090 - Socio - Economic Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities,
Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services, Cameroon
C
ONTACT
Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services
Mr. Jacques Chirac Awa
Cameroon
+
237 676177732
talk2chirac@yahoo.com spd@cbchealthservices.orgO
VERALL GOAL
/
MISSION
Schools in Cameroon are primarily government owned, but do not practice Inclusive Education. Only a few special
schools exist, which are operated by nongovernmental organizations. A demographic study of the Northwest Region of
Cameroon states that 4.5% of the children are living with disabilities and are 20 times less likely to be enrolled in school
compared to their non disabled peers. This could be because of the poverty of their parents or because of the lacking
equipment of human and material resources at school. The mission of the SEEPD project is to improve the quality of life
for persons with disabilities by breaking the vicious cycle of disability and poverty though the components health and
rehabilitation, education, livelihood, gender, child protection, communication and research. In the sector of education
the “14 School Project” was established working with ten primary and seven secondary schools in the Northwest Region
of Cameroon to practically implement Inclusive Education.
T
HE SOLUTION THAT HAS BEEN DEVELOPED
The program runs two special schools: the Integrated School for Blind and the Integrated School for Deaf. These schools
also serve as nurseries where children acquire the skills of Braille and Sign Language to be able to attend mainstream
schools. Their learning in the mainstream schools is supported by basic resources and assistive devices which enable
them to take part in the curriculum as best as possible, for example Sign Language interpreters. Learners with visual
impairments have access to assistive devices such as digital recorders and others. The project also provides training on
inclusive teaching and learning practices to teachers of the pilot schools. The strategy of Inclusive Education has proven
to be cost effective and has shown that more children with impairments now attend mainstream schools and succeed at
end of course examination. Additionally an Inclusive Education model was drafted for Cameroon, which is being piloted
in the Northwest Region of Cameroon with funding from Australian Aid.