Teachers’ Attitudes toward Educational Inclusion in Spain: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How are the attitudes of pre-service teachers and in-service teachers toward inclusion in Spain?
- Which research design has been followed in the different studies reviewed?
- Which factors are related to teachers’ attitudes toward educational inclusion?
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
Studies | Participants | Research Tool | Results |
---|---|---|---|
[44] | n = 143 (secondary education teachers). Years of experience: <5 (31%), 5–10 (25%), >10 (44%). Regular schools (86%), Semi-private schools (14%). | Questionnaire based on APADESO scale [45]. | Mixed attitudes. Teachers recognize the universal right to secondary education, considering that attention to diversity in mainstream classrooms is needed. However, they consider that integration is not very positive for their job: it lowers academic content, it impoverishes education, and capable students are neglected. |
[39] | n = 36 (n = 2 early childhood, n = 12 primary, n = 22 secondary education). 69.4% women; 30.55% men. Age: 41–50 (56%). | Questionnaire developed and validated by the authors: Scale for Measuring the Attitude of the Regular Classroom teacher towards Educational Integration. Semi-structured interview. | Positive attitudes toward integration-inclusion. Having training, satisfactory prior experience and consistent expectations are related to better attitudes. Regarding the inclusion of students with autism (high performance), the support of the administration and the school environment influence teachers’ attitudes (in secondary schools). |
[30] | n = 77 (n = 32 primary; n = 45 secondary education) + n = 39 university. 57.25% women; 32.8% men. Age: 35–45 (42.2%). Experience with students with disabilities: 100%. Three regular schools. | Questionnaire developed and validated by the author. | They feel uneasy working with students with disabilities (especially women and secondary school teachers). |
[32] | n = 336 (20.2% early childhood; 39.6% primary; 40.2% secondary education) 67% women; 33% men. Age: M = 41.5. Years of experience: <4–8 (28%), 9–15 (20.6%), >15 (51.3%). Experience with students with special educational needs: 100%. | The Teachers’ Perception on Inclusion Questionnaire [46]. | Teachers perceive inclusion positively: they consider that it develops tolerance (84%), and it is unfair to separate students with special educational needs from the rest of the students (59%). Nonetheless, they also consider that inclusion is impossible for students with moderate-severe difficulties (60%), especially in secondary education (70%). Early childhood education teachers’ have better attitudes toward inclusion than primary and secondary education teachers. Having support is related to better attitudes. |
[31] | n = 20 (primary education). 40% women; 60% men. Age: >40 (70%) Years of experience: <5 (20%); 5–20 (30%); >20 (50%). Two regular schools. | Adaptation: [46] questionnaire. | Inclusion generates tolerant attitudes (90%), being possible in secondary education. It favors the teaching–learning process (75%), schooling of students with severe disabilities should be in regular schools (50%), they value support teachers positively (90%). Having training, experience, and contact with people with disabilities are related to better attitudes. |
[34] | n = 82 (early childhood, primary and secondary education) 72% women; 28% men. Age: M = 39.51. Years of experience: M = 1.46. Experience with students with special educational needs: 100%. | Teachers’ attitudes and practices concerning inclusion [47]. | Positive attitudes. Inclusion encourages tolerance. Teachers of regular and semi-private schools, who teach in early childhood or primary education show better attitudes. |
[35] | Questionnaire: n = 2518 teachers (20.8% early childhood, 56% primary, 23.2% secondary education). Years of experience: 0–9 (54.8%); 10–20 (29.2%); >20 (16%). Interview: n = 27 teachers. | Questionnaire specifically elaborated for this study. Semi-structured interview, developed and validated by authors. | Inclusion implies multiple advantages: affective and socio-emotional development of students with special educational needs; students without special educational needs acquire ethical values; greater involvement of families and social agents; and acceptance of society. However, inclusion harms the academic performance of all students. Early childhood education teachers perceive inclusion significantly better, followed by primary education teachers and finally secondary education teachers. More experienced teachers perceive more advantages for students with special educational needs and less experienced teachers perceive more benefits of inclusion for students without special educational needs. |
[48] | n = 46 teachers (early childhood and primary education). A regular public school with students with hearing impairment and a regular private school. | Adaptation: Questionnaire of Opinions, attitudes and competences of teachers towards disability [49]. | Teachers positively value teacher cooperation and their awareness toward disability (it seems to be better in the public school). |
