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Charities call for pause of introduction of Inclusive Special Classes

A primary school classroom
Inclusive Special Classes are due to open in five post-primary schools this coming September

The Department of Education and Youth is to meet with disability organisations to discuss concerns about a new kind of special education class called an Inclusive Special Class which was announced yesterday.

It has convened a meeting of the Special Education Forum following calls for a pause to the new approach pending comprehensive consultation with the families of children with additional needs as well as representative organisations.

Autism charity AsIAm and Inclusion Ireland wrote to Minister for Education Hildegarde Naughton and her department requesting an urgent meeting to discuss Inclusive Special Classes.

In a statement outlining "deep concern", the organisations said: "Yet again, this announcement was made without any consultation with children, families and their representative organisations.

"This is a pattern; the people who will experience these shifts in policy most profoundly are the ones who are not at the table and who do not have their voices heard.

"Rather than co-designing policy meaningfully and strategically, this piecemeal approach causes unnecessary and avoidable confusion and upset for our communities.

"It is beyond time children's voices were centred in policy which deeply affects their lives," the statement said.

Inclusive Special Classes are due to open in five post-primary schools this coming September.

In what appears to be a hybrid of special class and mainstream provision, the department has said the classes will "help students with additional needs learn alongside other students in mainstream classes, while also having time during the day to receive extra support in a special class."