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Support and Inclusion of students with disabilities at higher education institutions in Montenegro – SINC@HE. EU practices and policies for the inclusion of disabled students in Higher Education. Policy and Legal Context at EU level. EU TFEU Charter on Fundamental Rights. UN CRPD
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Support and Inclusion of students with disabilities at higher education institutions in Montenegro – SINC@HE EU practices and policies for the inclusion of disabled students in Higher Education CONFERENCE 2012
Policy and Legal Context at EU level EU TFEU Charter on Fundamental Rights UN CRPD Article 4: promote the training of professionals and staff Article 5: reasonable accommodation Article 8b: awareness raising Article 24: inclusive education system Disability Action Plan: equal access to education EU2020 E&T2020 Member States policies and legal frameworks Lifelong Learning FP7PROGRESS
Problems/Needs of students with disabilities in EU • Access – disabled YP’s less likely to apply for HE • More disruption to studies; course changes; higher drop-out rates • Finance –disabled students cost higher than non-disabled • Mobility – layout; space; access; transport • Pedagogic – technical support for visual and hearing impairments; dyslexia; learning disabilities • Pastoral – stress levels greater; isolation; discrimination • Lack of representation • Low level of awareness • Low level of professional skills and training • Transitions – e.g. to work – more difficult
Support provision • Varies from country to country • In most countries, HEI’s responsible – more voluntary than mandatory • Preferential enrolment (Portugal; Greece; Hungary; Germany; Norway; UK) • Financial – combination of ‘block’ grant to HEI’s + personalised individual packages • Access and mobility – ramps; wheelchair access; transport • Technical/Pedagogic – photocopies; tape recordings; transcriptions; braille documents; e-exams; note-takers; signers • Disability officers – less developed • Staff training - less developed • Awareness-raising and networking - less developed
Persistent problems and Gaps in provision • HE sector more scope for interpretation of laws and policy than school sector – variability in level and quality of support • Definition – e.g. ‘reasonable accommodation • ‘Hidden disability’ – difficult to estimate numbers who don’t apply or don’t register – lack of reliable data and monitoring • Not enough focus on transitions • Not enough effort on awareness-raising and staff development • Poor representation and active involvement of students with disabilities
EU Good Practices • Ratification and support for UN CRPD • Over-arching policies promoting equality in education (EU2020; ET2020) • Major funding programmes (LLP; FP7; PROGRESS) • At member state level • Access (e.g. SWAP; Flemish Social Dimension in HE; French Active Guidance Policy; UK Widening Participation; Spain Inclusive Campus; Ireland DARE) • Support on Entry (German Studentenwerke; Norway Universell Service) • Supporting Study and Progress (French Social Criteria Grants)
EU: Provision and Gaps Kotor Meeting
EU: Implementation Good Practice Kotor Meeting
EU: Implementation Good Practice Kotor Meeting
sinc@he: Key results • Policies in place - ratification of the UN Convention and Protocol; ‘Strategy of integration of the persons with disabilities’; ‘Law of prohibition of discrimination of the persons with disabilities’. • But insufficient implementation in practice. • Public awareness relatively under-developed. • Numbers and type of YP with disabilities who are prevented from applying for higher education not clear. In Montenegro, only around 20 PWD officially registered in HEIs. • But unknown quantity not registered, or don’t consider going to University. Kotor Meeting
sinc@he: Key results-2 • Support to improve accessibility within the built environment variable . • Lack of integration between the different education sectors • Lack of qualified special needs education professionals and facilities for training professionals are under-developed. • AYDM plays a vital role, but its work requires more integration with government and HEI agencies. • The use of ICTs to support students with disabilities in HEIs is currently under-developed. • Financial support for students with disabilities is variable.
Priorities for the future in Montenegro • Priority Area 1: Definitions and Awareness: focusing on the gaps between policy and practice; lack of clarity in level of need; low level of public awareness • Priority Area 2: Financing: addressing fact that funding provision is neither coherent nor systematic; promoting more effective collaboration between government, HEIs and NGOs • Priority Area 3: Systematic Support: promoting better co-ordination between government Ministries; standardisation in entry, assessment and certification procedures; mainstreaming personal support; co-ordination of support activities; central database of resources; co-ordinating monitoring and evaluation; expanding and standardising ICT tools and assistive technology; support for transitions between school, university and work; involving more stakeholders, including disabled students’ family members Kotor Meeting
The problem with terminology GIFTED STUDENTS SPECIAL NEEDS PWD Michel Foucualt: ‘The purpose of education is to classify, control and punish” INCLUSIVE LEARNING