domingo, 15 de abril de 2012

Tomando un regreso inclusivo

An invited article



Taking an inclusive turn

Mel Ainscow




University of Manchester

key words: inclusion, organisational paradigm, school culture.

This special edition of the journal focuses on what  is, arguably, the biggest challenge facing education systems, that of developing practices that will

reach out to those learners who are failed by existing arrangements. Specifically, the papers look at ways of using the views of stakeholders in order to

move schools and other centres of learning in a more is, arguably, the biggest challenge facing education system, that of developing practices that will

reach out to those learners who are failed by existingarrangements. Specifically, the papers look at ways of using the views of stakeholders in order to

move  schools and other centres of learning in a more inclusive direction.
My own contribution is to provide an overall context for the ideas presented by the authors.  I do this b first reflecting on what inclusion in education

means and then outlining my own thoughts on what research suggests about strategies for moving thinking and practice forward. This leads me to stress

the importance of evidence as a ‘lever for change’ (Ainscow, 2005, p. 111).

The inclusive turn

Whilst recent years have seen an increased interest in the idea of inclusive education, the field remains confused as to

what this implies. Indeed, Slee (2004) argues that the idea has travelled so much that it has become ‘jet lagged’.

In many countries, inclusive education is still thought of as an approach to serving children with disabilities with general

education settings. However, internationally, it is increasingly seen more broadly as a reform that supports and welcomes

diversity amongst all learners (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 2001). It

presumes that the aim of inclusive education is to eliminate social exclusion that is a consequence of attitudes and

responses to diversity in race, social class, ethnicity, religion, gender and ability (Vitello & Mithaug, 1998).

Traditionally, the main response to difficulties experienced by learners has been through special education. In recent

years, this field has gone through a crisis of thinking about its guiding assumptions. As a result, the appropriateness of

separate systems of education has been challenged, both from a human rights perspective and from the point of view

of effectiveness (Lipsky & Gartner, 1996; Thomas & Loxley, 2001). Dissatisfaction with progress towards greater

inclusion has led to demands for more radical changes in both the developed and developing world (e.g. Ahuja, 2002;

Ballard 1995; Booth & Ainscow, 1998; Fulcher, 1989; Kisanji, 1998; Slee, 1996). One of the concerns of those who adopt

this view is with the way in which students come to be designated as having special educational needs. They see this as a

social process that needs to be continually challenged. More specifically, they argue that the continued use of what is

sometimes referred to as a ‘medical model’ of assessment – within which educational difficulties are explained solely in

terms of a child’s deficits – prevents progress in the field, not least because it distracts attention from questions about why

schools fail to teach so many children successfully.

Such arguments have led to proposals for a re-conceptualisation of the task. This revised thinking, has been characterised

by some scholars as the ‘organisational paradigm’ (Dyson & Millward, 2000). In general terms it involves moves away

from explanations of educational failure that concentrate on the characteristics of individual children and their families

towards an analysis of the barriers to participation and learning experienced by students within school system (Booth &

Ainscow, 2002). In this way, those students who do not respond to existing arrangements come to be regarded

as ‘hidden voices’ who, under certain conditions, can encourage the improvement of schools (Ainscow, 1999).

This approach, which I see as an ‘inclusive turn’, is more likely to be successful in contexts where there is a culture of

collaboration that encourages and supports problem-solving (Skrtic, 1991). It involves those within a particular context in

working together to address barriers to education experienced by some learners. As the papers in this volume suggest, it

also necessitates new relationships between teachers and learners.



Moving forward
What, then, is required for us to take an inclusive turn? In addressing this question I will draw on our programme of

research carried out in collaboration with schools over many years. Whilst much of this research has been carried

out in England, it has also involved projects in countries as diverse as Brazil, China, India, Romania, Spain and Zambia

(Ainscow, 2000). At the same time, through the work of the Enabling Education Network (EENET), we have encouraged



links between groups around the world that are trying to promote the development of inclusive education (further

details can be obtained from http://www.eenet.org.uk).

