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Inclusion

Published on May 12, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Inclusion

ALL children are different, ALL children can learn
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Inclusion is the involvement in an evolved community

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“Inclusion is not bringing people into what already exists; it is making a new space, a better space for everyone.” (Dei et al., 2000)

These inclusion communities:

  • Do not have to be confined to a single classroom
  • Assist all different sensory modalities
  • Evolve based on the individual student population

Successful Models of Inclusion include:

  • the rights for all students
  • fluidity of the school enivornment
  • benefits all types of learning
  • informal support for everyone
  • the expertise of classroom teachers

Inclusion is a often used, but often misused term

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Responsibilities of inclusive Education

  • Student feeling of engagement and empowerment from their learning
  • Reflect the diverse needs of all students regardless what learning pathways they pursue
  • Must provide students and staff with authentic and relevant opportunities to learn
Photo by Will Montague

Inclusionary Best Practices

  • Plan lessons that engage multiple learning types
  • Incorporate student prior knowledge and inquiry into curriculum deployment
  • Practice a student lead classroom where the teacher role is the facilitator
Photo by sciencesque

Inclusionary Planning Experience

  • A classroom with two students with colour-vision defiency
  • Teaching strategies evolve on a student-teacher-class learning basis around the identification of colours
  • Math and Social Studies lessons include colours that range far apart from one another on the colour wheel
Photo by Len Radin

"Inclusive Education is based on the acceptance and inclusion of all."
- Ontario Ministry of Education