A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds

An ever-increasing focus on out-of-school children may bring a new challenge to the already shaky system of schooling in Pakistan. A sustained segregatory and exclusionary way of thinking even at the highest ministerial level has given birth to two separate worlds; general education and special educ...

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Main Authors: Dr. Abdul Hameed, Dr. Afaf Manzoor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Management and Technology 2018-11-01
Series:UMT Education Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.umt.edu.pk/index.php/uer/article/view/149/144
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spelling doaj-a265cf81130b48fd81e9ad5e7e1f05852020-11-25T04:10:28ZengUniversity of Management and TechnologyUMT Education Review2616-97382616-97462018-11-0112218https://doi.org/10.32350/uer.12.01A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds Dr. Abdul Hameed0Dr. Afaf Manzoor1Professor, University of Management and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan. Lecturer, University of Education, Lahore, Pakistan. An ever-increasing focus on out-of-school children may bring a new challenge to the already shaky system of schooling in Pakistan. A sustained segregatory and exclusionary way of thinking even at the highest ministerial level has given birth to two separate worlds; general education and special education. The habitat of both worlds follows different sets of beliefs about education, children, teaching and learning, pedagogy and assessment. The interaction between these communities has remained sorrowfully minimal. As the push to enroll every child in school with a target of “No child left behind” has increased, it has become even more difficult for parents and families to choose an appropriate school for children with disabilities. Often, the closest mainstream school treats them as aliens, whereas an alternative or special school may be up to 12km away from the child leaving few or no option for parents to send their children with disabilities to school. As the Punjab government has taken a forward step for inclusive education in two districts, it has become more obvious that there are many challenges in creating realistic accommodations for children with special needs in “mainstream schools”. This concept paper has explored the gaps both in theory and practice that may hinder the inclusion of all children in their neighborhood schools.https://journals.umt.edu.pk/index.php/uer/article/view/149/144children with disabilitiesinclusive educationo ut of school childrensegregationspecial education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr. Abdul Hameed
Dr. Afaf Manzoor
spellingShingle Dr. Abdul Hameed
Dr. Afaf Manzoor
A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
UMT Education Review
children with disabilities
inclusive education
o ut of school children
segregation
special education
author_facet Dr. Abdul Hameed
Dr. Afaf Manzoor
author_sort Dr. Abdul Hameed
title A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
title_short A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
title_full A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
title_fullStr A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
title_full_unstemmed A Child on Crossroad of Two Isolated Worlds
title_sort child on crossroad of two isolated worlds
publisher University of Management and Technology
series UMT Education Review
issn 2616-9738
2616-9746
publishDate 2018-11-01
description An ever-increasing focus on out-of-school children may bring a new challenge to the already shaky system of schooling in Pakistan. A sustained segregatory and exclusionary way of thinking even at the highest ministerial level has given birth to two separate worlds; general education and special education. The habitat of both worlds follows different sets of beliefs about education, children, teaching and learning, pedagogy and assessment. The interaction between these communities has remained sorrowfully minimal. As the push to enroll every child in school with a target of “No child left behind” has increased, it has become even more difficult for parents and families to choose an appropriate school for children with disabilities. Often, the closest mainstream school treats them as aliens, whereas an alternative or special school may be up to 12km away from the child leaving few or no option for parents to send their children with disabilities to school. As the Punjab government has taken a forward step for inclusive education in two districts, it has become more obvious that there are many challenges in creating realistic accommodations for children with special needs in “mainstream schools”. This concept paper has explored the gaps both in theory and practice that may hinder the inclusion of all children in their neighborhood schools.
topic children with disabilities
inclusive education
o ut of school children
segregation
special education
url https://journals.umt.edu.pk/index.php/uer/article/view/149/144
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