Much of this research has involved the use of collaborative action research, an approach that involves processes of

development and inquiry, usually carried out in partnership with groups of schools as a means of developing better

responses to the challenges they face (Ainscow, Booth & Dyson, 2004). Kurt Lewin’s dictum that you cannot understand

an organisation until you try to change it is, perhaps, the clearest justification for this approach (Schein, 2001). In

practical terms, we believe that such understanding is best developed as a result of ‘outsiders’, such as researchers,

working alongside practitioners, policy makers and other stakeholders as they seek practical solutions to the problems

they face. An overall framework for these activities is provided by




The Index for Inclusion

(Booth & Ainscow, 2002). The Index, which emerged from our earlier research, is arguably the most detailed explanation


 available about what an inclusive school looks like (details can be obtained from http://inclusion.uwe.ac.uk/csie/). It takes

the form of review materials that enable schools to draw on the knowledge and views of staff, students, parents and

community members about barriers to learning and participation that exist within their existing ‘cultures, policies and

practices’ in order to identify priorities for change. In connecting inclusion with the detail of policy and practice, the

Index encourages those who use it to build up their own view of inclusion, related to their experiences and values, as they

work out what policies and practices they wish to promote or discourage (Ainscow, 2002; Rustemier & Booth, 2005).

Contextualised within the framework provided by the Index, our research confirms the views of others which

suggests that developments of practice, particularly amongst more experienced teachers, are unlikely to occur without

some exposure to what teaching actually looks like when it is being done differently, and exposure to someone who can

help teachers understand the difference between what they are doing and what they aspire to do (Elmore, Peterson &

McCarthy, 1996). It also suggests that this has to be addressed at the individual level before it can be solved at

the organisational level. Indeed, there is evidence that increasing collaboration without some more specific

attention to change at the individual level can simply result in teachers coming together to reinforce existing practices

rather than confronting the difficulties they face in different ways (Lipman, 1997).

At the heart of the processes in schools where changes in practice do occur is the development of a common language

with which colleagues can talk to one another and, indeed, to themselves about detailed aspects of their practice

(Huberman, 1993). Without such a language teachers find it very difficult to experiment with new possibilities.Frequently

when observers report to teachers what they have seen during their lessons they express surprise (Ainscow, 1999). Much

of what teachers do during the intensive encounters that occur is carried out at an automatic, intuitive level. Furthermore,

there is little time to stop and think. This is why having the opportunity to see colleagues at work is so crucial to the

success of attempts to develop practice. It is through shared experiences that colleagues can help one another to articulate

what they currently do and define what they might like to do (Hiebert, Gallimore & Stigler, 2002). It is also the means

whereby taken-for-granted assumptions about particular groups of students can be subjected to mutual critique.

Writing about similar processes, Timperley and Robinson (2001) explain how teachers’ existing understandings

influence the way evidence is interpreted, such that they perceive what they expect to perceive. Consequently, new

meanings are only likely to emerge when evidence creates ‘surprises’. The role of school principals and other senior

staff is crucial in encouraging such rethinking amongst their colleagues. So, for example, Lambert et al. (1995) seem to

be talking about a similar process in their discussion or what they call ‘the constructivist leader’. They stress the

importance of leaders gathering, generating and interpreting evidence within a school in order to create a ‘inquiring

stance’. They argue that such information causes ‘disequilibrium’ in thinking and, as a result, provides a challenge to

existing assumptions about teaching and learning (Lambert, Walker, Zimmerman, Cooper, Lampert, Gardner  & Szabo,

1995).