[26] | n = 407 (secondary education). 47.4% women; 52.6% men. Age: 31–40 (41.9%). Years of experience: 4–6 (29.2%) Inclusive education training: 39.8%. | Questionnaire developed and validated by the authors. | Mixed attitudes. Most of the secondary teachers consider that attention to diversity is a duty of the school (90%); inclusion is important (72.6%); it enriches the school community (68.7%); the education of the students with special educational needs is the responsibility of both the regular teachers and the special education specialists (76.9%). However, reaching real inclusion is utopian (46.8%); inclusion implies extra work to teachers (78.7%); students with disabilities should be educated in special education schools (44%). Having more teaching experience is related to less favorable attitudes. |
[50] | n = 7 (early childhood and primary education teachers). Years of experience in inclusion: minimum 5. | Questionnaire (open-ended questions). | Teachers accord importance to inclusion (it also benefits students without special educational needs), although their discourse is integrator and not inclusive. |
[36] | n = 78 (early childhood education teachers). 91% women; 9% men. Age: 21–30 (21.8%); 31–40 (25.6%); 41–50 (33.3%); 51–60 (19.2%). | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Early childhood education teachers recognize people with disabilities rights’ and the importance of their social inclusion. Teachers from the first years of early childhood education (0–3) have less positive attitudes than teachers from the last years of this stage (3–6). |
[29] | n = 175 (10.9% early childhood, 36% primary, 53.10% secondary education teachers). 70.9% women; 29.1% men. Age: M = 40.13. Contact with students with disabilities: 100%. Urban area (74.9%), rural (25.15%). | Adaptation: questionnaire for teachers about attitudes towards students with special educational needs derived from disability [51]. | Teachers accord greater importance to socio-emotional aspects of students with disabilities than to academic aspects. Teachers from semi-private schools feel more trained for inclusion. Having better attitudes is related to rural areas, to men (not significantly), to have less teaching experience and to early childhood and primary education teachers. |
[28] | n = 402 (48.9% early childhood education, 15% primary education, 5.1% special education, 13.8% other, 16.7% secondary education). 63.7% women; 36.3% men. Years of experience: <5 (26.5%); 6–15 (28%); 16–29(25.1%); >30 (18.2%). | Questionnaire specifically elaborated for this study. | Teachers show positive attitudes toward diversity, although they do not know how to organize the educational response. Men and more experienced teachers value inclusive polices better. Special education specialists value inclusive culture and practices significantly better. Teachers from regular schools are more positive towards inclusion. |
[52] | n = 30 (n = 6 early-childhood education; n = 18 primary education; n = 2 physical education; n = 2 English; n = 1 religion; n = 1 music). | Scale [30]. | Teachers feel uneasy with students with disabilities. They consider that special education specialists are the responsible of teaching these students. |
Studies | Participants | Research Tool | Results |
---|---|---|---|
[42] | n = 274 pre-service teachers (21.8% early childhood; 72.4% primary education). 91.5% women; 9.4% men. Age: M = 22.16. Grade: 2nd (n = 112), 3rd (n = 44), Special Education Master’s Degree (n = 59). | Adaptation: Opinions Relative to Integration of Students with Disabilities Scale [53]. | Positive attitudes. Master’s degree students show better attitudes than early childhood pre-service teachers; and both of them have better attitudes than primary education pre-service teachers. Training in special education programs improves the attitudes of second-grade students. |
[24] | n = 91 pre-service teachers (early childhood and primary education) 78% women; 22% men. Age: M = 28.13. Contact with students with special educational needs: 74.7%. | Questionnaire developed and validated by the authors. | Women and those who have had contact with students with special educational needs feel more prepared for inclusion. Nonlinear relation of teachers’ attitudes with contact frequency was found. |
[20] | n = 315 pre-service teachers (early childhood and primary education), and educational psychologists). Grade (early childhood): 1st (n = 43); 3rd (n = 39) Grade (primary) 1st (n = 36), 3rd (n = 37). Grade (educational psychologists) 1st (n = 82), 2nd (n = 76). 265 women; 50 men. Age: M = 22.35. Experience with students with special educational needs: 43.20%. | Adaptation: Attitudes toward Inclusive Education [54]. Reduced version: Values Questionnaire [55]. | Positive attitudes: concern for equality; willingness to make curriculum more flexible and to modify spaces. Women pre-service teachers, older participants, and participants with prior experience with students with special educational needs show slightly more positive attitudes. Third-grade pre-service teachers’ show better attitudes than First-grade pre-service teachers (non-linear relation). |
