Inclusive Education & Children with Special Needs • Topic 1 of 5

Concept of Inclusive Education

Inclusive education means that all children, with and without disabilities, learn together in the same regular classroom, and the school adapts its teaching, curriculum and environment to meet each child's needs. CTET loves the contrast between three older approaches. Segregation places children with disabilities in separate special schools, away from peers. Integration (also loosely called mainstreaming) places the child in a regular school but expects the CHILD to adjust and cope with the existing system, with little change to the school. Inclusion flips this: the SCHOOL changes to welcome the child, so no child is excluded, labelled or made to fit a fixed mould. The guiding principle is that diversity is normal and valuable, and every child can learn. In India this is backed by law, the Right to Education (RTE) Act 2009 guarantees free and compulsory education for ages 6-14, and the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act 2016 recognises 21 disabilities and gives children with benchmark disabilities the right to free education from ages 6 to 18, along with reasonable accommodation. The teacher's job is to remove barriers, not to sort children into who belongs.

✅ Solved examples

1. A school changes its building, materials and teaching methods so that a child with a disability can study alongside everyone else. This approach is best called:
Inclusion, the school adapts itself to fit the child, rather than asking the child to adapt to the school.
2. Placing children with disabilities in entirely separate special schools, away from other children, is known as:
Segregation, it isolates children with special needs instead of educating them together with peers.
3. In which approach is a child with a disability admitted to a regular school but expected to cope with the existing system largely unchanged?
Integration (mainstreaming), the burden of adjustment is on the child, whereas in inclusion the school adjusts.
4. Which Indian Act recognises 21 disabilities and provides for the right to free education for children with benchmark disabilities up to age 18?
The Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016. The RTE Act 2009 separately guarantees free education for ages 6-14.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. The core principle of inclusive education is that:
Who adapts to whom?
The school changes, not the child.
No child is excluded.
The school adapts to meet the needs of every child; all children learn together
2. Educating a child with a disability in a regular classroom where the child must fit into the unchanged system is called:
The child does the adjusting.
Less than full inclusion.
Integration / mainstreaming
3. The Act that guarantees free and compulsory education for all children aged 6-14 in India is the:
Passed in 2009.
Right to Education.
RTE Act, 2009
4. In inclusive education, diversity among learners is regarded as:
Not a problem to fix.
A normal, valuable feature of every classroom.
Normal and an asset / a resource for learning
5. Teaching children with disabilities in separate special schools is termed:
Opposite of inclusion.
They are kept apart.
Segregation

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.

Loading questions…