Free Articles from Interaction 28 Issue 2 Choice does not equal “informed choice” ...
v28/2/’14 : interaction
Choice does not equal “informed
choice” around inclusive education
Catherine & Andrew McDonald
“First we make our choices. Then our choices make us.”
Anne Frank
Almost from the moment Sofia, our first born was diagnosed, we told ourselves and
the very few people we could trust that we would give her back in an instant if that
meant she could avoid the isolation, loneliness and sense of purposelessness that we
believed would define her future. We truly believed that at best we could hope to
perhaps trick her somehow into having some sense of belonging. We wondered
what sort of band-aid we would be able to find to make life bearable for her. No one
had told us otherwise in those early days and we had both grown up in worlds that
gave us no reason to expect that anything more than this was possible. We had no
way of knowing that our “not quite whole” baby would grow into a young girl with
such gifts to share with all she encountered…that Sofia with her ‘intellectual deficit’
would become the teacher and we the students.
School was always going to be a daunting prospect. Handing over our tiny “June”
baby at the tender age of three and a half to complete strangers and trusting that they
would do the right thing by her was a leap of faith that felt like a free-fall from the
international space station. The fact that Sofia was born in June meant that she would
be the youngest in her class, but we wanted to give her exposure to her typically
developing peers from as early as possible. Our theory was that the peer modelling
of children with age-appropriate development was likely to push Sofia along or at
least drag her along in its wake.
We started thinking about school shortly after Sofia turned one years old, researching
our options and trying to grasp just what ‘Inclusion’ meant, what it would look like
when it was working, how “do-able” it was and how the costs and benefits stacked
up. Little did we know the answers would remain elusive for another five years. We
visited multiple schools, attended a number of Education Options Forums and spoke
to the director of the Centre for Inclusive Schooling, several teachers, therapists, a
school psychologist, our Disability Services Commission Local Area Coordinator,
parents of children with similar diagnoses who had already been through the
schooling process, tapping into every imaginable source of information. The
overwhelming focus of all of these was the level of funding and resources available
and the rights of parents and children. We most often left these encounters feeling
none the wiser and somewhat numb. Reflecting back on it now, it all makes sense.
Australian Institute on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
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