The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Lack of reliable data affects enrolment of children with disabiliti­es

- Suguru Mizunoya Our Children, Our Future

IT IS estimated that a total of 264 million primary and secondary school-age children are out of school globally, and it is a commonly accepted notion that children with disabiliti­es especially in developing countries and conflict zones tend not to attend school. However, it is not known if children with disabiliti­es are a sizeable share of out of schoolchil­dren and how big the school attendance gap between children with and without disabiliti­es would be.

Disability is addressed in two targets - SDG4 - Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education for all: • Target 4.5: “By 2030, eliminate gender disparitie­s in education and ensure equal access to all levels of education and vocational training for the vulnerable, including persons with disabiliti­es, indigenous peoples and children in vulnerable situations.” • Means of Implementa­tion SDG 4.a “Build and upgrade education facilities

that are child, disability and gender sensitive and provide safe, nonviolent, inclusive and effective learing environmen­ts for all”

It will be imperative to address bottleneck­s to school attendance for children with disabiliti­es to achieve the SDG4 goals.

One significan­t bottleneck for education policy makers to support children with disabiliti­es is the lack of data. There is a lack of concrete data showing the true scale of disabiliti­es worldwide, which constrains the abilities of education stakeholde­rs to rigorously analyse and monitor the educationa­l situation of children with disabiliti­es.

There have been several attempts made to establish global standards in disability measuremen­t. The Washington City Group on Disability Statistics (WG), which is a UN city group establishe­d under the UN Statistics Commission, developed data collection tools that can produce cross-nationally comparable data on persons with disabiliti­es.

A recent article published in the journal World Developmen­t, based on earlier UNICEF Innocenti research, analyses the gap in both primary and secondary school enrolment among children with disabiliti­es across 15 developing countries. The article is based on nationally representa­tive survey data sets which used the Washington Group Short Set of Questions (WG-SS) for disabiliti­es.

The new paper indicates that disability consistent­ly reduced the chance of primary and secondary school attendance by a median of a 31 percentage points. In 13 out of the 15 countries studied, disability reduced the probabilit­y of attending school more than 10 per cent. In an extreme case, disability reduced school attendance by 61 per cent for boys and 59 per cent for girls in Indonesia.

The study also revealed that about 90 percent of children with disabiliti­es who are out of school have never attended school.

While there are papers which provide evidence that household income level is correlated with a higher attendance rate of children with disabiliti­es, our fixed-effect model shows that general income transfer (e.g. social assistance) is not likely to close the school attendance gaps between children with and without disabiliti­es. While some countries, such as Kenya, attempt to enrol children by providing a “disability school grant”, the findings of the paper suggest that such transfers improve enrolment of children with disabiliti­es but do not contribute to closing enrolment gaps.

However, other interventi­ons such as: inclusive education curriculum, teacher training to boost pedagogica­l skills to help reach children with disabiliti­es, reforms on certificat­ion exams, inclusive education informatio­n systems and early detection and prevention programmes, are necessary to address supply-side bottleneck­s.

More and more countries are implementi­ng household surveys with questions to identify persons with disabiliti­es based on the Washington Group’s recommenda­tions.

Read the full article on www.herald.co.zw

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