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  • Experiment In Diversity

    EXPERIMENT IN DIVERSITY
    Tamar Kikacheishvili

    Transitions Online
    http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLa nguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=321&N rSection=3&NrArticle=20564
    May 12 2009
    Czeck republic

    Georgian educators are keen to more forward with inclusive education,
    but questions remain about funding.

    TBILISI | Each school day Ina Mangoshvili and her daughter Mari climb
    narrow Petriashvili Street to Public School No. 21.

    "I like coming here. But sometimes I have lots of homework. My favorite
    subject is Georgian literature, but math is really hard, and the
    teacher gives me a lot of assignments for the next day," says Mari, 11.

    "I have good friends in class but I don't like the boys there. Often
    they call me 'Mariii' and ask for my mobile phone," she says.

    Mari shares a bench with her best friend at school, Khatia Danelia,
    who helps her with math and in getting around. Mari has cerebral
    palsy. During a break between classes the third-floor hall fills with
    children. Khatia helps Mari walk through the crush.

    "Mari is very funny ... and loves sports. This year she wanted to
    go skiing with me but Mrs. Ina [Mari's mother] didn't let her,"
    Khatia says.

    Mari Mangoshvili (left) and her friend Khatia Danelia in class at
    School No. 21, one of 10 schools in Tbilisi selected for a pilot
    project on inclusive education. Photo by Tamar Kikacheishvili.

    INCLUSIVE EDUCATION

    School No. 21 and nine others in Tbilisi recently completed a two-year
    pilot project on inclusive education of children with special needs in
    regular public-school classrooms. Almost a third of the project's more
    than $90,000 cost was covered by a grant from the Norwegian government.

    In March, the Norwegian ambassador, John Ramberg, signed an agreement
    to help implement a new inclusive education program in 10 more
    schools across Georgia, targeted at a whole range of "minorities,"
    including children with limited mobility or slow development, those
    from non-Georgian ethnic groups, and homeless children.

    The success of the pilot project helped boost support for a three-year
    government strategy and action plan for inclusive education, said
    Eka Dgebuadze, a senior specialist at the Ministry of Education and
    Science. The plan, approved in October, does not allocate monies from
    the ministry budget for inclusive education.

    Inclusive education is a new idea in the Caucasus. Armenia began
    an inclusive education program in 2005, according to the Armenian
    Ministry of Education. In Georgia, education specialists are committed
    to delivering a better education to disabled children and others
    with special needs, but the means of financing the additional costs
    remains unresolved. The Georgian Education Ministry has been opposed
    to additional funding for schools that implement inclusive education
    projects, arguing that this would single out a certain category of
    student, in effect discriminating against them.

    The 10 schools selected for the pilot project were outfitted with
    resource rooms where pupils can relax, study, watch TV, or just play
    with toys. To improve accessibility, outdoor and indoor ramps were
    built and new toilets and classroom doors installed.

    The project also funded a teacher aide and a psychologist for each
    school.

    In all, 111 students with different levels of disability took part in
    the pilot program. About 200 disabled children are enrolled in public
    schools in the Georgian capital. Nationwide, the Education Ministry
    says, about 1,000 disabled students study at 13 special schools.

    The Education Ministry will continue funding the salaries of teacher
    aides and psychologists in the 10 schools. As for other schools, the
    ministry argues that many have sufficient resources to fund these
    positions. The aides and psychologists are paid the same as other
    school teachers, 300 lari, or about $180, a month.

    According to Tatia Pachkoria, inclusive education coordinator with
    the ministry's National Curriculum and Assessment Center, informing
    the public about special needs education and development of a
    national policy were key components of the project. As Georgia gets
    ready to adopt the 2006 UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with
    Disabilities, the Education Ministry is drafting new legislation to
    strengthen the rights of disabled people in schools and universities,
    Dgebuadze said.

    The new legislation in accordance with the convention should be
    adopted by this autumn and will mark another step toward more inclusive
    education, along with the strategy and action plan approved last year,
    Dgebuadze said.

    FUNDING NOT ASSURED

    Irina Lomidze is the inclusive education coordinator at Mari
    Mangoshvili's school in Tbilisi. She says 14 pupils affected by
    cerebral palsy and autism are enrolled there and receive individual
    care. Like other Georgian public schools, No. 21 is a combined primary
    and secondary school.

    "The teacher aide spends the most time with them, helping with
    whatever they need. Most of these children spend their time in the
    resource room, where they play with the toys or paint. Some of them
    just relax," Lomidze says.

    Some pupils spend most of their school day in the resource room,
    where there is always a staff member on duty. Thirty of the school's
    105-member teaching staff were given special training by Norwegian
    experts to better equip them to teach classes containing children
    with differing levels of physical and mental ability.

    Georgian educators are discussing the means of financing inclusive
    education. Education Ministry expert Dgebuadze says ministry officials
    would like to expand the current financing system for the benefit
    of children with disabilities. Under the existing system, public
    schools with fewer than 400 students receive a voucher worth 325
    laris per student per year to cover teacher salaries and some other
    expenses. Larger schools and schools in mountainous regions receive
    vouchers worth more money, but there are no additional funds for
    students with special needs.

    "These children need teacher aides and a psychologist as well. They
    also need special equipment. Currently, only the 10 pilot schools
    have all the equipment needed for the education of disabled children,"
    Dgebuadze says.

    But School No. 21's principal, Mikhail Lomidze (no relation to Irina
    Lomidze), believes that extra financing for disabled children would
    be discriminatory.

    "I think that the issues related to children must be dealt with on
    the same level. That's why schools get the same amount for each child,
    no matter whether disabled or healthy," Mikhail Lomidze says. He adds
    that it would be best if teacher aides were available to work with
    every disabled child.

    Irina Lomidze, the school's inclusive education coordinator,
    favors additional spending for children with special needs,
    however. She says the school needs at least three teacher aides and
    two psychologists. The school has almost 1,400 students but only one
    psychologist and one teacher aide.

    GRADUAL ACCEPTANCE

    The pilot project also uncovered negative reactions among many parents
    and even teachers toward children who look or behave differently,
    yet it also brought hope to proponents of inclusive education.

    When the project began, Irina Lomidze says, "Parents of healthy
    children complained about the disabled students being in their
    children's classes, even though there were almost no problems from
    the children themselves, and the children accepted each other better
    than the parents did."

    Some parents said that such mixed classes lowered the overall level of
    ability because their children became bored when the teacher repeated
    material for pupils with learning disabilities.

    "Our society still needs preparation for accepting these children
    as members of society. This was really a problem, especially when we
    were beginning the program," Dgebuadze says.

    Attitudes toward children with special needs seem to improve with
    experience, according to research carried out by the nonprofit
    International Institute for Education Policy, Planning, and Management
    with the National Curriculum and Assessment Center. Opinions
    on inclusive classes in Georgian schools are very different in the
    schools that took part in the pilot project compared to those without
    inclusive methods, the research found.

    The survey was conducted in the autumn of 2006, when the pilot project
    began, and a report was published in 2007.

    Surveying schools where students have no experience of inclusive
    education, the researchers found that many students believed the
    presence of a disabled person in class could lead to conflicts between
    students with differing attitudes toward disability.

    A very different picture emerged in the schools that took part in the
    pilot project. Here, the report says, "students did not perceive any
    influence on the class from the presence of a disabled child. This
    does not mean that nothing changed in those classes. But the main
    influence on these students was positive personality changes. They
    felt that through contact with disabled classmates they were growing
    more tolerant," the researchers concluded.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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