Advancing Inclusive Education in Zambia: The Imperative for a Directorate of Inclusive and Special Education within the Ministry of Education
Authors
Dr. Research Scholar, MOE-HQ-Directorate of Curriculum Development (Zambia)
Dr. Research Scholar, New York University Abu Dhabi Compass (Zambia)
Prof. Research Scholar, University of Zambia (Zambia)
Prof. Research Scholar, University of Zambia (Zambia)
Article Information
DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.903SEDU0613
Subject Category: Education
Volume/Issue: 9/26 | Page No: 8176-8187
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2025-10-10
Accepted: 2025-10-15
Published: 2025-11-08
Abstract
The establishment of Zambia's Directorate of Inclusive and Special Education within the Ministry of Education represents a significant policy advancement towards achieving equitable and inclusive educational outcomes for all learners. It employed qualitative approach to explore the establishment of the Directorate of Inclusive and Special Education within Zambia's Ministry of Education. Drawing upon social justice theory and informed by international mandates such as the Education for All (EFA) agenda, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD), and Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4), the research utilized data from policy documents, ministerial reports, and semi-structured interviews with key education stakeholders. Findings indicate that the Directorate's formation directly addresses historical deficiencies in policy coherence, resource distribution, teacher professional development, and monitoring frameworks, which previously impeded effective inclusive education implementation. Its institutionalization significantly enhances coordination across national, provincial, and district education tiers, thereby bolstering accountability and refining service delivery for learners with diverse needs. With institutionalization offers a robust and sustainable framework for advancing inclusivity, equity, and quality education across Zambia. Hence, the Ministry of Education should formally establish a Directorate of Inclusive and Special Education with clear mandates and adequate resources.
Keywords
Inclusive education, special education, educational policy, administrative reform
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References
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