108 - Planning Inclusive Cultures in School, River East Transcona School,
Canada
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ONTACT
River East Transcona School Division
Ms. Joan Trubyk
Canada
www.retsd.mb.ca+1 204 667 7130
jtrubyk@retsd.mb.caO
VERALL GOAL
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MISSION
PICS (Planning Inclusive Cultures in School) is a self-assessment instrument and process for use in early, middle and
senior year’s schools. It helps stakeholders (administrators, teachers, parents, students, support staff and others) to
better understand inclusion, assess and improve their own practice, and celebrate success. River East Transcona School
Division sought to achieve that purpose and required a process for doing so. The school division worked with
collaborators to develop PICS, then began a pilot project to apply the instrument in three schools, adding to that
number each year. All schools in the pilot complete the PICS assessment, develop, and implement action plans based on
the data. As the pilot continued, the school division and its collaborators revised the instrument based on feedback from
participants.
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HE SOLUTION THAT HAS BEEN DEVELOPED
River East Transcona School Division set out to improve the practice of inclusion in its Kindergarten to Grade 12 schools.
Its general approach was to develop a self-assessment strategy focused on inclusion to complement existing school
planning. The school division recruited collaborators with a history of scholarship in inclusive education. Together, they
investigated available resources and adapted the best to create "Planning Inclusive Cultures in School"
(http://www.pics-esm.ca/resources/). PICS is a facilitated process that guides stakeholders to identify and analyze
current school practices with an emphasis on those that encourage inclusion with particular attention on traditionally
disenfranchised populations. While considering the concept of inclusion across eight domains, participants learn to
understand inclusion itself more fully, thus creating a more fertile ground for subsequent planned change. PICS is most
powerful as a learning tool; engaging in the inventory fosters conversations among all stakeholders about what good
teaching means – from the broadest values to the most specific classroom practices – and how to translate that into
everyday practice.
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OUNTRY IN WHICH IT WAS DEVELOPED
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Canada