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Inclusive education for children with disabilities in a refugee camp
Authors:Thomas M. Crea  Kerri Evans  Robert G. Hasson III  Sarah Neville  Kelsey Werner  Elizabeth Wanjiku  Nobert Okumu  Gregory St. Arnold  Eric Velandria  Daniela Bruni
Affiliation:1. Professor and Assistant Dean of Global Programs at the School of Social Work, Boston College, United States;2. Assistant Professor at the School of Social Work, University of Maryland Baltimore County, United States;3. Assistant Professor at the Department of Social Work, Providence College, United States;4. Doctoral Candidate at the School of Social Work, Boston College, United States;5. Director of Social & Community Based Systems Modeling at the School of Social Work, Boston College, United States;6. Special Needs Coordinator at JRS (Jesuit Refugee Service) Kenya, Kakuma Refugee Camp, Turkana County, Kenya;7. Programme Manager at JRS (Jesuit Refugee Service) Kenya, Kakuma Refugee Camp, Turkana County, Kenya;8. Education Specialist, Education in Emergencies, at the JRS (Jesuit Refugee Service) International Office, Italy;9. Senior Education Specialist at the JRS (Jesuit Refugee Service) International Office, Italy;10. Education in Emergencies Specialist at the JRS (Jesuit Refugee Service) International Office, Italy
Abstract:Children in refugee camps, and particularly those with disabilities, face unique challenges in accessing education and are at high risk of being marginalised. Best practices suggest that main-streaming is the optimal strategy for serving students with disabilities. This study examines the extent to which mainstreaming in a refugee camp helps to promote children's prosocial behaviours, taking into account their emotional and behavioural problems. In Kakuma Refugee Camp, Kenya, researchers collected data from the parents of children currently enrolled in special needs education centres (n=65) and from those formerly enrolled at these facilities who transitioned to mainstream classrooms (n=81). Children in mainstream schools functioned better in terms of prosocial behaviours, but this relationship disappeared when factoring in children's emotional and behavioural difficulties. In the context of a refugee camp, mainstreaming alone is not likely to help children's psychosocial and educational functioning, which requires dedicated supports, appropriate facilities and infrastructure, and a dual focus on disability-specific and disability-inclusive initiatives.
Keywords:educational inclusion  forced displacement  mainstreaming  refugee camps  refugees  special needs education
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