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Armenian Children With Disabilities Enter Mainstream Education

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  • Armenian Children With Disabilities Enter Mainstream Education

    ARMENIAN CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES ENTER MAINSTREAM EDUCATION

    Reuters Alert, UK
    Sept 27 2007

    Source: World Vision Middle East/Eastern Europe office (MEERO)
    Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this
    article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are
    the author's alone.

    Twenty children with disabilities in Talin town, Aragatsotn Region,
    northwest of Armenia, attended public schools and primary educational
    institutions this September after being treated at the newly opened
    Child Centre of World Vision Armenia Talin Area Development Programme.

    The Centre is the only professional facility for children with
    disabilities in Talin town and surrounding villages where the
    children receive support from a psychologist, art therapist and speech
    therapist, and their parents receive counseling from a social worker
    and legal advice.

    'Through Child Centres World Vision aims not only to support the
    integration of children with disabilities through a number of services
    but also seeks to change the attitude of the communities towards them,'
    says Marina Hovhanissyan, child protection programme manager of World
    Vision Armenia.

    At the official opening of the Centre, the Mayor of Talin town,
    Mnatsakan Mnatsakanyan, emphasised the importance of the community
    members in the process of integration of children with disabilities
    into mainstream education.

    The Centre was established within the Talin Municipality Kindergarten,
    which enables children with disabilities to communicate with their
    peers and integrate into kindergarten activities.

    The Centre will also provide training sessions on modern trends of
    assessment and identification of child needs for the specialists of
    Child Protection Unit of Aragatsotn Regional Administration.

    'Our joint efforts will bring more professional care to the children
    with special needs of our region,' says Gayane Danielyan, head of
    Child Protection Unit of Aragatsotn Regional Administration.

    [ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and
    not of Reuters. ]
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