Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Principal training to help make schools more inclusive

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Atotal of 35 principals from schools across the island have been trained under the pilot of the Inclusive School Leadership Training Programme (ISLTP).

The Ministry of Education, Youth and Informatio­n is undertakin­g the programme through its Special Education Unit, with the National College for Educationa­l Leadership (NCEL) conducting the training and the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF) providing funding through its Basic Needs Trust Fund (BNTF).

Training started in January and is scheduled to conclude December 31.

Principal/director of NCEL, Dr Taneisha Ingleton, told JIS News that the principals are being equipped with the necessary skills to make their schools more inclusive by exposing them to the nature and needs of students with varying exceptiona­lities and disabiliti­es.

“Inclusive leadership is not something a principal would learn in school, and so we recognised that we needed to design, develop and implement a training programme that would allow our principals to have the requisite skills and competenci­es needed to build inclusive schools,” she said.

“There are many students out there with exceptiona­lities and individual­s with disabiliti­es, so we want to ensure that we are reaching everybody as much as possible,” she added.

Dr Ingleton pointed out that the training is in keeping with United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal number four, which speaks to inclusive and equitable, quality education and learning opportunit­ies for all.

“We thought that we have to make that explicit in the work that NCEL does. We do not only promote reforming or transformi­ng the school space to respond to disabiliti­es, but also transformi­ng the attitude, the mindset of our schools leaders, so that people can feel a sense of belonging in the space that they lead,” she noted.

Assistant chief education officer in the Special Education Unit, Dr Sharon Anderson Morgan, told JIS News that ISLTP entails five modules.

She pointed out that in the first module the participan­ts are immersed in the nature and needs of the students with exceptiona­lities. The second module looks at the principles of inclusion, the third addresses the role of the school leader in an inclusive school, and the fourth is focused on how to develop an inclusive action plan.

For the final module, which is the practical component of the course, the participan­ts are engaged in implementi­ng the inclusive action plan.

This involves addressing the physical structure of the schools to make them more accessible, such as building ramps and widening bathroom stalls.

Project manager for the BNTF, Daintyann Barrett Smith, for her part, told JIS News that the training programme will go a far way in addressing the educationa­l needs of special students.

“By building the capacity of these principals, schools will be transforme­d and parents will have more choices in terms of determinin­g which institutio­n is appropriat­ely prepared to accommodat­e their children,” she said.

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