Excluded or Included by COVID 19? The Impact of COVID 19 on Inclusive Education Efforts with Regard to Migrant Children in Belgium

S. Damery, Alissia Raziano
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Abstract

This article presents empirical findings from the H2020 CHILD UP project with an investigation of the impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on migrant children’s education and wellbeing in school. It aims to understand if and how the new education landscape and hybrid learning initiatives have changed inclusive education efforts geared towards migrant students in two Communities of Belgium. ‘Inclusive education’ is a key term often used in pedagogical discourse and describes an ideal situation where the unique, individual educational needs of each child can be met while the child remains in the mainstream classroom. The particular needs of migrant students, however, are often overlooked in inclusive education discourse, and their position can become even more complicated with the added pressures of the pandemic. Through questionnaires and interviews with students, teachers, and other school actors, we found that migrant students were often disproportionately negatively impacted by hybrid and remote learning measures, but that the situation also offered some surprising opportunities for mentoring and peer support and these contrasting outcomes are presented here.
COVID - 19排除还是纳入?新冠肺炎疫情对比利时移民儿童全纳教育工作的影响
本文介绍了H2020 CHILD UP项目的实证结果,调查了2019冠状病毒病大流行对流动儿童教育和在校福利的影响。它旨在了解新的教育格局和混合学习倡议是否以及如何改变了针对比利时两个社区移民学生的全纳教育工作。“全纳教育”是教学话语中经常使用的一个关键术语,它描述了一种理想的情况,在这种情况下,每个孩子的独特的、个性化的教育需求都能得到满足,而孩子们仍然在主流教室里。然而,在包容性教育话语中,移徙学生的特殊需求往往被忽视,他们的处境可能会随着疫情的增加而变得更加复杂。通过对学生、教师和其他学校参与者的问卷调查和访谈,我们发现流动学生往往不成比例地受到混合学习和远程学习措施的负面影响,但这种情况也为指导和同伴支持提供了一些令人惊讶的机会,这里展示了这些对比结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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