As the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) underscores the importance of inclusive education, Mrs. Ifedinma Nwigwe, Executive Director and Co-Founder of Maple Leaf Early Years Foundation, advocates for unified global efforts in implementing the programme in emergencies, particularly for internally displaced persons and refugees.
She made the call at the 2024 International Conference and Awards organised by The Zero Project Conference, held in Vienna, Austria.
More than 1,000 people from 100 countries attend the annual conference at the United Nations Offices in Vienna,
Mrs. Nwigwe said that inclusive education can transform learning environments by ensuring that pupils have a sense of freedom, safety and equality.
She also reiterated the importance of making the learning environment conducive for all categories of pupils, irrespective of their social, physical, emotional and intellectual conditions.
“Inclusive education is important because it provides an educational setting where students from different backgrounds and with different abilities learn together in an inclusive environment, without keeping certain categories of learners in isolation because of their special needs.
“It is imperative that we accommodate all children regardless of their physical, intellectual, social, emotional, linguistic, or other conditions. This is important because educational interventions are already limited in displaced settings because of their peculiar circumstances, and as a result, an inclusive environment is vital. Inclusive education has proven to increase the level of empathy in the pupils and also deepen the sense of accommodation and tolerance that strengthen the human support systems; it builds up the bank of emotional intelligence in the children while also boosting their confidence and ability to compete irrespective of their peculiar conditions. I say this because due to the type of trauma and other difficult conditions that they have been exposed to, inclusivity in educational programmes is the only means of ensuring that every pupil feels a sense of accommodation,” Mrs. Nwigwe stated.
She commended the management of the educational processes in many of Nigeria’s displaced persons environments, saying the country has been proactive in incorporating inclusivity in the education of distressed citizens.
“In many of the interventions we have made with the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs and the National Commission for People Living with Disabilities, inclusive education has been integral to every intervention we have made, and the results have been commendable. We are always intentional about ensuring that all children living with disabilities, for instance, are fully accommodated and provided with tools and motivations that facilitate learning in a plural environment without making them feel different,” she stated.
This, she said, has helped the healing process for both the displaced people and those living with disabilities because, according to her, “psychosocial support, and being around children whose abilities may differ from theirs make a significant impact on their journey of self-reliance and healing.”
She revealed that through her interventions and the support provided by the Nigerian government and its agencies, his organisation has been able to plant holistic and safe learning spaces for children, particularly those who feel different because of their disability, enabling them to fit in well in their environment.
The NGO also provides school feeding in internally displaced persons camps through its Transitional Learning Centre intervention as a means of enhancing the comfort and disposition of the beneficiaries to learning.
Inclusive education, according to UNICEF, involves transforming the whole education system-legislation and policy, systems for financing, administration, design, delivery and monitoring of education, and the way schools are organised.
“The Zero Project Conference (#ZeroCon24) is a unique global meeting place to innovate for disability inclusion.
At the 2024 conference, innovations and sessions will be centred around the topics of inclusive education and ICT.”
Meanwhile, the Maple Leaf Early Years Foundation (MLEY) is an NGO based in Nigeria that provides early childhood and elementary education to children from low-income backgrounds, rural areas, and camps for internally displaced persons.
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