TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.      SPECIAL EDUCATION                                                                                                     
2.                      GENERAL                PRINCIPLES                                                                                                   
3.                      ROLE OF SINDH EDUCATION DEPARTMENT IN SPECIAL EDUCATION                    
4.                      PRESENT                SITUATION                                                                                                     
5.                      ROLE OF BUREAU OF CURRICULUM IN THE PROGRESS OF SPECIAL                    
          EDUCATION                IN SINDH
          (i)                     Implementation of UNDP assisted Project for Special Education in                Sindh      
          (ii)                     Establishment of the Pilot Project for the Education and                Rehabilitation of       
                                  Physically Handicapped Children
          (iii)                    Establishment of Pilot Project for the Education and                Rehabilitation of the       
                                  Blind at Khairpur
          (iv)                    Implementation of the Scheme of Opening Units for the Handicapped                in        
                                  District/Sub Divisional Head Quarters in the Province
          (v)                    Development of Diploma Curricula for the Teachers of the                Handicapped       
          (vi)                    Translation of the Book “Exceptional Children” into Urdu and                Sindhi            
                                  (Providing Resource Material to the Working Teachers in their                Local
                                  (Languages)
          (vii)                   Purchase of Equipment for the Institutions of the Handicapped                through         
                                  UNICEF
          (viii)                  Recommendations for the Federal Ministry Grant of Rupees                One                  
                                  Million each to the Selected Schools of the Deaf in Sindh.
          (ix)                    Survey of the Handicapped in Hyderabad                Region                                          
          (x)                    Federal Government Grant-in-Aid to the Institutions for the                Handicapped       
                                  through Department of Education
          (xi)                    Deputation of Officers for Foreign Training for Bureau of                Curriculum and      
                                  Creation of One Post of Program Officer
          (xii)                   Bureau’s General Recommendations for the Enhancement of                Special             
                                  Education with Possible Issues
6.                      APPENDIX – ‘A’                                        
1. SPECIAL EDUCATION:
 Each                child has right to an education. The purposes and goals of                education are essentially similar for all children, while the                techniques required to help individual children progress may be                different. Some children will require substantial modification of                the educational program others only minor variations.
 Special                education is the educational component of rehabilitation. It is                needed for all those individuals who experience or are at risk of                experiencing significant and continuing difficulties in learning                and in adjusting to normal educational opportunities made                available to other persons. The term special education has been                used to denote those aspects of education that are applied to                handicapped and gifted children but are not usually used with the                majority of average children. Special is defined by Webster as                ‘distinguished by some unusual quality; uncommon; noteworthy;                extra ordinary; additional to the regular; extra; utilized or                employed for a certain purpose in addition to the ordinary’. Those                definitions are certainly applicable to special education, which                consists of the modifications of or additions to school practices                intended for the ordinary child practices that are unique,                uncommon, of unusual quality, and in particular in addition to the                organization and instructional procedures used with the majority                of children. Children and adults with disabilities comprise a                substantial part of the population. The consensus of expert                opinion and various research surveys is that 10 to 15 percent of                children are identified as disabled and required active                intervention and specialized services. Conditions of poverty                disease, etc, can result in higher prevalence of disabled children                who will require special education intervention.
2. GENERAL PRINCIPLES:
a)      Educational                resources for handicapped students should be comparable to those                available for other students and appropriate to meet the special                needs of those children, since these needs have often been long                neglected or received unduly low priority. 
b)      Special                education programs in the future will be found in a variety of                settings, with some disabled children able to participate in a                regular school setting, while others will require very intensive                program. There should be as a basic assumption underlying                educational and other efforts on behalf of the handicapped, a                commitment to integrating the disabled person as fully as possible                into the community of non-handicapped persons. History is replete                with examples of unnecessary segregation of disabled, and                consequent substandard treatment and determination. 
(c)     Wherever                handicapped students are being educated alongside non-handicapped                students, those responsible for educational provision must develop                a clearly stated plan which specifies the steps to be taken and                precise resources which will be required to ensure that the                assessed needs of the individual student will be fully met.                Placing a handicapped student in a normal setting is only the                first step to integration. 
(d)     Special                education services should be: 
(i)                     Individualized: i.e. based on the assessed and agreed needs of the                individual students and leading to clearly stated curriculum goals                and short term objectives which are regularly revised, and where                necessary, revised. 
(ii)     Locally                accessible: i.e. within reasonable traveling distance of the                pupils’ home or residence, except in special circumstances where                the pupils’ needs cannot be met by these means. 
(iii)                  Comprehensive: i.e. serving all persons special needs irrespective                of age or degree of handicap, such that no child of schools age is                excluded from educational provision on grounds of severity of                handicap or receives educational services significantly inferior                to those enjoyed by any other students. 
