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2019 “State of the Education Report for India: Children with Disabilities”

Topic covered:

Issues related to Education.

2019 “State of the Education Report for India: Children with Disabilities”

 

What to study?

For prelims and mains: key highlights of the report, concerns and measures needed for upliftment.

 

Context: The 2019 “State of the Education Report for India: Children with Disabilities” has been released by the UNESCO.

The report highlights accomplishments and challenges with regards to the right to education of children with disabilities (CWDs).

 

Key highlights of the report:

  • There are 78,64,636 children with disability in India constituting 1.7% of the total child population.
  • Three-fourths of the children with disabilities at the age of five years and one-fourth between 5-19 years do not go to any educational institution.
  • The number of children enrolled in school drops significantly with each successive level of schooling.
  • There are fewer girls with disabilities in schools than boys with disabilities in schools.
  • A large number of children with disabilities do not go to regular schools but are enrolled at the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS).
  • The percentage of children attending schools is the lowest among those with multiple disabilities, mental illnesses and mental retardation.

 

Challenges ahead:

  • Significant gaps remain, even though successive government schemes and programs have brought large numbers of children with disabilities into schools.
  • Only 61 percent of CWDs aged between 5 and 19 were attending an educational institution compared to the overall figure of 71 percent when all children are considered.
  • Around 12 percent of CWDs dropped out of school, which is comparable with the overall percentage of dropouts among all children. 27 percent of CWDs never attended any educational institution, as opposed to the overall figure of 17 percent when the entire child population is taken into account.
  • A review of enrolment figures at NIOS shows a decline for most categories of disabilities between 2009 and 2015.

 

Why the attitude of parents and teachers toward mainstream education important? 

To accomplish the goal of inclusive education besides accessibility to physical infrastructure, processes in the school, assistive and ICT technology and devices being essential resources.

 

The report has made certain recommendations to improve the state of education for CWDs:

  • Amend the RTE Act to better align with the RPWD Act by including specific concerns of education of such children.
  • Establish a coordinating mechanism under HRD Ministry for effective convergence of all education programmes of children with disabilities.
  • Ensure specific and adequate financial allocation in education budgets to meet the learning needs of children with disabilities.
  • Strengthening data systems to make them robust and reliable and useful for planning.
  • Massively expand the use of information technology for the education of children with disabilities.
  • Give a chance to every child and leave no child with disability behind.
  • Transform teaching practices to aid the inclusion of diverse learners.
  • Overcome stereotypes and build positive dispositions towards children with disabilities, both in the classroom and beyond.

 

Way ahead:

Inclusive education is complex to implement and requires a fine understanding of diverse needs of children and their families across different contexts. India has made considerable progress in terms of putting in place a robust legal framework and a range of programmes and schemes that have improved enrolment rates of children with disabilities in schools.

However, further measures are needed to ensure quality education for every child to achieve the goals and targets of agenda 2030 and more specifically Sustainable Development Goal 4.

 

Sources: the Hindu.

 

Mains Question: We still have much to do to ensure an inclusive, barrier-free and rights-based society for persons with disabilities through empowering them. Discuss the steps taken by government in this regard and examine how far have we been successful in empowering the differently abled?

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