¶ … inclusion, which calls for integration of students with disabilities to the regular classroom/education system in the United States. Specifically, it will provide arguments in favor of using full inclusion in the classroom. What's so special about special education? The children and what they can learn from educational experiences with their peers, that's what's special. Including special education students in the classroom benefits everyone, from the teachers, to the students, to the parents.
FULL INCLUSION
The Education for All Handicapped Children Act (P.L. 94-142) first discussed the issue of full inclusion of students with disabilities in 1975. The act guaranteed "free and appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment" for all children with disabilities. In 1991, the act was amended and renamed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). However, the act did not mandate full inclusion, and the courts have ruled on several different conceptions of the Act and its meaning. Schools are not required to provide full inclusion to students, and many do not, for a variety of reasons, including funding, lack of teacher training, and even misinterpretation of the term.
Arguments against full inclusion in the classroom are often difficult to dispute, and yet, numerous school districts around the nation have met the challenges of full inclusion, and have developed successful and viable programs for their students. Clearly, the issue of full inclusion is not a simple one. Schools must prepare to include all students in the classroom experience. Teachers must be fully trained, and there must be special support staff available. To meet these needs, there must be funding available from the government to subsidize the training and hiring of trained staff, along with additional training for the current staff.
Countless educators, parents, and school officials all feel full inclusion has a variety of benefits, especially if the children are educated in their "home schools," i.e., they do not have to be transported to another school in the district that is removed from their own neighborhood. One study showed:
educating all students with severe intellectual disabilities in their home schools, had at least four...
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