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Inclusive education at HI

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Inclusion | Kenya | Mali | Rwanda | PUBLISHED ON August 1st 2023
Malika at school with her best friend Habsatou. Malika, 10, lives in Maradi, Niger. She is visually impaired. Thanks to HI’s support, she is now in year CE2 .

© J. Labeur / HI

In 2022, HI launched 43 projects exclusively dedicated to inclusive education, particularly in Mali and Rwanda.

Key figures: inclusive education in HI actions

•    In 2022: 43 projects dedicated entirely to inclusive education, and 57 projects with an inclusive-education component.
•    Just over 100,000 beneficiaries, mainly children, but this figure also includes their parents and teachers.
•    The three countries in which HI is most active in inclusive education are Mali, Rwanda and Kenya.

Three questions for Nancy Christelle Umugwaneza, specialist in inclusive education at HI

What effects does inclusive education have, particularly in Rwanda?

Although it’s still far from perfect, inclusive education is now being taken into consideration and promoted at all levels in Rwanda: from exclusion to the identification of children, their assessment and guidance leading to enrolment at school, keeping them in school, learning and progress etc. – that’s what we are striving to do in Rwanda. We are achieving it through the universal design of learning and a child-centred approach: we focus on what children can do, rather than what they can’t do. And the stakes are high: establishing assessment centres in communities, training teachers, adapting teaching materials, assistive technologies etc., to ensure that children with specific needs are no longer excluded from their community.

What is the basis of your commitment to these inclusive-education projects? Why do you believe in them, what motivates you?

What drives me to fight for the inclusion of everyone is the fact that I have seen the progress we have already made in this area. Parents know that children with special needs have the right to go to school just like any other child. The teachers have understood that when supported, children with disabilities can learn at their own pace and achieve better results in line with their abilities.

What is your most memorable encounter, and to what extent does it show how inclusive education can change the life of some children?

I have so many vivid memories from my career, especially when I was in charge of assessing needs and guiding the children. I remember one child who was about to leave school . He was an orphan, no family, and suffered from a severe visual impairment. Yet he was brave enough to persevere at school despite his difficulties – his teachers believed that he was an intelligent pupil. During the assessment our teams noticed his visual impairment and referred him to an ophthalmologist. He received follow-up care and was fitted with glasses. A “simple” pair of glasses changed the boy’s life at school. He very soon felt more confident, and was able to follow the lessons just like all the other children. He stayed on at school and left with very good grades that allowed him to get a scholarship to go to university.

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