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    Moscow, Prospekt Marshala Jukova, d.78, korp.2
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    Articles by tag "inclusion":

    Sheveleva D.E. Children with speech disorders in an inclusive kindergarten: how to build communication
    2023, 2 p. 34-43
    Sheveleva D.E.
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    76

    The relevance of the subject of the article. The article is devoted to the communication of children with speech disorders in an inclusive kindergarten. Staying in the environment of healthy children has a positive effect on socialization and the formation of communication skills in preschoolers with disabilities. But meanwhile, there may be a contradiction between the social conditions of preschool inclusion and the real opportunities for communication in some children. These contradictions affect children with speech disorders. These children, due to speech pathology, are not capable of full communication. Therefore, the problem of communication and socialization in preschoolers with speech disorders should be solved.

    Description of the research progress. Studies on age periodization, according to which communication develops between preschoolers who do not have speech pathologies, are analyzed. The author of the article refers to the brain organization of speech and shows its systemic nature from the point of view of the participation of different brain areas. As a theoretical basis, two classifications of speech disorders are given in the article, with the help of which speech pathologies in childhood are studied; in the future, in accordance with this classification, according to the form of speech pathology, work is carried out to eliminate speech defects. The article has an interdisciplinary character and integrates psychology, pedagogy and speech therapy.

    Research results. The work on speech correction begins with the diagnostic stage. Diagnostic examination, which establishes the state of active and passive speech in a child, is based on the position on the systemic structure of speech functions. The article shows that speech has a systemic structure – from elementary to the most complex forms. Speech therapy classes have different aims and structure, depending on the correctional focus on a particular speech defect. In addition to speech therapy classes, recommendations are given on the development of etiquette speech and on the formation of communication skills within the framework of a role-playing game and theatricalization.

    Conclusion. Working in a kindergarten to restore speech reduces the “risk zone” for socialization. With sufficient communication, children acquire the possibility of full inclusion in the peer environment.

    Keywords: inclusive preschool education children with speech disorders social integration speech therapy examination speech development and correction methods of social inclusion
    DOI: 10.24412/2782-4519-2023-2116-34-43
    Letunovskaya S.V., Potashova I.I. Criteria for the Effectiveness of the Implementation of Inclusive Education in Preschool Educational Organization
    2021, 4 p. 58–67
    Letunovskaya S.V. , Potashova I.I.
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    65

    The relevance of the topic of the article. In recent years, more and more preschool educational organizations) have become inclusive. In this regard, it becomes necessary to identify criteria for assessing the quality of providing special conditions to preschoolers with disabilities.

    The aim of the study. This article examines the problem of criteria-based assessment of the effectiveness of the implementation of inclusive education in preschool education. The analysis of studies related to both general issues of inclusion and the assessment of its quality, as well as an analysis of the activities of effectively operating educational complexes in the city of Moscow, is carried out.

    The results of the study was the identified system of criteria that helps to determine, especially at the initial stage of implementing inclusive practices in preschool education, the degree of their compliance with the regulatory legal framework of the Russian Federation. This system of criteria includes: 1) the creation and implementation of a specific mechanism for providing special educational conditions to children with disabilities; 2) the sufficiency of the local regulatory framework governing the implementation of inclusive education in a particular institution; 3) the availability of a document that allows for the individualization of the process of creating special conditions and an integrated approach to overcoming the existing developmental deficits of a preschooler; 4) transparency and accessibility of information about the implementation of inclusive practices in kindergarten for all participants in educational relations; 5) the presence in the preschool educational organization of the structures necessary for the deployment of inclusive practices: the psychological and pedagogical support service and the psychological and pedagogical council; 6) the availability of personnel resources necessary for the implementation of special conditions and the level of their competence; 7) a developing subject-spatial environment, organized taking into account the special needs and capabilities of pupils with disabilities, both in the group and in the kindergarten as a whole.

    Conclusion. As a result of the study, criteria are proposed that complement the existing system of the effectiveness of the implementation of inclusive education assessment and will be especially useful for the management teams of preschool educational institutions.

