Abstract
In March 2020 all schools in Italy were closed due to the Covid‐19 pandemic, and the novelty of distance learning was introduced. During the 2020–2021 school year, pre‐primary and primary schooling was carried out in situ, while secondary education was re‐organized into a mixed system, with students spending 50% of their time attending classes from home, in distance learning. This reconfiguration was a challenge to students, teachers, and parents, affecting the learning experience of the most vulnerable students and students with disabilities, particularly. It necessarily brought into question Italy’s “progressive” legal framework for “school inclusion.” The scope of the present article is to analyze the teaching activities carried out with students with disabilities in Italy during the first wave of the emergency lockdown and their consequent challenges for school inclusiveness. An overview of the Italian inclusive model in education and the national measures adopted to guarantee the right to education during times of school closure/restriction is outlined. We have sought to test the hypothesis that distance learning may introduce many risks for inclusion (resulting in a “downgrading inclusion,” that is, a decline of the level of inclusion already reached for students with disabilities), but it may also present an improvement in how teachers address these students and their needs. To this end, after reporting data from the available studies on this target, we provide insights from a web questionnaire submitted to a non‐probabilistic sample of nearly 150 primary and (lower and upper) secondary school teachers. Results showcase that, though with a general worsening of school inclusion, in some cases, teachers were actually able to support students with disabilities and their families in a new, customized, empathetic, and more attentive manner.
Highlights
In March 2020 all schools in Italy were closed due to the Covid‐19 pandemic, and the novelty of distance learning was introduced
During the 2020–2021 school year, pre‐primary and primary schooling took place reg‐ ularly, while secondary education was re‐organized into a mixed system, with students spending 50% of their time attending classes from home, in distance learn‐ ing
Empirical evidence generated from a web questionnaire submit‐ ted to a non‐probabilistic sample of nearly 150 Italian pri‐ mary and secondary school teachers will be discussed
Summary
In March 2020 all schools in Italy were closed due to the Covid‐19 pandemic, and the novelty of distance learning was introduced. During the 2020–2021 school year, pre‐primary and primary schooling took place reg‐ ularly, while secondary education was re‐organized into a mixed system, with students spending 50% of their time attending classes from home, in distance learn‐ ing. This reconfiguration posed a challenge to every stu‐. Social Inclusion, 2022, Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages X–X dent, teacher, parent, and school manager, highlighting latent educational problems and unveiling educational inequalities already affecting the most vulnerable stu‐ dents Among this group, students with disabilities more generally, and the issue of their inclusion in education have been an educational priority during the Covid health crisis. Empirical evidence generated from a web questionnaire submit‐ ted to a non‐probabilistic sample of nearly 150 Italian pri‐ mary and secondary school teachers will be discussed
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