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To cite this article: Rolf B. Fasting (2013) Adapted education: the Norwegian pathway to inclusive
and efficient education, International Journal of Inclusive Education, 17:3, 263-276, DOI:
10.1080/13603116.2012.676083
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International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2013
Vol. 17, No. 3, 263– 276, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13603116.2012.676083
Department of Primary and Secondary Teacher Education, Oslo and Akershus University
College of Applied Sciences, Pb 4 St. Olavs plass, Oslo 0103, Norway
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Since the UNESCO conference in 1994, inclusion has been a major denominator in
the educational debates of most OECD countries, focusing on how to facilitate
education and social interaction for the diversity of pupils. By international
standards, the Norwegian education system is regarded as inclusive, but the
ongoing debate and political pressure in Norway on how to increase pupils’
benefit of education, challenge this understanding. This article gives a historical
account of Norwegian education policy to illustrate the way inclusive education
has been understood over the years. Furthermore, it presents empirical evidence
showing an increasing use of special education in Norway as a basis for
discussing dilemmas of the current education reform, ‘Knowledge Promotion’.
The last part of the article highlights the partly contradictory aims schools and
teachers are given: the aims of increasing pupils’ learning and of developing
inclusive schools. The outcomes of the processes involved are closely related to
the standards of educational policies, how these standards are implemented and
the understanding of how to develop schools that take care of and respect the
variety of pupils.
Keywords: inclusive education; education policy; special education; adapted
education
∗
Email: rolf.fasting@hioa.no
97) did not cause any major debate. Instead, the education debate has been turned
towards differentiation and the implementation of adapted education.
Inclusive education can be understood initially as ‘a move towards extending the
scope of “ordinary” schools so that they can “include” a greater diversity of children’
(Clark, Dyson, and Millward 1995, 5). Hence, inclusion has to be considered a process
of change, whereby policy-makers and schools are gradually being more responsible
for accommodating the needs of a greater diversity of the pupil population. Both
adapted education and inclusive education have common denominators, implying
respect, sensitivity and responsibility for the diversity of human beings. However,
the principle of adapted – or adaptive education (i.e. Engen and Lied 2011) – can
be understood as an overarching, non-categorical principle including ideologies and
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school (Y 1–7) and lower secondary (Y 8–10), and all Norwegians join their local
public school at the age of six. Upper secondary school (Y 11 –13) is a statutory
right for all citizens, and most pupils (98%) continue from lower secondary to upper
secondary general studies/ vocational education and training, where 75% graduate 3
or 4 years later (Y 13).
The Norwegian education system is close to a ‘one-track’ system (Pijl and Meijer
1991), which means that all pupils (including pupils with Special Educational Needs
(SEN)) are subjected to the same regulations and supported by their local school. A
municipal support system, the Educational Psychology Service, is available to
schools to ensure that expert assessments are prepared, and pupils with SEN are pro-
vided special education in accordance with the Education Act (for a review, see Thy-
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gesen 2007).
Special education in Norway can be divided into two categories: part-time, inte-
grated special education and full-time, segregated special education. Part-time, inte-
grated special education comprises individual- or group-based support assigned as
‘in-class’ or ‘out-of-class’ measures. For most of the time, the pupils are taught ‘in-
class’ by the class teacher, and for some time, the pupils receive special education
depending on the characteristics of the needs or learning difficulty. A minority of
pupils receive full-time segregated special education, either at a special education
resource centre, special school or in a special group or class at the municipal level.
In total, about 8.5% of the pupils are supported with special education in 2010–
2011 (GSI statistics). The Norwegian topography and the sparsely populated rural dis-
tricts (one-quarter of Norwegian schools have fewer than 90 pupils, GSI statistics
2010–2011) indicate that qualified support of pupils with SEN differs according to
where the pupils live (Vislie and Langfeldt 1996; Skårbrevik 2005).
countryside, and in the rural districts a more classless social structure existed (Eckhoff
2001). For a sparsely populated and economically poor country (at the time governed
by Sweden), there was no basis for a parallel school system. The fact that Norway, by
European standards, had an egalitarian society, and that nearly all citizens belonged to
the Lutheran Evangelical Church, encouraged the progression towards a unified school
system – a school for all (Dokka 1988).
