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The power of inclusive education | Ilene Schwartz | TEDxEastsidePrep

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    Imagine a world
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    in which children of all abilities
    learn, play, and grow together,
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    a world in which ability
    does not stand in a way of making friends
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    or dictate where you get to go to school
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    or who you get to study with.
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    That's what I do every day.
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    I try to think about
    how we make this become a reality,
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    how we try to understand and appreciate
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    the power and the promise
    of inclusive education.
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    So, what is inclusion?
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    Inclusion's not a strategy,
    an instructional strategy.
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    Inclusion isn't a placement option.
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    Inclusion is about belonging.
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    It's about belonging to a community,
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    a group of friends,
    a school, or a community.
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    But it's also important to remember
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    that inclusion is not
    just about being there.
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    We've all probably had the experience
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    where you walk into a room full of people
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    and you don't belong, you're not a member.
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    That doesn't feel very good.
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    So how do we fix that
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    to make sure that the children
    that we are working with
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    don't experience this idea
    of not belonging?
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    Well, we do that through instruction.
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    We do that through teaching.
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    What we want to learn
    and what we've learned
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    is that teaching works,
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    instruction is important.
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    But it is also important to realize
    that instruction doesn't just happen.
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    Instruction is intentional.
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    Instruction is planned.
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    Instruction helps all of us
    be more successful.
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    Whether you're a child learning
    how to negotiate their environment
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    or a little boy with disabilities
    who's learning how to use language
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    or a child in elementary school
    trying to tackle two-digit addition
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    or trying to learn how to ride a bike
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    or you're a 50 plus something
    non-digital native
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    who's trying to figure out
    how to use her new iPad,
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    instruction works.
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    And we all benefit from good instruction.
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    Now, we sometimes as adults
    forget how important good instruction is
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    because we don't venture very far
    out of our comfort zone
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    and try and learn new things.
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    So, one of the things I do every year
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    is encourage my graduate students
    to try to learn a new thing.
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    And they all look at me
    with a perplexed look and say,
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    "We're in graduate school.
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    We're learning new things every day."
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    And I say, "Yeah, but by the time
    you get into graduate school,
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    you know how to do school.
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    So, try to learn something else.
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    Try to learn something
    in a domain that you aren't very good at."
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    And I follow my own advice.
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    So, once every so often,
    I try to learn a skill
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    or achieve something
    in an area that I am not very good at -
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    and that's how I ended up
    doing a triathlon for my 50th birthday -
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    and understand -
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Laughs)
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    And understand the importance
    of instruction.
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    Now, when we think about instruction,
    it's important that we think about
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    what instruction does
    to both the learner and the teacher.
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    One of the things that instruction
    does for the learner is
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    it helps them be more confident
    and more competent, okay?
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    When we have good instruction,
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    the learner, the children, become better
    at what you're teaching them how to do.
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    The teacher becomes
    more confident as well.
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    Because there's nothing more reinforcing
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    than a teacher then seeing
    their students achieve.
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    And really, there's nothing -
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    there's no way to make
    a child feel better about him or herself
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    than to help them
    be successful in their learning.
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    If you want to teach someone,
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    if you want to increase
    someone's self-esteem,
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    teach them how to read.
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    That's how you do it.
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    Now, the thing
    about instruction, though, is
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    that it's important to think
    about what you're teaching.
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    Often when people come to see
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    the inclusive preschools that we run
    at the University of Washington,
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    they'll say to me, "Isn't that great?
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    I can't tell who has a disability
    and who doesn't have a disability."
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    That always makes me happy.
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    But isn't it great the way children
    just naturally interact together?
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    And you know, we have
    about 50 years of data that tell us
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    that if you have children
    with and without disabilities
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    and you don't do anything special,
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    what you'll have is
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    you'll have children
    with and without disabilities
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    in a room together not interacting.
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    So, if we want them to interact together,
    we need to teach it.
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    If we want children to be helpful
    towards each other,
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    to interact and be friendly
    towards each other,
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    we need to teach it.
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    If we want children to care
    about other people in their classroom,
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    we need to teach it.
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    And that teaching is intentional.
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    The other thing about that teaching
    is that it's data-based.
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    What I mean by that is that good
    instruction yields good outcomes.
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    In fact, we like to think about it
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    as saying that student failure
    is instructional failure.
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    When a child doesn't learn
    what we want him or her to learn,
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    it's because we haven't taught it
    to them in the right way.
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    It's not because
    we're necessarily bad teachers.
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    It's because maybe we haven't figured out
    the right way to teach it yet.
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    Maybe we don't have control
