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Armenia Moves Towards Integrated Schooling

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  • Armenia Moves Towards Integrated Schooling

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #670
    Dec 21 2012


    Armenia Moves Towards Integrated Schooling

    Major education reform sees mainstream schools gradually refitted with
    facilities and access for disabled pupils.

    By Arpi Beglaryan - Caucasus

    Armenia is equipping mainstream schools to allow disabled children to
    attend them, instead of being educated separately.

    The reform stems from the obligations Armenia undertook in 2010 when
    it ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,
    which requires states to prevent discrimination and afford equal
    access to all.

    The change will not be completed for another decade, since Armenia's
    school buildings generally date from the Soviet era, and it is
    difficult to adapt them for wheelchair access and other specialised
    needs.

    Naira Harutyunyan, head of the inclusive education department at a
    school in the capital Yerevan, said her institution currently accepted
    children with mental disabilities, but could not yet take pupils who
    used wheelchairs because it lacked the funds needed to make adequate
    changes.

    `The ramp we have is a problem,' she explain. `We've experimented with
    it and discovered that wheelchairs could tip over on the descent, so
    we've stopped using it,' she said.

    Azniv Manukyan, a psychologist at the same school, welcomed the
    reform, noting the dramatic change she had observed in one autistic
    boy over the course of a year.

    `An inclusive system is the right thing for children like that,
    because they forced into a place that will benefit them,' she said.
    `When you have one-on-one tuition with any pupil, you will always get
    results. In class, the teachers play a very important role, and we
    also have extra sessions.'

    In October, Education Minister Armen Ashotyan submitted a bill laying
    down the principles for inclusive schooling. He said all 1,347 schools
    in Armenia would be opened to all pupils, and noted that the reform
    would reduce the cost of educating disabled children in separate
    schools.

    Armenia currently has 107 integrated schools, with the numbers
    increasing by 15 a year.

    Where there is opposition to the scheme, it often arises from
    prejudice among parents.

    `Three years ago, when I started working at this school, there were
    parents who asked for their children not to be sat near `children with
    problems'; they didn't want their children to be in the same class as
    disabled children,' Manukyan said. `But I have to say that increasing
    numbers of parents now ensure they teach their children to make
    friends with the disabled kids.'

    Harutyunyan said another obstacle to success was that placing disabled
    children in inclusive schools was still a matter of parental choice.

    `I would urge the government to reconsider the rule that parents
    themselves can decide which school their children should study at,'
    she said.

    The boarding schools where severely disabled children have studied up
    to now insist that the rationale for their existence has not gone
    away.

    `We still have children with the most difficult of conditions,'
    Artsvik Arshakyan, the principal of one such school in Yerevan, said.
    `Children with lesser disabilities should be moved into inclusive
    education system, but our school must remain as a starting-point.
    There are always going to be children with serious disabilities, and
    if they have nowhere to go, they will end up on the street.'

    Minister Ashotyan confirmed that some of the Soviet-era schools would
    be retained.

    `We can't just eliminate these special schools in Armenia, just as
    they can't be eliminated in any other country,' he told parliament.
    `But the number has to be limited, and children shouldn't be placed in
    them unless there's good reason.'

    The basic rule was that children who could attend mainstream schools
    should do so.

    `Society must become more receptive and tolerant,' he said. `It has to
    understand that these are members of society, the children of this
    society.'

    Arpi Beglaryan is a reporter for emedia.am in Armenia.


    http://iwpr.net/report-news/armenia-moves-towards-integrated-schooling



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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