087 - Modelling Inclusive Education in Tanzania, Add International,
Tanzania
C
ONTACT
Add International Tanzania Country Program
Mr. Mathew Thomas Kawogo
Tanzania
www.add.uk+255 715 1111 51
Mathew.Kawogo@add-tanzania.orgO
VERALL GOAL
/
MISSION
The project wants to model Tanzania’s National Strategy on Inclusive Education by initiating a systematic education
change in three districts. This change shall influence the school management, the teacher training, and the pupil support
and ensure that families and the communities are involved. Another goal is to support the implementation of the
developed "National Strategy on Inclusive Education".
T
HE SOLUTION THAT HAS BEEN DEVELOPED
In Tanzania, less than five percent of disabled children are currently attending school and most of them are in especially
for them created schools or integrated units and not in inclusive classrooms. In Pwani, the region that is addressed,
were barriers, across policies, practices and the culture that hindered the participation and the learning possibilities of
children with disabilities. These barriers manifested themselves in form of inaccessible schools, a lack of teacher
trainings and parents that were thinking their disabled children are not worth to be educated. So the project works
together with families, children, schools and public agencies to address these challenges by putting the focus on
removing barriers, which are e.g. a lack of resources, inadequate teacher trainings, discrimination, a lack of awareness,
within the education system. It also wants to provide support to the diverse specific needs of children with disabilities
so that they are able to learn alongside their peers. Therefore, it sensitizes the people’s awareness through events on a
national and a local level and through the distribution of the "National Strategy on Inclusive Education", which is being
translated into Swahili. It provides training media about inclusive education and disability, establishes inclusive
"Educational Support Resource and Assessment Center" and also "School-Based Education Support Centers", which
offer qualified personnel to address different barriers that hinder the participation of children with disabilities, develops
training manuals and supporting review of the existing government manuals and guidelines, identifies children with
disabilities, refers to specialist services and local professionals, provides training in curriculum development and also
monitors disabled children’s access and offers advocacy and advice for public officials concerning inclusive education at
local and national levels.