Disability support and accessibility in ordinary schools in South Africa

Type Working Paper - Stellenbosch Economic Working Papers
Title Disability support and accessibility in ordinary schools in South Africa
Author(s)
Issue WP05/2021
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2021
URL https://ideas.repec.org/p/sza/wpaper/wpapers365.html
Abstract
Increased access to education among children with disabilities requires increased enrolment of children with disabilities in ordinary schools, the provision of disability support, more accessible school environments and re-training of teachers. There is however little available data on these aspects of disability support or accessibility in South Africa. This hinders accountability for policy implementation and makes budgeting for inclusion difficult. This paper aims to close this gap through multivariate analysis of the School Monitoring Survey 2017, supplemented by analysis of a follow-up qualitative study. The results are compared against the 2011 survey to illustrate progress in implementation. Further, the 2017 survey is compared against the Screening, Identification, Assessment and Support policy 2014 and against promising indicators of school- and teacher-level inputs and processes to identify key measurement gaps. The analysis shows substantially more schools have established school-based support teams, and more of these teams received support from the district, in 2017 than in 2011. A much larger proportion of schools has wheelchair-accessible toilets in 2017. Educators who have been trained in identifying/supporting learners experiencing learning barriers and/or have formal qualifications in special needs education are more likely to be confident in addressing learning barriers. However, many of the current training programmes do not cover curriculum or assessment differentiation. Unfortunately, less than half our schools are confident in their ability to screen learners for visual, hearing or learning difficulties. The results also suggest that educators have a poor understanding of the screening process. The poor ability to screen learners means many learners with less obvious disabilities are unlikely to be identified in schools. As a result, many learners with disabilities/experiencing barriers to learning are unlikely to receive the support they need

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