Attitudes Toward Inclusion and Utilitarian-Progressive Philosophical Orientations: A Survey Study of Maltese State Primary School Educators
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62695/RLCQ3326Keywords:
Inclusive education, Malta, Philosophy of education, Primary education, Progressivism, UtilitarianismAbstract
This article conceptualises Maltese educational philosophy according to a utilitarian-progressive dualism, with critical theory as the source of antagonism between the two positions. In this sense, education for work and economic development serves as a utilitarian or technocratic justification for the prevailing socioeconomic status quo. In contrast, education for personal and social development serves more progressive or humanistic goals of personal empowerment and sociopolitical emancipation. Given that inclusion is a relatively explicit feature of Maltese educational policy and practice, we asked how attitudes towards inclusion currently interact with the broader foregoing philosophical orientations among Maltese primary school educators. A survey of 62 educators in a large state primary school was carried out, consisting of an existing scale for measuring attitudes toward inclusion, as well as a locally contextualised bespoke scale designed to measure philosophical orientations. Factors such as role and experience, as well as initial and ongoing training were included as explanatory factors. The results suggest overall positive attitudes toward inclusion, combined with a juxtaposition of utilitarian and progressive views about education. Based on the findings, we argue that initial training is a particularly important opportunity for educators to engage more fully with philosophy of education and critical pedagogy since they are less likely to do so later in their careers in the Maltese primary state school sector.
References
Ahmmed, M., Sharma, U., & Deppeler, J. (2012). Variables affecting teachers’ attitudes towards inclusive education in Bangladesh. Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 12(3), 132–140.
Alquraini, T. A. (2012). Factors related to teachers’ attitudes towards the inclusive education of students with severe intellectual disabilities in Riyadh, Saudi. Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 12(3), 170–182.
Avramidis, E., Bayliss, P., & Burden, R. (2000). Student teachers’ attitudes towards the inclusion of children with special educational needs in the ordinary school. Teaching and Teacher Education, 16(3), 277–293.
Avramidis, E., & Kalyva, E. (2007). The influence of teaching experience and professional development on Greek teachers’ attitudes towards inclusion. European Journal of Special Needs Education, 22(4), 367–389.
Avramidis, E., & Norwich, B. (2002). Teachers’ attitudes towards integration/inclusion: A review of the literature. European journal of special needs education, 17(2), 129–147.
Bajada, G., Callus, A. M., & Borg, K. (2022). Unpretentious education: A Foucaultian study of inclusive education in Malta. Disability & Society, 37(8), 1247–1271.
Bartolo, P. A. (2010). The process of teacher education for inclusion: The Maltese experience. Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 10, 139–148.
Borg, S., & Schembri, H. (2022). The Sociological Perspectives of Learning Support Educators in the Early Years and Primary Education in Gozo. MCAST Journal of Applied Research & Practice, 6(4), 124–148.
Boyle, C. (2014). Teachers’ Attitudes Towards Inclusion Scale Adjusted [Database record]. Retrieved from PsycTESTS. https://doi.org/10.1037/t36360-000
Boyle, C., Topping, K., & Jindal-Snape, D. (2013). Teachers’ attitudes towards inclusion in high schools. Teachers and teaching, 19(5), 527–542.
Centeno, M. A., & Cohen, J. N. (2012). The arc of neoliberalism. Annual Review of Sociology, 38, 317–340.
Cheung, D., & Ng, P.-H. (2000). Science teachers’ beliefs about curriculum design. Research in Science Education, 30(4), 357–375. https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02461556
Cheung, D., & Wong, H.-W. (2002). Measuring teacher beliefs about alternative curriculum designs. Curriculum Journal, 13(2), 225–248. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585170210136868
Emmers, E., Baeyens, D., & Petry, K. (2020). Attitudes and self-efficacy of teachers towards inclusion in higher education. European Journal of Special Needs Education, 35(2), 139–153.
Farquhar, S., & White, E. J. (2014). Philosophy and pedagogy of early childhood. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 46(8), 821–832.
Gezer, M. (2018). An analysis of correlations between prospective teachers’ philosophy of education and their attitudes towards multicultural education. Cogent Education, 5(1).
