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Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town

The exclusion of children with Severe to Profound Intellectual Disability (SPID) from the education system has been a challenge as they have been previously deemed as” ineducable” or “untrainable” and consequently neglected by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) in South Africa regarding the pro...

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Main Author: Tukwayo, Pearl
Other Authors: McKenzie, Judith
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Tukwayo, Pearl
author2 McKenzie, Judith
author_browse McKenzie, Judith
Tukwayo, Pearl
author_facet McKenzie, Judith
Tukwayo, Pearl
author_sort Tukwayo, Pearl
collection Thesis
description The exclusion of children with Severe to Profound Intellectual Disability (SPID) from the education system has been a challenge as they have been previously deemed as” ineducable” or “untrainable” and consequently neglected by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) in South Africa regarding the provision of resources to the caregivers who provide education to the children. The purpose of the study was to investigate the experiences of the support staff in Special Care Centre (SCCs) on the support that is currently being received from the DBE and stakeholders. This will be achieved by determining barriers to accessing quality education in an inclusive education system and exploring viable solutions to these barriers amid the COVID19 pandemic. The methodology that was employed was a qualitative research method to explore the experiences of the participants. The human rights of children with SPID was an important factor of this study, the theoretical framework that was employed was an ecological systems theory. Where necessary, the interview questions were simplified in isiXhosa for the participants who were struggling to grasp some concepts. The cohort of participants included one centre manager, one assistant caregiver, and six caregivers. The participants were identified in SCCs in the Western Cape in different communities namely, Langa, Gugulethu, and Maitland. I chose participants using purposive sampling as it was vital to choose the participants who possessed the ability to respond to the research questions. Ethical clearance was provided by the Human Research Ethics Committee of the University of Cape Town (HREC 013/2021sa). Informed consent was obtained from all the participants before the interviews were conducted. Semi-structured interviews were recorded on a mobile device and hand notes were taken throughout. Data was collected in isiXhosa and later transcribed into English and an inductive analysis was completed manually. The investigation on the experiences of the support staff in special care centres has found that although the support staff require high levels of support to advance quality education for children with SPID in an inclusive education, the support that they are currently receiving has been found to be inadequate. The children are still receiving education in a segregated setting using different curricula and the caregivers are not provided with adequate specialised training. The study recommends effective implementation of Inclusive Education in SCCs so that SCCs can be part of the DBE where children with SPID will follow the same curriculum as children who do not have disabilities, but which can be adapted, be taught by adequately equipped caregivers, have an opportunity to attend fully inclusive schools, and the provision of specialised training for caregivers to equip them with greater knowledge on the theoretical perspective of caring for children with SPID.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:18.917Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine
publisherStr Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43150 Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town Tukwayo, Pearl McKenzie, Judith Profound Intellectual Disability Department of Basic Education COVID19 pandemic Special Care Centre The exclusion of children with Severe to Profound Intellectual Disability (SPID) from the education system has been a challenge as they have been previously deemed as” ineducable” or “untrainable” and consequently neglected by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) in South Africa regarding the provision of resources to the caregivers who provide education to the children. The purpose of the study was to investigate the experiences of the support staff in Special Care Centre (SCCs) on the support that is currently being received from the DBE and stakeholders. This will be achieved by determining barriers to accessing quality education in an inclusive education system and exploring viable solutions to these barriers amid the COVID19 pandemic. The methodology that was employed was a qualitative research method to explore the experiences of the participants. The human rights of children with SPID was an important factor of this study, the theoretical framework that was employed was an ecological systems theory. Where necessary, the interview questions were simplified in isiXhosa for the participants who were struggling to grasp some concepts. The cohort of participants included one centre manager, one assistant caregiver, and six caregivers. The participants were identified in SCCs in the Western Cape in different communities namely, Langa, Gugulethu, and Maitland. I chose participants using purposive sampling as it was vital to choose the participants who possessed the ability to respond to the research questions. Ethical clearance was provided by the Human Research Ethics Committee of the University of Cape Town (HREC 013/2021sa). Informed consent was obtained from all the participants before the interviews were conducted. Semi-structured interviews were recorded on a mobile device and hand notes were taken throughout. Data was collected in isiXhosa and later transcribed into English and an inductive analysis was completed manually. The investigation on the experiences of the support staff in special care centres has found that although the support staff require high levels of support to advance quality education for children with SPID in an inclusive education, the support that they are currently receiving has been found to be inadequate. The children are still receiving education in a segregated setting using different curricula and the caregivers are not provided with adequate specialised training. The study recommends effective implementation of Inclusive Education in SCCs so that SCCs can be part of the DBE where children with SPID will follow the same curriculum as children who do not have disabilities, but which can be adapted, be taught by adequately equipped caregivers, have an opportunity to attend fully inclusive schools, and the provision of specialised training for caregivers to equip them with greater knowledge on the theoretical perspective of caring for children with SPID. 2026-04-30T06:46:26Z 2026-04-30T06:46:26Z 2023 2026-04-29T11:16:39Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43150 en eng application/pdf Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Profound Intellectual Disability
Department of Basic Education
COVID19 pandemic
Special Care Centre
Tukwayo, Pearl
Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
title_full Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
title_fullStr Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
title_short Access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities: examining barriers amid the COVID-19 pandemic and exploring the support of the Department of Basic Education in special care centres in Cape Town
title_sort access to quality education for children with severe to profound intellectual disabilities examining barriers amid the covid 19 pandemic and exploring the support of the department of basic education in special care centres in cape town
topic Profound Intellectual Disability
Department of Basic Education
COVID19 pandemic
Special Care Centre
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43150
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