Situating "children-supporting-children" Platform in the Context of the Inclusive Agenda: A Phenomenological Exploration
Abstract
The increasing plurality of the school population today calls for a mandate to promote inclusion in the educational systems by removing grounds that excludes and discriminates. One powerful means of promoting inclusion is through the "children-supporting-children" platform. As such, learners should be guided in the development and enhancement of social skills as a pre-requisite to a society that bars exclusion; however, less is known about it. This paper bridges this research gap by contributing to the intensive understanding and important realization on how children can become co-implementers of the inclusive agenda. A transcendental phenomenological approach was used to analyze how the teacher-participants experience and understand the context of "children-supporting-children" in the inclusive agenda as transpired in their early-grade classrooms.  A semi-structured interview, focus group discussion, and class observation was conducted to gather data to (1) identify and establish their meanings and understanding of the emerging inclusive expressions and concepts exhibited by their pupils and (2) classroom strategies they employ to reinforce the constructs. A structured and inductive analysis was performed to refine the data and identify emerging codes and themes.  The findings of this paper suggest that pre-schoolers are co-constructors of inclusive culture through emerging expressions and that schools are an avenue to enhance such expressions. There is limited research on specific strategies and interventions in an early childhood setting to promote inclusion; therefore, insights in this paper are relevant in implementing pro-active inclusive pedagogies as they are accounts of those who are in the field.
https://doi.org/10.26803/ijlter.19.6.18
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