(e)     Educational                services should be made available to children below school age and                the educationally and developmentally oriented. Home visiting                services should be available from the first weeks of life. 
(f)                     Educational opportunities should also be provided to adolescents                and adults at least on the same scale as to all other sections of                the community. 
(g)     To respond                appropriate to these needs there must be primary responsibility                placed in a single agency. The educational authorities should have                the responsibility for education of all children, without regard                to the type or severity of their disability. Comprehensive                programming for disabled persons will require a full range of                services, health, social welfare, rehabilitation employment                placement etc. and this will necessarily involve close cooperation                among various governmental community and voluntary agencies. Some                agency however, must take the lead and assume the responsibility                for the child. The establishment of a national body such as a                council or commission for the handicapped to coordinate and                promote intersectoral and interdisciplinary planning and                development has been as a necessary step especially for countries                which are venturing newly in the provision of services for                handicapped persons. 
(h)     While                special education programs will necessarily bring additional                expenditures and each nation is faced with the fact that it has                insufficient funds to meet all its purposes, the costs of managing                to provide early identification and education of handicapped                children and to subsequently train those children and place them                in the work force are much greater. Studies of rehabilitation and                education programs across the world document that the economic                advantages from such programs in productivity, payment of taxes by                handicapped persons and reduced need for welfare assistance and                disability stipends, outweigh the costs. Failure to educate and                train handicapped persons in proportions equal to the provisions                of services for the non-handicapped, because of the problem being                perceived as a lower priority, result in later expensive programs                to care for the untreated disabled developing nations, as they                formulate new approaches to educating children, should be aware of                the problem other nations have had in following this approach of                giving a low priority to the handicapped. Handicapping conditions                are caused by and cause, under development and dependency. 
3. ROLE OF SINDH EDUCATION DEPARTMENT FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION:
In Sindh province                the education of the handicapped has remained the responsibility                of Education Department. Whatever the work has been done in public                or private sector in this regard has been supervised by the                Department through the Directorate of Bureau of Curriculum and                Extension Wing, Sindh Jamshoro. This Directorate along with other                manifold responsibilities pertaining to Curriculum Development,                Teacher Training, Establishment of Audio-Visual Aids Centers,                Production and Procurement of Instructional Material, Organization                of Adult Education Program, Women’s Division Programs and                Agro-Technical Programs in the entire province, also works for the                establishment and enhancement of services for the handicapped                children in the province of Sindh. 
The Directorate                Bureau of Curriculum and Extension Wing, Sindh Jamshoro has                Special Education Cell within its establishment at its                headquarters at Jamshoro which comprises of one subject Specialist                and other assisting officers posted at different places in the                province. The concerned subject specialist and the coordinating                officers are foreign qualified in the field of Special Education                and have been successfully working in this field for the last                three years. 
4. PRESENT SITUATION:
The present                situation of Special Education in the province of                Sindh is quite encouraging.                The extreme interest of Education Department has proved to be the                source of a promising future for this part of Education in Sindh. 
At the moment, 26                institutions are working for the cause of the handicapped all over                the province. Though the majority of these institutions is at                Karachi but the present Government has done a lot to provide the                similar services for the handicapped of the interior. Out of these                26 institutions, 20 are run by private sector and the remaining                six are Government institutions. The privately managed                institutions are registered with Education or Social Welfare                Department and are getting Grant-in-Aid from these provincial                departments every year. 
The provincial                Department of Education has been providing annual grant-in-Aid to                these institutions regularly and has been supervising them by                providing all the instructional help and professional guidance.                Federal Ministry has also been providing them Special Grant-in-Aid                through the provincial Department of Education. 
The list of these                26 institutions is listed below with very brief information. The                detailed information regarding the staff, enrolment, facilities                etc: in respect of each institution has been given in Part ‘B’ of                this repot.
