圣文森特和格林纳丁斯的包容性变革:合作自述

Q4 Social Sciences Exceptionality Education International Pub Date : 2024-05-11 DOI:10.5206/eei.v34i1.16932
Monique Somma, John Freer, Margo Shuttleworth, Sheila Bennett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在包括加勒比地区在内的许多国家,最近对全纳教育实践专业发展的需求日益增长。这种对高质量专业发展的需求符合联合国教育、科学及文化组织(2016 年)关于到 2030 年实现所有儿童全纳的呼吁。最近,我们的团队受邀为圣文森特和格林纳丁斯的教育工作者提供专业发展,重点是针对有特殊教育需求的学生的循证实践。在 3 年的时间里,这项服务工作演变成了多方面的全纳教育试点,有特殊教育需求的学生由此从隔离学校过渡到主流学校。在这篇文章中,我们以合作式的自述方式介绍了我们的集体经历。我们的自我反思记录了我们在圣文森特和格林纳丁斯的教育工作者、学生、学校、社区和家庭准备向全纳教育过渡的三年时间里,通过为他们提供支持和教育而获得的经验和感悟。在集体回顾我们的自我反思时,我们发现我们服务工作的核心有三大主题:(a) "全纳的障碍",(b) "关系的重要性",(c) "转变"。在讨论这三个主题时,我们探讨了我们在整个服务项目中所经历的成功和挑战。接下来,我们将讨论与这些经历有关的反思性思考,作为加勒比地区内外可持续全纳工作的共享重要知识。
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Inclusive Change in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: A Collaborative Autoethnography
In many countries, including those in the Caribbean, there has recently been an increasing demand for professional development on inclusive educational practices This need for high-quality professional development is in line with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s (2016) call for inclusion of all children by 2030. Recently, our team was asked to provide professional development to educators in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines that focused on evidence-based practices for students with special education needs. Over the course of 3 years, this service work evolved into a multi-faceted pilot of inclusive education, whereby students with special education needs transitioned from a segregated school into mainstream schools. In this article, we present a collaborative autoethnography that highlights our collective experiences. Our self‑reflections chronicle our experiences and accompanying perceptions gained through providing support and education to educators, students, schools, community, and families in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines over a 3-year period, as they prepared for this transition to inclusion. In collectively reviewing our self-reflections, we discovered three major themes at the heart of our service work: (a) “barriers to inclusion,” (b) “the importance of relationships,” and (c) “transformation.” In discussing these three themes, we explore the successes and challenges we experienced throughout these service projects. What follows is a discussion of our reflective musings related to these experiences as shared critical knowledge for sustainable inclusion work within the Caribbean and beyond.
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Exceptionality Education International
Exceptionality Education International Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.10
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0.00%
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5
期刊最新文献
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