The process of teacher education for inclusion: the Maltese experience
This paper discusses major challenges for the development of teacher education for inclusion through an analysis of relevant recent experience in Malta. Inclusion in society and in education has been explicitly on the Maltese national agenda for the past two decades. The Faculty of Education of the...
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description | This paper discusses major challenges for the development of teacher education for inclusion through an analysis of relevant recent experience in Malta. Inclusion in society and in education has been explicitly on the Maltese national agenda for the past two decades. The Faculty of Education of the University of Malta has been one of the main actors of the inclusion initiative and has also taken a European initiative through the recent co‐ordination of a seven‐country, 3‐year European Union Comenius project on preparing teachers for responding to student diversity. This paper is based mostly on the reflective experience of the author at the Faculty of Education over the past several years. A brief picture of the Maltese education system is followed by a description of the challenges that have been encountered in the promotion of inclusion. These include the development of a rights‐based approach to the education of persons with disability and the widening of its application to all minority or disadvantaged groups, and the impact of political and social contexts on the development of inclusive schools. These developments are then related to intertwined initiatives for teacher education for diversity that were further influenced by the leadership of deans and heads of the department in the faculty of education. Finally, four current issues are highlighted, namely: the strategic balance between the education of specialist educators and that of all teachers for diversity, and between specific and infusion models for such education, and, finally, the pedagogic balance between the academic and experiential learning about inclusion, and between the theory and practice of inclusive teaching. |
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These developments are then related to intertwined initiatives for teacher education for diversity that were further influenced by the leadership of deans and heads of the department in the faculty of education. Finally, four current issues are highlighted, namely: the strategic balance between the education of specialist educators and that of all teachers for diversity, and between specific and infusion models for such education, and, finally, the pedagogic balance between the academic and experiential learning about inclusion, and between the theory and practice of inclusive teaching.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1471-3802</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1471-3802</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-3802.2010.01163.x</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher><subject>Access to Education ; Attitudes toward Disabilities ; Diversity ; Education policy ; Equal Education ; Experiential Learning ; Foreign Countries ; inclusive development ; Inclusive education ; Inclusive Schools ; Leadership ; Mainstreaming ; Malta ; Multiculturalism & pluralism ; pedagogy ; Political Issues ; Preservice Teacher Education ; Professional training ; Professors ; Regular and Special Education Relationship ; Social Attitudes ; Social inclusion ; Social Influences ; Special education ; Special Education Teachers ; Student Diversity ; Teacher education ; Teacher Improvement ; Teacher Response ; Teaching Methods</subject><ispartof>Journal of research in special educational needs, 2010-08, Vol.10 (s1), p.139-148</ispartof><rights>2010 The Authors. 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Inclusion in society and in education has been explicitly on the Maltese national agenda for the past two decades. The Faculty of Education of the University of Malta has been one of the main actors of the inclusion initiative and has also taken a European initiative through the recent co‐ordination of a seven‐country, 3‐year European Union Comenius project on preparing teachers for responding to student diversity. This paper is based mostly on the reflective experience of the author at the Faculty of Education over the past several years. A brief picture of the Maltese education system is followed by a description of the challenges that have been encountered in the promotion of inclusion. These include the development of a rights‐based approach to the education of persons with disability and the widening of its application to all minority or disadvantaged groups, and the impact of political and social contexts on the development of inclusive schools. These developments are then related to intertwined initiatives for teacher education for diversity that were further influenced by the leadership of deans and heads of the department in the faculty of education. Finally, four current issues are highlighted, namely: the strategic balance between the education of specialist educators and that of all teachers for diversity, and between specific and infusion models for such education, and, finally, the pedagogic balance between the academic and experiential learning about inclusion, and between the theory and practice of inclusive teaching.</description><subject>Access to Education</subject><subject>Attitudes toward Disabilities</subject><subject>Diversity</subject><subject>Education policy</subject><subject>Equal Education</subject><subject>Experiential Learning</subject><subject>Foreign Countries</subject><subject>inclusive development</subject><subject>Inclusive education</subject><subject>Inclusive Schools</subject><subject>Leadership</subject><subject>Mainstreaming</subject><subject>Malta</subject><subject>Multiculturalism & pluralism</subject><subject>pedagogy</subject><subject>Political Issues</subject><subject>Preservice Teacher Education</subject><subject>Professional training</subject><subject>Professors</subject><subject>Regular and Special Education Relationship</subject><subject>Social Attitudes</subject><subject>Social inclusion</subject><subject>Social Influences</subject><subject>Special education</subject><subject>Special Education Teachers</subject><subject>Student Diversity</subject><subject>Teacher education</subject><subject>Teacher Improvement</subject><subject>Teacher Response</subject><subject>Teaching 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Inclusion in society and in education has been explicitly on the Maltese national agenda for the past two decades. The Faculty of Education of the University of Malta has been one of the main actors of the inclusion initiative and has also taken a European initiative through the recent co‐ordination of a seven‐country, 3‐year European Union Comenius project on preparing teachers for responding to student diversity. This paper is based mostly on the reflective experience of the author at the Faculty of Education over the past several years. A brief picture of the Maltese education system is followed by a description of the challenges that have been encountered in the promotion of inclusion. These include the development of a rights‐based approach to the education of persons with disability and the widening of its application to all minority or disadvantaged groups, and the impact of political and social contexts on the development of inclusive schools. These developments are then related to intertwined initiatives for teacher education for diversity that were further influenced by the leadership of deans and heads of the department in the faculty of education. Finally, four current issues are highlighted, namely: the strategic balance between the education of specialist educators and that of all teachers for diversity, and between specific and infusion models for such education, and, finally, the pedagogic balance between the academic and experiential learning about inclusion, and between the theory and practice of inclusive teaching.</abstract><cop>Oxford, UK</cop><pub>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</pub><doi>10.1111/j.1471-3802.2010.01163.x</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Access to Education Attitudes toward Disabilities Diversity Education policy Equal Education Experiential Learning Foreign Countries inclusive development Inclusive education Inclusive Schools Leadership Mainstreaming Malta Multiculturalism & pluralism pedagogy Political Issues Preservice Teacher Education Professional training Professors Regular and Special Education Relationship Social Attitudes Social inclusion Social Influences Special education Special Education Teachers Student Diversity Teacher education Teacher Improvement Teacher Response Teaching Methods |
title | The process of teacher education for inclusion: the Maltese experience |
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