Kemp has followed Lili and the rest of her mixed kinder cohort through their school years into adulthood. “They’ve all gone on to success,from Paralympics to acting,” she says. “Iknow inclusion works.”
But Kemp expects there will always be a need for some special schools for those with the most complex needs.
Lili in a special integrated pilot kinder program for kids with disabilities in the early 2000s,now run by STAR Limited.
Though Meaker wanted Lili to stay in mainstream classes,her medical needs made a special school the right fit. There Lili thrived,learning to sign and making friends. Today,the 25-year-old lives in her own house with two ex-classmates.
“In an ideal world,we’d have inclusion,but this isn’t an ideal world,” Kemp says. “These kids need tailored support.”
Catia Malaquias is among academics and advocates calling for a phase-out of special schools. She stresses that no one is suggesting they should be shut down tomorrow.
“There will need to be a transition,” she says. “But until that commitment is made at a policy level,the easier option will always be to send kids with disabilities somewhere else.”
Catia Malaquias says she wants Julius to live a life where he is always part of the community.Credit:Stefan Gosatti
Malaquias’ son Julius,who has Down syndrome,has always attended mainstream schools with his sisters. But when he reached high school,Malaquias was warned the “gap” between him and other students would be too great and that he wouldn’t have any friends.
“There was this doom scenario,” she says. “But Julius loves high school as much as primary school. I know other kids are looking out for him. I want him to be part of his community. I want him to be known.”
Still,inclusive education lecturer Dr Kim Davies says phasing out special schools isn’t politically feasible as it will take away parental choice and distract from much-needed improvements to inclusion at mainstream schools where most kids with disabilities are already taught.
Australian Special Education Principals Association president Matthew Johnson says if special schools are considered segregation,then by the same logic,single-sex,religious and high-fee private schools are segregated too.
Julius Panetta in Year 8 attends a mainstream high school and loves it as much as he did primary school.Credit:Stefan Gosetti
“I’m terrified to think of my kids being thrown back into the mainstream,that[are] already not coping,for a thought experiment,” Johnson says. “It should be about what the kids need.”
Research has found that fewer than40 per cent of Australian teachers feel equipped to teach kids with special needs,and the sector is currently struggling with a teacher shortage.