Greenway, C. W., & Rees Edwards, A. (2020). Knowledge and attitudes towards attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): A comparison of teachers and teaching assistants. Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties, 25(1), 31–49.
Hsien, M., Brown, P. M., & Bortoli, A. (2009). Teacher qualifications and attitudes toward inclusion. Australasian Journal of Special Education, 33(1), 26–41.
Jenkins, S. B. (2009). Measuring teacher beliefs about curriculum orientations using the modified-curriculum orientations inventory. The Curriculum Journal, 20(2), 103–120.
Jury, M., Perrin, A. L., Rohmer, O., & Desombre, C. (2021). Attitudes toward inclusive education: An exploration of the interaction between teachers’ status and students’ type of disability within the French context. In Frontiers in Education, 6, Article 655356.
Kalyva, E., Gojkovic, D., & Tsakiris, V. (2007). Serbian Teachers’ Attitudes towards Inclusion. International Journal of Special Education, 22(3), 31–36.
Kim, M. (2004). Teachers’ philosophical orientation and practices: A study of novice preschool teachers in South Korea. Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 5(3), 276–292.
Lindner, K. T., Schwab, S., Emara, M., & Avramidis, E. (2023). Do teachers favor the inclusion of all students? A systematic review of primary schoolteachers’ attitudes towards inclusive education. European Journal of Special Needs Education, 38(6), 766–787. https://doi.org/10.1080/08856257.2023.2172894
Makaiau, A. S., & Miller, C. (2012). The Philosopher’s Pedagogy. Educational Perspectives, 44, 8–19.
Mayo, P. (2021). The politics of education. Xjenza Online, 9(Special Iss.), 114–121.
Mdikana, A., Ntshangase, S., & Mayekiso, T. (2007). Pre-Service Educators’ Attitudes towards Inclusive Education. International journal of special education, 22(1), 125–131.
Muscat-Inglott, M. (2021) Curricular brood parasitism in Malta: An empirical study of vocational education and the reproduction of social inequality. The SOJO Journal: Educational Foundations and Social Justice Education, 7(2), 53–66.
Özokçu, O. (2018). Investigating classroom teachers’ attitudes towards inclusion. Inonu University Journal of the Faculty of Education, 19(3), 418–433.
Pishvaei, V., & Kasaian, S. A. (2013). Design, construction, and validation of a critical pedagogy attitude questionnaire in Iran. European Online Journal of Natural and Social Sciences: Proceedings, 2(2), 59–74.
Schembri, H., & Sciberras, C. (2020). Ethical considerations and limitations when researching education in small island states. SENTIO, 2, 42–49.
Seçer, Z. (2010). An analysis of the effects of in‐service teacher training on Turkish preschool teachers’ attitudes towards inclusion. International Journal of Early Years Education, 18(1), 43–53.
Sharma, U., & Sokal, L. (2016). Can teachers’ self-reported efficacy, concerns, and attitudes toward inclusion scores predict their actual inclusive classroom practices? Australasian Journal of Special Education, 40(1), 21–38.
Strout, L. J. (2015). Philosophy within practice: Relationship between philosophical orientations and teaching styles of faculty in early childhood teacher preparation programs [Doctoral dissertation]. Capella University.
Subban, P., & Sharma, U. (2005). Understanding educator attitudes toward the implementation of inclusive education. Disability studies quarterly, 25(2).
Sultana, R. G. (1992). Personal and social education: Curriculum innovation and school bureaucracies in Malta. British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 20(2), 164–185.
Sultana, R. G. (1994). Towards a sociology of consumption in Malta. In R. G. Sultana & G. Baldacchino (Eds.), Maltese society: A sociological inquiry (pp. 163–186). Mireva.
Syme, T. (2019). Charity vs. revolution: Effective altruism and the systemic change objection. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 22(1), 93–120.
Unianu, E. M. (2012). Teachers’ attitudes towards inclusive education. Procedia-social and Behavioral Sciences, 33, 900–904.
Whitehead, P., & Crawshaw, P. (2014). A tale of two economies: The political and the moral in neoliberalism. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 34(1/2), 19–34.
Yilmaz, K. (2009). Elementary School Teachers’ Views about the Critical Pedagogy. Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 18, 139–149.