

five additional students per year. In Kara, they began in 2013. In Dapaong, they began in 2011, and between 2011-
2015 the annual number of children followed by Itinerant Teachers grew from 56 to 58 then 68 and now 71
children per year. (A total of 125 children overall)
3.
The Itinerant teachers project is part of a wider project by HI aiming to increase the access to schools for children
with disabilities. E.g. in Kara 63 teachers were trained in 2012 and 108 in 2013, plus 83 education advisors and
stakeholders, and 136 teachers in Dapaong.
OUTLOOK
Further in-depth study and analysis of these innovative and cost-effective approaches would aid the government in
implementing sustainable and tested approaches to inclusive education, while promoting the full social participation of
children with disabilities and fostering better livelihood opportunities for children with disabilities and their families. At
the same time, a phased scale up approach can be implemented to continue to pilot the approach in more challenging
areas (i.e. fewer links to specialist schools etc.) The second phase of Togo’s Education Sector Plan from 2014 to 2016
includes Inclusive Education, and there are now three paragraphs, which mention specific clauses linked to Inclusive
Education in the document, which is an important step to future sustainability of the Inclusive Education agenda
without HI involvement.
The ministry has also been involved in validating the Inclusive Education manual, and the braille and sign language
manuals, and this involvement is evidence that they are on board with changing institutional structures within
education. Members from the Ministry have also been involved in the working groups that were set up to help adapt
the national examinations in order to make them accessible for children with disabilities.