[56] | n = 99 pre-service teachers (secondary education). 60.6% women; 39.4% men. Age: <25 (63.6%). | Questionnaire developed and validated by the authors. | Favorable attitudes. Pre-service teachers consider attention to diversity as an enrichment and duty of schools. They agree with combined schooling and they think inclusion is possible in secondary education. They consider that teaching students with special educational needs is everyone’s responsibility, although it involves extra work to the regular teachers. |
[38] | n = 41 pre-service teachers (early childhood education) 92.7% women; 7.3% men. Age: M = 21.37. University access: Entrance examination (53.7%); Higher Level Education Cycle (46.3%). Contact with people with disabilities: 39%. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Positive attitudes. Early childhood pre-service teachers recognize the rights of people with disabilities and they intend to interact with them. They value their abilities less positively. Pre-service teachers who have accessed university through entrance examination and have had prior contact with people with disabilities show better attitudes towards inclusion (no strong relation). |
[57] | n = 65 pre-service teachers (primary education) 38 women; 27 men. Age: M = 21.28. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Positive attitudes, but not enough (especially concerning pre-service teachers’ expectations towards students with disabilities and their knowledge about these students). |
[23] | n = 107 pre-service secondary education teachers (psychologic counselling n = 12; Mathematics n = 13; Spanish language n = 33; Geography and History n = 22; Physical education n = 11; Others n = 16). 57% women; 43% men. Age: M = 26.14. Contact with people with disabilities: 62.6%. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Positive attitudes. Women and those who have had contact with people with disabilities score better (not significantly). Geography and History specialists show less favorable attitudes. |
[43] | n = 158 pre-service teachers (early childhood and primary education). Grade: 1st (n = 90), 4th (n = 68). 76.8% women; 23.2% men. Age: 18–22 (77.3%). | Adaptation: [58] questionnaire (Likert items and open-ended questions). | Positive attitudes. Pre-service teachers consider that attention to diversity is important; it enriches the school community; it allows teaching all students fairly; and it promotes positive values. However, they are undecided about the best type of schooling for students with special educational needs and the extra work that the inclusion of these students in the regular classroom implies for the teacher. Fourth-grade pre-service teachers have significantly better attitudes and richer and more realistic speeches than first-grade pre-service teachers. |
[37] | n = 48 pre-service teachers (early childhood education). 91.67% women; 8.33% men. Age: M = 21.25. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Pre-service teachers who have greater contact with people with disabilities have greater willingness to interact with them. Remarkable (not significant) relation between the attitudes of the participants and their academic performance was found. |
[41] | n = 46 pre-service teachers (early childhood and primary education) 78% women; 22% men. n = 50 pre-service secondary education teachers. 50% women; 50% men. Age: 22–26. | [58] questionnaire. | Positive attitudes. Pre-service teachers consider that inclusion is enrichment. In early childhood and primary education, pre-service teachers are undecided about the appropriate schooling modality of students with disabilities. They do not know sure if teaching students with special educational needs implies an extra work for the teachers. Secondary education pre-service teachers have less positive attitudes. |
[25] | n = 314 pre-service teachers (13.1% early childhood, 19.1% primary, 34.1% secondary education, 33.8% other). 75.45% women; 24.52% men. Contact with people with disabilities: 55.8%. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Pre-service teachers show positive attitudes. Women have significantly better attitudes than men. Early childhood pre-service teachers show more positive attitudes than primary education pre-service teachers, and they are also more positive than secondary pre-service teachers. |
[59] | n = 120 pre-service teachers (early childhood education); n = 16 English specialists; n = 34 special education teachers; n = 139 physical education teachers; n = 11 creative languages; n = 46 without specialization 95.1% women; 4.8% men. Age: M = 22.39. | Scale of beliefs towards attention to disability in physical activity [60]. | Positive attitudes toward disability: especially special education pre-service specialists (not significantly). |
