Last week I attended a screening of
Including Samuel with Kelly and Elliot. It was shown at a local elementary school and moderated by our friend Jennifer, who has attended ARDs with Kelly and assisted her tirelessly with paperwork and ARD preparation.
Including Samuel addresses the challenges of including children with disabilities in mainstream classrooms, a topic that is near and dear to us as we have struggled to get Chloe placed at school.
Samuel is the son of photojournalist and filmmaker Dan Habib. When Samuel was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, he was forced to face the issue of inclusion, a topic about which he hadn't thought much about before. Habib follows Samuel's progress, as we see Samuel interacting with his peers at school and participating in the regular education classroom. The Habibs are fortunate to live near a school whose philosophy of full inclusion accommodates students of varying levels of disability in a single classroom.
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Samuel interacts with typical classmates. |
Besides Samuel, we meet hip-hop artist Keith Jones, an inspiring adult with cerebral palsy who has not let his disability prevent him from a full life, including working as a music producer, marrying and having children, and functioning independently. He says the best thing to have happened to him was to be placed in regular education classes, not segregated classes. Other individuals featured in the film illustrate the clear benefits of full inclusion for both the disabled and their typical peers.
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Keith Jones--one inspiring guy! |
Habib doesn't try to sugar coat the difficulties that arise with inclusion. In teacher interviews, we see the range of opinions and emotions, from Samuel's teacher, who believes that full inclusion is the best way for
all children to learn, regardless of speech or mobility problems, to the mainstream teacher who tearfully describes the challenges of reaching both the superbly gifted and the profoundly disabled at the same time. As one teacher points out, however, the danger of creating separate classrooms for disabled children is that if there is a separate classroom, it
will be used, needed or not.
Given our experience with schools which have not practiced inclusion, this quote hit way too close to home: "Inclusion is an easy thing to do poorly. When we do it poorly, we become convinced that it cannot work." Even when one parent or one teacher promotes inclusion, a simplistic approach of placing a child with disabilities in a mainstream classroom without adequate support or appropriate modifications can lead to failure. I fear that in many schools, poor execution has led to suspicion or outright rejection of full inclusion.
While
Including Samuel does not provide all the answers, the film does a great service by raising lots of questions, and, most importantly, raising the possibility that full inclusion can and does work.