IEDC scheme, followed by inservice training during the DPEP and the Janashala period, the study findings are
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