The Inclusion of Career Education in the Secondary School Curriculum for Learners with Learning Disabilities in Botswana: A Critical Analysis

Authors

Duduzile Nkomo

Special and Inclusive Education, University of Botswana, Gaborone (Botswana)

Nozizwe Nkomo

Special and Inclusive Education, University of Botswana, Gaborone (Botswana)

Article Information

DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100500084

Subject Category: Education

Volume/Issue: 10/5 | Page No: 1265-1273

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-04-23

Accepted: 2026-04-30

Published: 2026-05-23

Abstract

Career education has emerged as a critical dimension of contemporary schooling as education systems increasingly seek to respond to labour market uncertainty, technological disruption, and demands for inclusive socio-economic participation. This paper critically examines the relevance of integrating career education into the secondary school curriculum for learners with learning disabilities in Botswana. Drawing on recent scholarship and policy discourse, the paper conceptualises career education as a holistic, developmental, and cross-curricular process that extends beyond narrow vocational preparation to encompass self-awareness, occupational exploration, career adaptability, and lifelong learning competencies. Anchored in key theoretical frameworks from vocational psychology including Super’s Life-Span, Life-Space Theory, Holland’s theory of vocational personalities, as well as the Social Cognitive Career Theory, the paper underscores the psychological foundations that justify systematic career education interventions, particularly for learners with learning disabilities. Using a multidimensional analytical lens, the discussion interrogates the relevance of career education from legal, psychological, socio-cultural, economic, and educational perspectives within Botswana. The analysis reveals that career education aligns strongly with national visions of human and social development, supports learner wellbeing and self-determination, challenges stigma and exclusion, enhances economic participation, and enriches curriculum relevance. However, the paper also identifies significant structural and implementation challenges that include limited teacher capacity, resource disparities, and poor school-to-work linkages. This discourse concludes that embedding career education as a core curricular component is essential for advancing inclusive education outcomes in Botswana and calls for sustained systemic commitment to realise its transformative potential.

Keywords

career education, secondary school, curriculum

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References

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