Abstract

Under the light of educational equality, visually impaired students (VIS) have the right to improve their quality of life through educational achievement. Fortunately, policies and regulations encourage inclusive education to support all types of students including students with visual impairment. This means that the VIS are required to complete a compulsory educational system including studying English language in school and university levels. However, the mismatch between the objectives of the support policies and the practicality towards English Language Learning (ELL) among these students still exists in Thailand, and the difficulties in the ELL of the VIS remain uninvestigated. Hence, this study aims to explore the essence and meaning of ELL in an inclusive classroom derived from the perceptions of the VIS. To elicit the experiences from the participants, the phenomenological methodology was employed as the research design. The findings were drawn from nine students with visual impairment studying in an inclusive classroom setting. The data was collected from in-depth interviews and grouped into units of meaning or themes. The results showed that the essence of this study was shaped from both negative and positive aspects of ELL in an inclusive classroom, which can contribute to the VIS, practitioners, and administrative levels as guidance for future practices.

Highlights

  • 1.1 IntroductionEducation is the key to opportunity and it is for everyone, including students with disabilities

  • Through the phenomenological study notions, this study provided the lived experiences of the visually impaired students (VIS) regarding the interplay between their English Language Learning (ELL) and their educational lives in the inclusive classroom setting based on the themes or the units of meaning extracted from the in-depth interviews

  • The essence for this phenomenological study was depicted through their expectation towards the pedagogical aspect in ELL and the awareness of how meaningful ELL is for their future

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Summary

Introduction

Education is the key to opportunity and it is for everyone, including students with disabilities. Equal to the sighted students, the VIS have the opportunity to broaden their future career path. In Thailand, according to the National Education Act of 1999, the curriculum aimed for equal education and regulated that all education levels ‘shall aim at human development with desirable balance regarding knowledge, critical thinking, capability, virtue and social responsibility’. It is obliged that the curricula ‘shall emphasize academic development with priority given to higher professions and research for development of the bodies of knowledge and society’ Despite the support policies officially provided by the government, the education path for the VIS who are studying at educational institutes has been found lacking compared to the whole population of people with visual impairment

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