S.#  |                      INSTITUTION  |                      CATEGORY TEACHING  |                      NO. OF TEACHERS  |                      NO. OF STUDENTS  |                    
01.  |                      SCINOSA                      Day Home and Training Institute, 2/1-ST, Block ‘U’, North                      Naziambad, Karachi-33. Ms. Alia Samad. Telephone No: 615565  |                      Mentally Retarded  |                      05  |                      35  |                    
02.  |                      Municipal Deaf and Dumb School,                      Near Habib Hotel, Station Road, Hyderabad.  |                      Deaf  |                      06  |                      37  |                    
03.  |                      Al-Mustaid Home for                      Handicapped, Near Malir Halt, Kali Tanki, B-Area, Malir,                      Karachi.  |                      Mentally Retarded, Deaf  |                      0  |                      06  |                    
04.  |                      DEWA                      School for the Deaf, III-A-4/5, Nazimabad, Karachi. Phone                      No. 617845  |                      Deaf  |                      12  |                      150  |                    
05.  |                      Adult Blind Center, 36/3, Love                      Lane, Garden East, Karachi-3. Phone No. 72072.  |                      Blind  |                      07  |                      29  |                    
06.  |                      The Ida Rieu Schools for the                      Blind & Deaf, Mutes, Near Old Exhibition, Karachi. Phone                      No.: 71127.  |                      Deaf, Blind  |                      14  |                      230  |                    
07.  |                      Day Home Society for the Care                      of Handicapped, K.M.C. Dental Clinic, Jamshed Quarters, Near                      Islamia College, Karachi. Clinic Telephone: 415740  |                      Physically Handicapped  |                      03  |                      45  |                    
08.  |                      ABSA                      School for the Deaf, 26-C, National High Way, Korangi Road,                      Defence Housing Society, Karachi. Phone No. (Residence, Mrs.                      Minhaj Barna, Principal, 437314)  |                      Deaf  |                      14  |                      85  |                    
09.  |                      The Association for the Welfare                      of the Adult Deaf and Dumb, Frere Market, Shahrah-e-Liaquat,                      Karachi-1. Mr. Mehkri, Phone No. 73571  |                      Deaf  |                      07  |                      40 Workers  |                    
10.  |                      General Secretary, Association                      for the Retarded Children, (Day Special School), 20-C,                      Block-6, P.E.C.H.S., Karachi-29. Dr. Nusrat Awan, School                      Phone No. 419741, (Res.) 411760.  |                      Mentally Retarded  |                      06  |                      88  |                    
11.  |                      The Hope Center for Mentally                      Retarded, 1/E/12/8, Nazimabad, Karachi.  |                      Mentally Retarded  |                      05  |                      50  |                    
12.  |                      Government School for the Blind                      Children, Khairpur. Telephone No. 2459.  |                      Blind  |                      07  |                      05  |                    
13.  |                      Rotary School for the Deaf and                      Dumb, Eidgah Road, Sukkur.  |                      Deaf  |                      05  |                      36  |                    
14.  |                      School for the Blind, Near                      Municipal High School, Shahdadpur Road, Nawabshah.  |                      Blind  |                      07  |                      14  |                    
15.  |                      Association for Children with                      Emotional and Learning Problems. 8-B, First South Street,                      Defence Housing Society, Karachi. Miss. Mehar Hassan, Phone                      No. 540665. Miss. Munawar Sultana, Telephone No. 530726.                      J.P.M.C. Karachi. Telephone No. 512551/336.  |                      Mentally Retarded & ESN                      Children  |                      04  |                      32  |                    
16.  |                      Darul                      Sukoon, Kashmir Rd, Op. PIA Complex, Karachi. (Sister                      Gertrude, Ph #. 411797).  |                      Mentally Retarded  |                      07  |                      125  |                    
17.  |                      Darul                      Sukoon Center for Physically Handicapped, Near Quaid’s Mazar,                      M.A. Jinnah Road, Karachi.  |                      Mentally Retarded and                      Physically Handicapped  |                      05  |                      45  |                    
18.  |                      Lemmens                      House, Karachi.  |                      Physically Handicapped  |                      07  |                      55  |                    
19.  |                      Society for the Rehabilitation                      of Cripple Children, PMA House, Annexe Garden Road, Karachi.                      Telephone No. 433167, 436854. Mrs. Mehar Afroz Habib.  |                      Physically Handicapped  |                      05  |                      50 about  |                    
20.  |                      Pilot Project for the Education                      and Rehabilitation of Physically Handicapped Children,                      Hyderabad.  |                      Physically Handicapped,                      Mentally Retarded & Deaf.  |                      02  |                      55  |                    
21.  |                      Leprosy Unit, Hussainabad,                      Hyderabad.  |                      Leprosy Patients  |                      03 Plus Voluntary Doctors  |                      40 about  |                    
22.  |                      School for the Deaf, Nawabshah.  |                      Deaf  |                      02  |                      12  |                    
23.  |                      Unit for the Handicapped                      Children, Near Government Training School, Sanghar.  |                      Deaf, Physically Handicapped,                      Slightly MR  |                      01  |                      16  |                    
24.  |                      Unit for the Handicapped                      Children, Near Government Training School, Kandhkot.  |                      Deaf, Physically Handicapped,                      Slightly MR  |                      01  |                      15  |                    
25.  |                      Unit for the Handicapped                      Children, Near Government Elementary College of Education,                      Larkana.  |                      Deaf, Physically Handicapped,                      Slightly MR  |                      01  |                      18  |                    
26.  |                      Unit for the Handicapped                      Children, Near Government Training School, Dadu.  |                      Deaf, Physically Handicapped,                      Slightly MR  |                      01  |                      12  |                    








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