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Schools should be fully inclusive by 2020

DUBAI INCLUSIVE EDUCATION POLICY FRAMEWORK LAUNCHED TO ENSURE EDUCATION FOR ALL, INCLUDING CHILDREN OF DETERMINAT­ION

- BY JANICE PONCE DE LEON Staff Reporter

By creating equal education opportunit­ies for all, we will contribute to the abilities of our young learners and help develop the country in line with aspiration­s that aim to make the UAE a model nation.” Shaikh Mansour Bin Mohammad | Chairman, Higher Committee on the Rights of People of Determinat­ion

It took more than 40 rejections in a span of weeks for Ruby, now 11, to get admitted to a mainstream private school in Dubai. Steph Hamilton, Ruby’s mother, had to run from one school to the next, pleading with school principals to admit her daughter who has Down syndrome to get admitted just like everyone else.

“It was like having a firing squad hit you and it’s very hurtful. Every human being knows what it feels like to be rejected in some way,” Hamilton told a group of educators yesterday.

Hope shone on the mother and daughter when, finally, GEMS Winchester School decided to admit Ruby in 2014.

“Her first day in school was incredible but at the same time, bitterswee­t, because the fight to get to that point was exhausting. It’s bitterswee­t in the sense that I shouldn’t be feeling that way anyway,” Hamilton said.

Hamilton is just one of the many parents who face difficulti­es getting their children with additional needs admitted to school. Many even have to pay double or triple the fees in hundreds of thousands of dirhams for their children’s education.

This is what the Dubai Inclusive Education Policy Framework aims to address now that it’s in place.

The policy framework, launched yesterday by the Inclusive Education Taskforce headed by the Knowledge and Human Developmen­t Authority (KHDA), aims to transform all Dubai private education providers to be fully inclusive by 2020.

It is in line with the Dubai Disabiliti­es Strategy and part of a larger citywide goal of making Dubai a disability-friendly city by 2020 through the ‘My community … a city for everyone’ initiative.

Shaikh Mansour Bin Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Chairman of the Higher Committee on the Rights of People of Determinat­ion, said the launch of the inclusive education policy comes in line with the national policy to empower people of determinat­ion.

“Education is a top priority and by creating equal education opportunit­ies for all, we will contribute to the abilities of our young learners and help develop the country in line with aspiration­s that aim to make the UAE a model nation,” Shaikh Mansour said.

Dr Abdullah Al Karam, chairman of the Board of Directors and director-general of KHDA, said the new framework enables greater access and better provisioni­ng for students who experience special educationa­l needs and disabiliti­es (SEND) in Dubai.

This means students who experience SEND may enrol in any mainstream private early childhood learning centre, school or university in Dubai without the risk of rejection by 2020.

School premises and facilities will have to be retrofitte­d to make them accessible to everyone in accordance with the Dubai Universal Accessibil­ity Code.

Dr Al Karam called on educators “who have the power to create this change” to ensure that the developmen­t of inclusive education is establishe­d as a strategic priority in their educationa­l network.

Fatma Bel Herif, executive director of the Dubai Schools Inspection Bureau, said the policy was launched after meetings with 537 stakeholde­rs, including parents, children with determinat­ion, teachers, child carers, and others.

The policy veers away from the medical model, which treats the “disability” as a disease that needs to be fixed, she said. Instead, the new policy uses the social model where the focus is on how to accommodat­e the child and making sure his journey to inclusion is barrier-free.

Representa­tives from GEMS Wellington Academy, Al Ittihad Private School, American School of Dubai, and Safa Community School demonstrat­ed that inclusive education can be done in Dubai by presenting their journey towards becoming inclusive schools.

During the launch, Sir Christophe­r Stone, chief education officer of GEMS Education, and Clive Pierrepont, director of Communicat­ions at Taaleem, both committed to enforce the policy in their school networks.

“The UAE is moving towards an understand­ing of inclusion and, certainly, Dubai has created a commitment to ensuring that all schools have to be fully inclusive by 2020 and we’re doing absolutely everything we can to make sure [of it],” Stone said.

 ?? Courtesy: KHDA ?? Steph Hamilton with daughter Ruby, who had difficulty finding a seat in Dubai schools because she has Down syndrome.
Courtesy: KHDA Steph Hamilton with daughter Ruby, who had difficulty finding a seat in Dubai schools because she has Down syndrome.

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