Urban teens face unequal access to inclusive education

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Reports highlights unequal access to inclusive education for urban teens - by emma_okelly

Her primary school was just a short walk away but now that she is in first year, the 13-year-old is out the door with her older sister by 7.15am.

More widely, the research finds that city dwelling children in general are getting short-changed compared to their rural cousins when it comes to access to inclusive non-segregated education. In further evidence of the lack of choice for Dublin City children, more than 80% of secondary schools in the capital are segregated by religion and almost 20% are fee-charging.

One would think that the more disadvantaged area would come out on top when it comes to public investment and that - given all the concern about tackling disadvantage - the State would be investing more heavily in educational provision in these areas. "The school is fantastic, but she gets exhausted and finds the commute really difficult," Rosie’s mother says. The report says planning decisions being made by the Department of Education are serving to exacerbate, rather than remedy, inequality

"The school's chosen location was as socioeconomically exclusive as it was geographically remote," the study notes, and"perpetuated systemic inequality in the provision of education".

 

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emma_okelly The RTE report highlights unequal access to an educate together second level school & ignores positive legacy of all other educators including the VEC/ETB & its contribution to education in the locality, which included development of a local animation industry and Oscar winners.

emma_okelly Now do rural teens…

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