    Keywords: inclusive education preschool educational organization inclusion criteria children with disabilities inclusive educational environment
    DOI: 10.24412/1997-9657-2021-4106-58-67
    Volkova T.V., Topaj N. Multicultural Education at the Present Stage of Development of an Inclusive Society. Russian and German Experience
    2020, 5 p. 32–48
    Topaj N. , Volkova T.V.
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    98
    The article is dedicated to the analysis of the concept of “multicultural education” in the context of the development of an inclusive society, in particular, on the comparison on the implementation of multicultural component in the Russian educational system and the experience and implementation of a multicultural educational environment and bilingual education in Germany. The authors consider the adaptation and integration of migrants as one of the most important humanistic priorities of educational activities, the implementation which requires active participation of the entire education system in accordance with the “concept of state free migration policy of the Russian Federation „for the period up to 2025, which prioritizes the tasks of assisting migrants in the process of social and cultural adaptation and integration, e.g. on the topic of speech development, interaction and the improvement of the system of measures, that ensure respect the attitude of migrants to the culture and traditions of the host community. Multicultural education in Russia is viewed in the context of a multinational environment and migration policy. One part oft he article is to analyze the concept of a teachers multicultural (intercultural) competence as non-an integral part of general pedagogical competence. The need to develop a teacher‘s multicultural worldview has to be put in the context of the migration policy development, diversity and globalism of intercultural relations and intercultural communication. The authors are explaining an example of Russian practice implementing a multicultural educational environment and development experience (bi) multicultural environment on the example of the federal state of Berlin. The educational practice and policy will be shown on the implementation of bilingual education in preschool and school organizations, technologies for integrating bilingual children, migrant children, examples of identifying the level of language development (testing of bilingual children for knowledge of the German language). The article describes cognitive development features of bilingual children, considering the connection in the picture the world of the child of several cultures, which is primarily manifested at the linguistic level and special communication skills. The article substantiates the importance of language development, relevance and the need for an inclusive aproach in the process of integrating children, carriers of bilingual and bicultural component of personality. Multicultural, multi-confessional environment is defined as social inclusion, but inclusive education is set in the context of cultural diversity. A social inclusive approach is seen as a necessity for the successful implementation of polycultural education.
    Keywords: multicultural education inclusion inclusive society children-bilinguals children-migrants speech development multicultural competence of a teacher
    DOI: 10.24411/1997-9657-2020-10083
    Volkova T.V., Hentschel T. Inclusion Concepts. Examples of Inclusive and Socio-Psychological Practices in the German Education System
    2020, 2 p. 38–50
    Hentschel T. , Volkova T.V.
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    83

    This paper is devoted to the analysis of the concept of “inclusion”, the existing problems and challenges of the implementation of inclusive education in the world, in particular through the example of the development of inclusion and the implementation of inclusive and socio-psychological practices in the education system in Germany. It describes the system of services for persons with disabilities, based on the classification by ICF, which is a standard and instrument of the World Health Organization, where disability is not considered as a property of a person, but a social phenomenon. The research is aimed at the organization of an inclusive environment, which does not exist in isolation, does not belong to a particular area of education, but is a natural part of society, and a general pedagogical concept. Ways of developing inclusion and inclusive education in particular are considered with regard to the history and mentality of countries, where the global community has moved away from a narrow view of inclusion as interaction with people with disabilities, and towards a broad acceptance of inclusion, where societies are diverse, with no segregation on the basis of diversity, from language and religion to disability, development and gender philosophy, which is the ideological basis for inclusion.

    Inclusion as a special, progressive worldview is the emotional maturity of society, a well-thought-out structure of interaction between the child’s family and society and with other families, schools and other social institutions. The existing problems in the implementation of inclusive approaches in education in Russian practice are considered, in particular, the issues of human resources potential. The key principles of remedial and inclusive education, including in Russian educational practice, based on research by Lev Vygotsky, are presented.