Our own research has shown how the use of evidence to study teaching can help foster the development of more

inclusive thinking and practices (Ainscow, Howes, Farrell & Frankham, 2003). Specifically, it can help to create space

for reappraisal and rethinking by interrupting existing discourses, and by focusing attention on overlooked possibilities for

moving practice forward. A particularly powerful technique in this respect is the use of mutual observation, sometimes

through video recordings (Ainscow, 1999, 2003). As the papers in this journal illustrate, evidence collected from students

about teaching and learning arrangements can also be an effective means of interrupting taken-for-granted assumptions

(Ainscow & Kaplan, 2005; Messiou, 2006; Miles & Kaplan, 2005). Under certain conditions such approaches provide

that help to make the familiar unfamiliar in ways that stimulate self-questioning, creativity and action. In so




doing, they can sometimes lead to a reframing of perceived problems that, in turn, draws the teacher’s attention to

overlooked possibilities for addressing barriers to participation and learning.

Here my argument is informed by the work of Robinson (1998) who suggests that practices are activities that solve

problems in particular situations. This means that to explain a practice is to reveal the problem for which it serves as a

solution. So, in working closely with practitioners, we have found that we can make inferences about how school staff

have formulated a problem and the assumptions that areinvloved in the decisions made. We have also observed how


initial formulations are sometimes rethought as a result of an engagement with various forms of evidence. However, this

is not in itself a straightforward mechanies for the development of more inclusive practices. To move practice in the

direction of greater inclusion, interruptions must be welcomed and they must follow an invitation to engage in dialogue

(Ainscow, Booth, Dyson, Farrell, Frankham, Gallannaugh, Howes & Smith, 2006). They must also be principled,

introducing values as a motive for action, or allowing connections to such motives that have previously been hidden.



Of course, any space that is created may be filled according to conflicting agendas. We have documented detailed

examples of how deeply held beliefs within schools may prevent the experimentation that is necessary in order to

foster the development of more inclusive ways of working (Ainscow & Kaplan, 2005; Howes & Ainscow, 2006). This

reminds us that that it is easy for educational difficulties to be pathologised as difficulties inherent within students.

This is true not only of students with disabilities and those defined as ‘having special educational needs’, but also of

those whose socioeconomic status, race, language and gender renders them problematic to particular teachers in

particular schools. Consequently, it is necessary to explore ways of developing the capacity of those within schools to

reveal and challenge deeply entrenched deficit views of ‘difference’, which define certain types of students as ‘lacking

something’ (Trent, Artiles & Englert, 1998). This involves being vigilant in scrutinising how deficit assumptions

may be influencing perceptions of certain students.




School cultures




Through our research we have been able to show how, as a result of engaging with various forms of evidence, staff

within some schools reconsidered their assumptions and, as a result, were able to develop new ways of working

(Ainscow, Booth, Dyson, Farrell, Frankham, Gallannaugh, Howes & Smith, 2006). In some cases this led to significant

changes in the way problems were defined and addressed.

We saw these as examples of the way norms of teaching are socially negotiated within the everyday context of the

schools (Talbert & McLaughlin, 1994). In this sense, they are evidence of how the culture of the workplace impacts

upon how teachers see their work and, indeed, their students (Skidmore, 2004). It underlines the idea that the

development of more inclusive approaches does not arise from a mechanical process in which any one specific

organisational restructuring, or the introduction of a particular set of techniques, generates increased levels of

participation. Rather, the development of inclusive practices requires processes of social learning.

All of this points to the importance of cultural factors. Schein (1985) suggests that cultures are about the deeper

levels of basic assumptions and beliefs that are shared by members of an organisation, operating unconsciously to

define how they view themselves and their working contexts.

The extent to which these values include the acceptance and celebration of difference, and a commitment to offering

educational opportunities to all students, coupled with the extent to which they are shared across a school’s staff,

relate to the extent to which students are enabled to participate (Kugelmass, 2001).

Hargreaves (1995) argues that cultures can be seen as having a reality-defining function, enabling those within an

institution to make sense of themselves, their actions and their environment. A current reality-defining function of

culture, he suggests, is often a problem-solving function inherited from the past. In this way, today’s cultural form

created to solve an emergent problem often becomes tomorrow’s taken-for-granted recipe for dealing with

matters shorn of their novelty.

