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EDUC 201 School & Society |
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Mainstreaming
vs. Inclusion
In 1975, Public Law 94-142 was established by the Congress. That law requires that all children be
educated in "the least restrictive environment." It is, essentially, the "special
education" law. Out
of that law comes the idea of "mainstreaming" "Mainstreaming"means nothing more than moving a child
out of both special education self-contained classrooms and out of
pull-out programs and putting him/her in "regular"classroom
-- in the "mainstream"of schooling. (Regular classrooms are considered to be the mainstream.)
But, this interpretation of the law works from the idea that
the individual child may be better served by not placing him or her
in regular classrooms, that some children are better able to learn
in more sheltered environments, such as self-contained classrooms.
All children who receive this service do so on the basis of
both a battery of tests and conferences with educators, psychometrists
and parents, which result in an Individual Education Plan (IEP) for
the child. These people decide to what extent the child will be in regular
classrooms, pull-out programs, and/or self-contained classrooms (parents
have absolute veto power). In
fact, most special education children spend the majority of their
time in regular, or mainstream, classrooms.
Unfortunately, this is a relatively expensive program.
Approximately 10% of children in American public schools receive
special education services.
Something in the neighborhood of 35% of the school’s
academic budget goes to support it.
(I think it important to distinguish between "the academic
budget"and "the budget."
The academic budget is the part of the budget that actually
goes to support classroom operations; it is about 60 - 65% of the
total education budget.)
Inclusion is a little more difficult to define exactly, because
exactly how it will be worked out varies from program to program. It is not yet widely practiced and, therefore, has numerous
variations.
Generally speaking, though, inclusion differs from mainstreaming
in that it would completely eliminate pull-outs and self-contained
classrooms. Special needs children would be "included"
in the regular ed. classrooms. These students would still have IEPs, but the efforts to fulfill
the IEPs would be made in the regular classrooms, which in perhaps
10%- 20% of the cases is already done.
In one manifestation of inclusion, the special education teachers
would come into the mainstream classrooms and work with the students
in that environment. Thus,
there would not be elimination of special education services, but
a change in the location of their delivery.
The commonly mentioned problem with this approach is that it
would either result in attention to fewer students by the same number
of special education teachers, less attention to the same number of
students by the same number of special education teachers, or the
same amount of attention to the same number of students by more special
education teachers. One possible way to prevent any of those things happening,
of course, is to turn part of the special education responsibility
over to the regular classroom teachers.
Most regular ed. teachers resist that, of course, because they
don't feel they have been adequately trained to deal with special
needs children. I don’t want to get into the arguments pro and con. What is important to understand is that these are two different ways of enacting PL 94-142. The key feature of "inclusion"is that it would eliminate self-contained (or separate) special education programs and perhaps special ed. pull-outs as well. Special education teachers, rather than teaching in their own classrooms, would come into regular education classrooms and help the special education students in that environment. |
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Last updated by Jim Vandergriff 6/13/02 10:51 AM jvanderg@knox.edu |