    Keywords: inclusion psychological service tolerance barrier-free environment special needs children ICF (International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health)
    DOI: 10.24411/1997-9657-2020-10067
    Lubovsky V.I. Inclusion – a Developmental Dead End for the Education of Disabled Children
    2017, 2 p. 32–37
    Lubovsky V.I.
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    56
    This article describes the development of the system of special schools and preschools Russia towards the deepening of differentiation in accordance with an important principle of modern pedagogy – the achievement of the highest possible individualization in education. Unfolded in recent years, the integration of disabled children into regular educational institutions, particularly in the form of inclusion, is directly opposite this principle of pedagogy and ignores the patterns of mental activity in disabled children. It is also amazing that the realization of this integration was brought in by non-experts, showing a lack of understanding of these laws/patterns: through the introduction of inclusion they ruined the inclusive education of children with impaired speech, who, studying in a regular school, had received speech therapy in school speech therapy centers. Data is provided on the 35 year long experience of implementing integration in the US and the 30 year experience in the UK. In both countries there is no consensus among experts on the feasibility of integration, especially in the form of inclusion. A disabled child in a regular school loses most of the funds and conditions, which provide special education, while he, wherever he studies, remains the object of special education. There is no conclusive research that would prove that even one of the claimed benefits of inclusion has been achieved. Moreover, increasing attention to the adaptation of textbooks convinces us that the basic idea of inclusion – the education of a disabled child in the same class with normally developing children, and the same curriculum and the same textbooks for most disabled children – is untenable.
    Keywords: disabled children special schools and special preschools special education differentiation individualization of learning integration inclusion adaptation
    Martynenko M.N. Making Sense of a Cartoon as a Factor in Developing a Capability For Symbolic Mediation in Preschool Age
    2015, 8 p. 34–39
    Martynenko M.N.
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    56
    The article is devoted to a study conducted in preschool education №2325 called «Academy of Childhood” in Moscow involving participants from the group for 6-7 year old children (N=50.). The aim of the study was to identify the degree of absorption of a preschool child in the culture of animation, the quality of its comprehension as a factor in the development of its capacity for symbolic mediation. The author notes that each subject was given a set of specially selected diagnostic tests to determine his or her level of mental development and certain neuropsychiatric features. The methods were consistent with the subjects’ age specifics and the goals, objectives and hypothesis of the study. In her study, the author used her own technique, developed in accordance with standard provisions for psychometric methods. The study identified four levels of representation of the animated film in children’s minds, and 3 levels of preschool children’s abilities to symbolic mediation. When processing the results obtained the following trend was observed: the higher the degree of a child’s quantitative exposure to cartoon culture – the lower is its propensity for qualitative analysis and comprehension of cartoons. It is noted that the number of cartoons seen is a factor that negatively affects the development level of the child’s capacity for symbolic mediation. Recommendations are given on proper selection of animated films before showing them to a child.
    Keywords: animated film child’s inclusion into culture symbolic mediation cognitive abilities diagnostic set
    Pascal C., Bertram T. Listening to young citizens: the struggle to make real a participatory paradigm in research with young children
    2015, 1 p. 69-79
    Bertram T. , Pascal C.
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    26
    Since the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child was ratified in 1991, children’s right to have a voice, and to have their opinions heard, has led many providers and practitioners in the field of early years to seek ways to involve children’s perspectives in the evaluation and development of practice. Those who value democracy understand that encouraging young children to actively participate has long term implications for participatory citizenship. Researchers in early childhood have also been sensitised to the challenge of inclusive research, in which our youngest children are viewed as active subjects, rather than objects, in a research process that is set in the context of a democratic encounter. The Centre for Research in Early Childhood in Birmingham, England has a strong ethical commitment to including the voices of children as an integral part of all its research and development work. We operate through an ethos of empowerment of all participants, and aim for participatory research practice which has at its heart an active involvement in promoting the rights of children as citizens with voice and power. This paper will trace a brief history of the children’s participatory position in England and explore the struggles and challenges we, as researchers, have faced in making our personal commitment to children’s participation a reality. It will draw upon the work of a series of research and development projects we have undertaken over the last fifteen years in which we tried to work alongside children to explore and document their realities of life in early childhood settings. These projects include the Effective Early Learning (EEL) Programme, the Accounting Early for Life Long Learning (AcE) Programme, the Children Crossing Borders Project (Bertram and Pascal 2007) and the Opening Windows (OW) Programme. Through the work of these projects, and with an especial focus on the Children Crossing Borders research, which was the precursor to the OW programme, we explain how we have attempted to provide space for multiple voices in the research process. We share our learning about how better to support and listen to the voices of young children, who are the most often silenced in the production of knowledge and understandings about their lives. From this experience, methodological and epistemological lessons for researchers and practitioners will be identified and further explored.
    Keywords: participatory paradigm inclusion children’s voice democratic practice research methodology
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