By Wamundila Waliuya
Education must be for all! I really like this statement but I do not understand it. If I understand it, then, it should mean that there should be no form of discrimination in the education system. Is it possible today? I think so.
Education must be for all! I really like this statement but I do not understand it. If I understand it, then, it should mean that there should be no form of discrimination in the education system. Is it possible today? I think so.
Let us try to
look at it from this point of view. The education system everywhere should
carry teacher training programme for all; a curriculum for all; teaching
methodology for all; physical infrastructure for all; a school and community
for all; teachers for all; school support staff for all; communication modes
and language for all; education planning and budget allocation for all. This
sounds crazy! But I am trying to talk about a system that gives access,
effective participation and progression for all learners.
I again sound
vague when referring to ‘all’. Who are these all? It may mean all citizens
interested in learning. All citizens interested to learn should find the
education system ready to absorb and accommodate them appropriately. The
teachers must be ready for them. The school infrastructure must be ready for
them. The curriculum, both core and extra-curriculum must be ready for them.
The community too must be ready for them. Everything reconciling with education
and learning must be ready. No one interested to learn must be made to adjust
to the education system. They should only fit into the already accommodating
system.
I think I am
still vague when referring to ‘all’ and ‘them’. Let us look further at this
example. The school system must be able to be ready for them interested in
using staircases and those who are not interested in stairs cases but are
interested in lifts, escalators or ramps. The schooling system should also
accommodate those who use print, large print and Braille or those who use all
the modes of communication. The schooling system should be able to accommodate
those who use speech and can hear; those who use speech but use sign language
also; those who use sign language only etc. The schooling system should
accommodate those who prefer to have extra time to learn and prefer to learn
certain subjects that suitable for them. The schooling system should be able to
set different examining methods for those who prefer to be examined differently.
For instance, one learner would say, “I do not need to learn mathematics
because I feel I can not assimilate it at the same speed as my colleagues can.
My intellectual capacity can accommodate mathematics. So I would like to learn
particular practical skills and be examined in that”. The education system
should accommodate this learner who needs to learn too. Not all learners need
mathematics, science, geography, history and book keeping. Some learners would
only need communication skills, home economics and activities of daily living
and be examined in these. Nothing is wrong with this. But we tend to force all
subjects or courses on everyone. Why?
Let us look at
another scenario. A teacher training curriculum planning technical team is sitting
and one says, “Guys, let us make a curriculum for teacher training which will
include the following: compulsory English language, sign language, tactile
language, Braille and at list one local language. Of course bearing in mid
other courses like psychology, sociology and teaching methodology”. The planner
then says, “You are correct, the teaching methods should equip the teachers
with skills to accommodate those who need more time to learn; those who need
individualized attention; those who prefer sign language; those who prefer
computers with screen reading software; those who prefer large print; those who
use Braille”. The other joins in to say, “Let us not forget those learners who need
more intensive support like orphans with stress, girls with stress and those
with intellectual difficulties”. Another jokingly but seriously says, “Let us
not forget the elderly who still want to go back to primary school.” This seems
to be a serious technical team. What do you think? A newly graduating teacher
should be proud to shout, “I am a teacher for all learners”.
What an
expensive education system! It is not expensive. It is inclusive. My question
now is: where does the so called “special education” fall. Let’s talk.
No comments:
Post a Comment