Studies | Participants | Research Tool | Results |
---|---|---|---|
[21] | n = 26 (primary education) 17 women; 9 men. Age: M = 43.42 n = 26 pre-service teachers (primary education) 18 women; 8 men. Age: M = 27.73 Contact with people with disabilities: 100%. | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. | Positive attitudes toward disability (especially in women). |
[61] | n = 4 pre-service teachers (early childhood and primary education) Grade: 1st (n = 2), 4th (n = 2). n = 2 in-service teachers (first year of teaching: early childhood and primary education). 3 women; 3 men. | Adapted interview from [62,63]. | Both pre-service and in-service teachers show inclusive attitudes. They consider that inclusion fosters cooperation, empathy, and tolerance, among other values. However, they relate the benefits of inclusion only to vulnerable students (integration approach). |
Studies | Participants | Research Tool | Results |
---|---|---|---|
[32] | n = 106 special education specialists (primary and secondary education). 82.7% women; 17.3% men. Age: M = 37.8 Years of experience: M = 12.3 | Adaptation: Attitudes towards integration in primary [64] and secondary [65] education questionnaire. | They consider integration does not work properly. Lower acceptance of students with behavioral problems and belonging to ethnic minorities. Having more experience and being older are two aspects associated to less positive teachers’ attitudes. |
[66] | n = 428 teachers of special education schools (80.3% special education teachers; 9.6% speech-language teachers; 10.1% others) 73.1% women; 26.9% men. Years of experience: <1–7 (41.4%); 8–14 (12.7%); >15 (45.8%). | Questionnaire on training needs of teachers in special education schools, developed and validated by authors. | Teachers consider inclusion a basic pillar of education. Special education schools should be based on the inclusion principles. Teachers without experience perceive inclusion more favorably. |
[27] | n = 428 special education specialists. 73.1% women; 26.9% men. Age: >41 (49.7%). Years of experience: <1–3 (27.3%); 4–7 (14.5%); 8–14 (14.2%); >15 (44%). | Questionnaire developed and validated by the authors. | Special education specialists consider diversity important. They favorably perceive inclusive practices in special education schools. Having less teaching experience is related to less positive attitudes. Men seem to have better expectations towards students with disabilities than women. |
Studies | Participants | Research Tool | Results |
---|---|---|---|
[67] | n = 7 physical education specialists (n = 2 pre-service teachers; n = 2 primary education in-service teachers; n = 3 secondary education in-service teachers) Years of experience: primary 5–10; secondary 4–8. | Open-ended questions posed by authors. Two sessions’ observation. | Positive attitudes. Except in cases of students with very specific needs, teachers generally agree with schooling in regular schools. |
[40] | n = 76 physical education pre-service teachers. 34 women; 42 men. Age: M = 22.61. Grade: 3rd (n = 42); 4th (n = 34). Years of experience with people with disabilities: <1 (75%); 1–3 (14.5%); 3–5 (3.9%); >5 (1.3%); No answer (5.3%). | Scale of Attitudes towards People with Disabilities [19]. Scale of beliefs towards attention to disability in physical activity [60]. | Very positive attitudes toward disability were found. Having prior experience with people with disabilities is related to better attitudes (not significantly). |
[22] | n = 40 physical education specialists. 32.5% women; 67.5% men. Age: <30 (n = 9); 31–40 (n = 22); >41 (n = 9). | Adaptation: [68] questionnaire. | Not very positive attitudes were found. Some teachers consider that it is impossible to work with the rest of students effectively (37.5%); “handicapped” students should study in special education schools (35%). Middle-aged men have moderately less positive attitudes. |
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lacruz-Pérez, I.; Sanz-Cervera, P.; Tárraga-Mínguez, R. Teachers’ Attitudes toward Educational Inclusion in Spain: A Systematic Review. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11020058
Lacruz-Pérez I, Sanz-Cervera P, Tárraga-Mínguez R. Teachers’ Attitudes toward Educational Inclusion in Spain: A Systematic Review. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(2):58. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11020058
Chicago/Turabian StyleLacruz-Pérez, Irene, Pilar Sanz-Cervera, and Raúl Tárraga-Mínguez. 2021. "Teachers’ Attitudes toward Educational Inclusion in Spain: A Systematic Review" Education Sciences 11, no. 2: 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11020058
APA StyleLacruz-Pérez, I., Sanz-Cervera, P., & Tárraga-Mínguez, R. (2021). Teachers’ Attitudes toward Educational Inclusion in Spain: A Systematic Review. Education Sciences, 11(2), 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11020058