Hannah Awadzi
Ms Gloria Gyamea, a Physiotherapist at the Orthopedic
Training Centre (OTC), Nsawam, has called on the Ghana Education Service to
urgently ensure that children with cerebral palsy are admitted into mainstream
schools
Ms Gyamea, demonstrating how to fix a splint to parents |
She said: “As a physiotherapist, the first recommendation I
make to parents is to tell them to send their children to mainstream school but
most of the children return to me disappointed the their children have been
refused admission.”
“I have a list of about 250 parents with cerebral palsy
children who have been refused admission at into pre-school simply because they
have cerebral palsy,” Ms Gyamea said.
She expressed the concern when OTC organized a workshop for
parents and care givers of cerebral palsy children to enhance their knowledge
on CP management.
Ms Gyamea said that usually when children with cerebral
palsy are admitted into mainstream schools they pick up developmental skills
quickly and it further enhances their development.
“I have a nephew with cerebral palsy who went to mainstream
school and walked just after the third term,” she said explaining that as
children with CP see their colleagues walk and engage in other activities, they
get motivated and pushed to also do it.
She urged the Ghana Education service to treat this issue as
an urgent one to avoid wasting and possibly killing children with cerebral
palsy.
“Ghana Education Service please tell us where we can put
children with CP, should we continue to hide them indoors.”
Ms Naomi Adumea Asante, an educationist, who expressed
passion about the issue of admitting children with cerebral palsy into
mainstream school, said it is an issue which government should treat as urgent.
She noted that every teacher who has gone through the
training college knows a bit about special education, however, they do not put
those skills to use.
“I am particularly worried about the so-call Montessori
springing up and charging huge fees and yet refuse children with cerebral palsy
admission or do not treat them well when they are in their schools.”
Ms Adumea Asante said depending on the severity of cerebral
palsy in a child, he or she could get worse if the child is put in a special
schools and even when parents send these children to specials schools they are
shown a tall list of people waiting to be admitted.
Mrs Hannah Awadzi, Initiator of the Special Mothers Project,
an advocacy and awareness creation programme on cerebral palsy, said: “I have
seen a lot of mothers who says their children with cerebral palsy even though
intelligent are kept home because schools don’t accept them.”
She expressed surprise that even with the launch of the
Inclusive Education Policy, nothing seems to be happening, and said she hoped
that government paid more attention to such issues.
“Many educated parents with children who have cerebral palsy
are forced to stop work and stay home to take care of their children, how then
can they take care of the children since they earn nothing and yet taking care
of these children is a lot of money, “ Mrs Awadzi added
This is welcoming, but sometimes main school, particularly pre school may not be the ideal place for a child with CP. This is because the child may need more therapy at this stage than the academics. Unless of course the pre-school has provision to accommodate therapy for the child.
ReplyDeleteTruth is that some of the children with CP just may not be able to attend main stream schools (sad as it is, but that's the reality) thus the focus should be to provide the special schools well equipped to meet their needs where they can be taken to daily. For those with milder form of CP, no doubt they can fit in the main stream schools with less difficulty and support.