The Phnom Penh Post

Gov’t, NGO launch disabled children teaching manual

- Khorn Savi

THE Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport and Save the Children have created a manual to help teachers in the education of children with disabiliti­es. The move is designed to help get nearly 55,000 disabled youngsters in schools.

At the launch of the National Manual on Teaching Children with Disabiliti­es in the capital on Friday, Out Sarang, education programme manager for Save the Children, said the new manual included more detailed technical programmes in the field.

“The ministry has previously published some guidelines, but they were not so detailed, with Khmer language and maths teachers not knowing how best to teach children with disabiliti­es. This new manual now supplies them with up-to-date techniques,” he said.

The ministry has worked with relevant NGOs to help 54,838 children with disabiliti­es enrol in school, according to its 2018 report.

Sarang said Friday’s launch came after the National Manual on Teaching Children with Disabiliti­es was recognised by Education Minister Hang Chuon Naron in May last year.

Thorng Rithy, the director of the ministry’s Special Education Department, said it is a first for Cambodia to have this type of manual to advise teachers as to how best to support children with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

A 2010 national survey by the ministry found that more than 10 per cent of children aged between two and nine years had an impairment, especially in cognition, hearing and speech.

However, this is thought to be below t he true figure, due in part to t he fact t hat children’s impairment­s are f requently not adequately recognised or t reated.

“Before, we had regulation­s concerning the education of children with disabiliti­es, but with this manual, we now have specific guidance,” Rithy said.

Elizabeth Pearce, country director of Save the Children in Cambodia, said: “The manual provides clear guidance on how to teach children with intellectu­al and learning disabiliti­es and autism who are at risk of being left behind in the education system.

“Inclusive education for children with disabilit ies will now be available for a ll Cambodian families and communitie­s.”

Save the Children has been working to familiaris­e teachers and educationa­l authoritie­s from provincial and district offices of education on key topics, such as how to manage the behaviour of children with disabiliti­es and how to teach them, and how to develop an individual child support plan.

Other NGOs involved in the developmen­t of the manual are also to use it to support children with disabiliti­es.

Pearce said the next step is to ensure the manual is integrated into Ministry of Education policy so it can be rolled out across the country to benefit all children with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? The audience at Phnom Penh’s Koh Pich Exhibition Centre waits for a speech by Prime Minister Hun Sen as part of the Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es in 2013.
HENG CHIVOAN The audience at Phnom Penh’s Koh Pich Exhibition Centre waits for a speech by Prime Minister Hun Sen as part of the Day of Persons with Disabiliti­es in 2013.

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