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2006-10-25 04:51:27 · 2 answers · asked by staticroad792 3 in Education & Reference Teaching

2 answers

Inclusion is more abstract term itself what to include means it's not define term till now. But inclusive education is the more defined term, which means to repect the diversity of the students regarding their langauage, culture, sex, age, race, geography, level without any discrimination.

2006-10-25 18:29:21 · answer #1 · answered by digendra 3 · 0 0

Yes, and no, more and more 'inclusive education' is becoming prevelant in the UK with young people with additional needs, being educated alongside their peers in the classroom, with some physically less able young people even outstripping their peers academically. However, a common complaint among these young people has always been that though they were well catered for in terms of academic support, they were rejected by their non-disabled peers and didn't have a good experience of social inclusion. This is the key factor that schools need to work on, it isn't the child with additional needs who has the real 'problem' but the peers who lack the ability to accept and the schools who do not promote equality

2006-10-25 04:58:08 · answer #2 · answered by Bumblebee 3 · 0 0

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