    of all the elements
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    that we need to be able
    to have control of.
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    But when a student
    isn't making progress in an area,
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    what that teaches us is
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    that we need to change
    our instructional strategy.
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    Well, instruction is important.
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    It's only important
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    if you're teaching values, skills,
    activities, and outcomes
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    when we are very interested
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    in thinking about what children learn
    from being in inclusive environments.
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    Now, when we started studying inclusion,
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    I was working with some colleagues,
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    and we studied about 35
    children for five years.
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    And these were children
    ranging from preschool to high school.
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    And they had severe disabilities,
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    and we observed them many, many times
    over the course of five years.
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    And we talked to their teachers
    and their parents and their peers
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    and to them, if they
    were able to talk with us,
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    because we were interested in finding out
    what the benefit was of inclusion.
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    We all knew there was benefit.
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    We saw the benefits.
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    We heard the stories.
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    And in fact, one of the stories
    we heard every year was
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    what I like to call
    the birthday party story.
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    So, imagine that you have a third-grader
    with severe disabilities
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    who's always been
    in a segregated classroom.
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    And this year, because their school
    has decided to embrace inclusion,
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    the child is in a general
    education classroom
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    with support.
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    And about three months
    into the school year,
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    Bryan, our third-grader, comes home,
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    and in his backpack
    is a birthday party invitation.
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    And his parents say this is the first time
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    he's ever been invited
    to a birthday party.
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    That's a big outcome, okay?
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    But it's not the outcome of inclusion.
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    The number of party invitations you get,
    it's not the outcome.
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    But it's an indicator of an outcome.
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    And what are the outcomes
    we're looking for?
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    The outcomes we're looking for
    are membership, relationship, and skills.
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    And membership is how we interact,
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    how a child interacts with the group,
    with the school, with the classroom,
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    with the community,
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    what kind of accommodation are made
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    to help that child participate
    in a meaningful way.
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    Relationships are how the child
    interacts on a one-to-one basis
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    with other children, students
    in their classroom,
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    and we think about
    the range of relationships
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    that student demonstrates.
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    So we think about the relationships
    where sometimes you're a peer
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    with someone in your classroom.
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    Sometimes you're helping
    someone in your classroom.
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    Sometimes you're receiving help
    from someone in your classroom.
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    And sometimes you have conflicts
    with someone in your classroom,
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    and you have to learn how to settle
    those conflicts in an appropriate way.
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    Now, you notice one of the kinds
    of relationships we don't label
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    is friendship.
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    Because friendship
    is a complex range of relationships
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    where you sometimes are helping
    and sometimes receiving help,
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    sometimes hanging out,
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    and sometimes having conflicts
    and settling those conflicts.
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    And of course, another outcome
    of inclusive education are skills.
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    We don't want to ever
    not give enough credit
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    to how important it is to learn skills,
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    but skills by themselves
    don't help us accomplish great things.
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    We all know people
    who are very good at math
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    or very good at writing
    or very good at science
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    who can't use those skills,
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    because they can't work with other people,
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    because they don't have
    good relationships,
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    because they aren't interested in
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    or don't have the skills
    to be a member of a group.
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    So these things together
    are what we call inclusive education.
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    So we've talked about what inclusion is.
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    We've talked about
    how to promote inclusion.
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    But now the question is,
    Why do we care,
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    why do we care about inclusion?
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    And I like to sum it up this way.
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    Inclusion is the celebration
    of diversity put into action.
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    If we care about diversity,
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    then we have to do something
    to make this diversity come true.
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    Just like we have 50 years of data
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    about children
    with and without disabilities
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    playing together,
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    that if you put them in a room
    and you don't do anything special,
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    you'll children with disabilities
    and without disabilities in a room
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    not playing together.
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    But we know that if we use
    our smart instructional practices
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    to facilitate interaction,
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    everyone benefits.
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    And that's the power
    and the promise of inclusion:
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    making sure everyone is supported,
    everyone is challenged,
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    and everyone benefits
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    in this great inclusive
    world that we have.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The power of inclusive education | Ilene Schwartz | TEDxEastsidePrep
Description:

The classroom is a complex environment. If not explicitly managed, it can quickly turn into a collection of smaller groups that happen to be in the same room rather than an inclusive whole. See how this, sometimes overlooked, aspect can make a profound difference.

Dr. Ilene Schwartz is a professor in the area of special education at the University of Washington and the director of the Haring Center for Research and Training in Education at UW. She earned her PhD in child and developmental psychology from the University of Kansas and is a board certified behavior analyst (BCBA). Dr. Schwartz joined the UW faculty in 1991 and has an active research and professional training agenda with primary interests in the area of autism, inclusion, and the sustainability of educational interventions. She has had consistent research funding from the U.S. Department of Education since 1990 and serves on a number of editorial review boards including the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis and the Journal of Early Intervention.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
11:30

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