A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand

This research compared the work and opinions of regular school teachers teaching in inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand. These teachers were drawn from schools participating in an in-service training program to enhance the capacity of students with special needs in regular classrooms. A s...

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Main Authors: Pennee Kantavong, Sujarwanto, Suwaree Rerkjaree, Budiyanto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-09-01
Series:Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452315117303727
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spelling doaj-0acd8eb7cce142e98019fe67cf6cc6a32020-11-25T00:02:13ZengElsevierKasetsart Journal of Social Sciences2452-31512017-09-0138329129610.1016/j.kjss.2016.05.005A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and ThailandPennee Kantavong0Sujarwanto1Suwaree Rerkjaree2Budiyanto3College of Local Administration, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002, ThailandState University of Surabaya, IndonesiaFaculty of Education, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002, ThailandState University of Surabaya, IndonesiaThis research compared the work and opinions of regular school teachers teaching in inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand. These teachers were drawn from schools participating in an in-service training program to enhance the capacity of students with special needs in regular classrooms. A sample of 172 teachers in primary schools in Thailand and 165 from Indonesia answered a questionnaire based on Friedmen's concept of teacher burnout. Eighty percent of the Thai teachers had bachelor's degrees, but only 1 percent were in special education, whereas 77 percent of the Indonesian teachers had bachelor's degrees and 13 percent were in special education. Teachers' opinions on four areas were investigated: inclusion, support from various parties, work environment, and exhaustion. There was no correlation between background variables and teachers' exhaustion and fulfillment. There was a correlation between the number of students in a class and a teacher's de-personalization at the .01 level. When considering social dimensions and exhaustion, there was a correlation at the .01 level. There was a correlation between self-fulfillment and exhaustion at the .01 level. There was no correlation between the organizational, psychological, structural and support dimensions, and exhaustion. In general, teachers reported that they received support from various parties. Most of them expressed positive opinions of students with special needs.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452315117303727comparative studyinclusive classroomsspecial education needs studentsteacher opinions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pennee Kantavong
Sujarwanto
Suwaree Rerkjaree
Budiyanto
spellingShingle Pennee Kantavong
Sujarwanto
Suwaree Rerkjaree
Budiyanto
A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences
comparative study
inclusive classrooms
special education needs students
teacher opinions
author_facet Pennee Kantavong
Sujarwanto
Suwaree Rerkjaree
Budiyanto
author_sort Pennee Kantavong
title A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
title_short A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
title_full A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
title_fullStr A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
title_full_unstemmed A comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand
title_sort comparative study of teacher's opinions relating to inclusive classrooms in indonesia and thailand
publisher Elsevier
series Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences
issn 2452-3151
publishDate 2017-09-01
description This research compared the work and opinions of regular school teachers teaching in inclusive classrooms in Indonesia and Thailand. These teachers were drawn from schools participating in an in-service training program to enhance the capacity of students with special needs in regular classrooms. A sample of 172 teachers in primary schools in Thailand and 165 from Indonesia answered a questionnaire based on Friedmen's concept of teacher burnout. Eighty percent of the Thai teachers had bachelor's degrees, but only 1 percent were in special education, whereas 77 percent of the Indonesian teachers had bachelor's degrees and 13 percent were in special education. Teachers' opinions on four areas were investigated: inclusion, support from various parties, work environment, and exhaustion. There was no correlation between background variables and teachers' exhaustion and fulfillment. There was a correlation between the number of students in a class and a teacher's de-personalization at the .01 level. When considering social dimensions and exhaustion, there was a correlation at the .01 level. There was a correlation between self-fulfillment and exhaustion at the .01 level. There was no correlation between the organizational, psychological, structural and support dimensions, and exhaustion. In general, teachers reported that they received support from various parties. Most of them expressed positive opinions of students with special needs.
topic comparative study
inclusive classrooms
special education needs students
teacher opinions
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2452315117303727
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