Changing the norms that exist within a school is difficult to achieve, particularly within a context that is faced with

so many competing pressures and where practitioners tend to work alone in addressing the problems they face

(Fullan, 1991). On the other hand, the presence of children who are not suited to the existing ‘menu’ of the school can

provide some encouragement to explore a more collaborative culture within which teachers support one another in

experimenting with new teaching responses. In this way, problem-solving activities gradually become the reality-defining,

taken-for-granted functions that are the culture of a school that is more geared to fostering inclusive

ways of working.

The implication of all of this is that becoming more inclusive is a matter of thinking and talking, reviewing and refining

practice, and making attempts to develop a more inclusive culture. Such a conceptualisation means that we cannot divorce

inclusion from the contexts within which it is developing, nor the social relations that might sustain or limit that

development (Dyson, 2006).

Our explorations have convinced us that it is in the complex interplay between individuals, and between groups and

individuals, that shared beliefs and values exist, and change, and that it is impossible to separate those beliefs from the

relationships in which they are embodied. Nias (1989, p. 20) describes a ‘culture of collaboration’ developing as both the

product and the cause of shared social and moral beliefs. Our work would suggest that what happens as a consequence of

the involvement of schools in processes of collaborative action research, with the opportunity it provides to work with

outsiders committed to promoting inclusion, is that it provokes discussion about social and moral beliefs.

In turn, consideration of these beliefs and values, and their connections with curricular and extracurricular activities, can

contribute to a growing commitment to inclusion.




Concluding remarks



This paper has addressed what I see as the biggest challenge for education systems around the world, that of responding to

learner diversity. The approach I have outlined is not about the introduction of particular techniques or organisational

arrangements. Rather it requires a new way of thinking, what I have rereferred to as a feflective turn Engaging with

evidence, particularly the views of children, is a key strategy. As Copland (2003, p. 394) suggests, inquiry can be the

‘engine’ to enable the distribution of  leadership that is needed in order to foster participation,
and the ‘glue’ that can bind a school community together around a common purpose.

All of this has major implications for leadership practice. In particular, it calls for efforts to encourage coordinated


and sustained efforts by whole staff groups around the idea that changing outcomes for students is unlikely to be achieved

unless there are changes in the behaviours of adults. Consequently, the starting point must be with staff members: in

effect, enlarging their capacity to imagine what might be achieved, and increasing their sense of accountability for

bringing this about. This may also involve tackling taken-for-granted assumptions, most often relating to expectations

about certain groups of students, their capabilities and behaviours.

My argument is, then, based on the assumption that  and that the logical starting point for development is with a detailed

analysis of existing arrangements. This allows good practices to be identified and shared, whilst, at the same time,

drawing attention to ways of working that may be creating barriers to the participation and learning of some students.

However, as I have stressed, the focus must not only be on practice; it must also address and sometimes challenge the

thinking behind existing ways of working and that the logical starting point for development is with a detailed analysis of

existing arrangements. This allows good practices to be identified and shared, whilst, at the same time, drawing attention

to ways of working that may be creating barriers to the participation and learning of some students. However, as


I have stressed, the focus must not only be on practice; it must also address and sometimes challenge the thinking behind

existing ways of working  and that the logical starting point for development is with a detailed analysis of existing

arrangements. This allows good practices to be identified and shared, whilst, at the same time, drawing attention to ways

of working that may be creating barriers to the participation and learning of some students. However, as I have stressed,

the focus must not only be on practice; it must also address and sometimes challenge the thinking behind existing ways of

working.

Address for correspondence. Mel Ainscow.  University of Manchester, School Of Education, Oxford Road.
Manchester M13 9PL,UK. Email: mel.ainscow@manchester.ac.uk.


References

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S. Hegarty & M. Alur (eds),  Education and Children with Special Needs: From Segregation to Inclusion


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Understanding the Development of Inclusive Schools. London: Falmer. Ainscow, M. (2000)

‘Reaching out to all learners: some lessons from international experience.
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