Education in the sense we see it today, was legislated in 1889 and named The
National School – in towns and countryside alike. The 7-year schooling included,
among others, the subjects geography, natural – and social studies, and was to be
free for everyone. In 1905, the Norwegian alliance with Sweden ended in a peaceful
agreement, and the independence required an economic and administrative reconstruc-
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tion of the country. To encourage the process, it was important to unite the people by
both political and educational means. The Norwegian egalitarian society, and the fact
that Norway had no segregated educational traditions as, for example, the English
boarding schools or education rooted in denominations as in the Netherlands, supported
the breakthrough of the unitary school system. An additional matter was the political
pressure to establish a connection between The National School and the Higher (sec-
ondary) School. A budget resolution by the Parliament in 1920 implied that public
financial support would only be provided to Higher Schools that were based on the
completion of The National School. The matter made a vital contribution towards
the development of a common and undivided 7-year school system for children of
all social groups (Dokka 1988; Eckhoff 2001). The principle of a free of charge,
unitary school, has been the foundation for Norwegian education policy ever since.
The national curriculum of 1939 (NC-39) and the following legislations of 1951 and
1955 can be regarded as the next step on the pathway towards adapted education. The
curriculum emphasised that the teaching should be in accordance with the pupils’ abil-
ities and aptitudes, and that all pupils should be trained in independent learning; ideas
that can be traced back to the progressive ideas of Dewey in the mid-1920s. The Nor-
wegian post-war social democratic policy, however, was based on a confidence in the
administrative capacity of the central state. Accordingly, the NC-39 included detailed
instructions on the subject matter which schools were expected to teach (Telhaug,
Mediås, and Aasen 2006). These instructions took the form of what was called
‘minimum requirements’ to be achieved at different grade levels, and the requirements
challenged the variety of pupils. To solve the predominant problems, provision for
state-run special schools for pupils with sensory impairment, behavioural problems
and mental retardation were legislated (1951); these were the first schools based on reli-
gious, social and humanistic initiatives (Befring, Thousand, and Nevin 2000). The 1951
legislation was followed by an amendment to the Public School Act (1955) instructing
local authorities to provide remedial support for pupils who struggled to fulfil the
expectations of the curriculum. The measures paved the way for a ‘two-track’ education
system (Pijl and Meijer 1991): a system of public schools and a system of special
schools and special education – remedial classes. In the effort to make The National
School a school for everyone, someone – and here lies the paradox – had to be
excluded.
During the 1960s, several reforms were attempted and, as the last of the Nordic
countries to do so, a 9-year compulsory school was implemented; i.e. 6 years of elemen-
tary school followed by 3 years at lower secondary. In the latter half of the decade, a
renewed emphasis on social justice arose, and the Norwegian historian Francis Sejer-
sted speaks of ‘new radicalism’ and no less than a ‘mental revolution’ to describe
International Journal of Inclusive Education 267
the processes that took place (Sejersted 2004, 258–9). The processes fuelled the debate
on how to support pupils who experienced difficulties regarding school expectations
and requirements. A white paper released in 1967 broke with the ‘two-track’ education
system (Ministry of Social Affairs 1967), emphasising that the placing of children in
segregated settings should be the exception rather than the rule. The administrative
and ideological turn in how to support and facilitate education for pupils with SEN fos-
tered a debate that still is ongoing.
behind the 9-year compulsory school reform (1969). One driving force can be traced to
economic–instrumental objectives, assuming a close association between the level of
education and social welfare (Aasen 1999). From this viewpoint, the post-war gener-
ation was regarded as raw material for the welfare state, implemented through edu-
cation: innovative principles and objectives that can be traced to modernism. On the
other hand, the social objective may be considered to predominate in the 1969–1975
school reform. The 1974 curriculum revision (NC-74) and an amendment to the Edu-
cation Act (1975) underscored that all children, regardless of ability, social factors, eth-
nicity or special needs, had the right to live and grow up with their families and attend
their local classes during compulsory schooling (Haug 1996; Dyson and Millward
1997). The new education ideology, based on the principle of pedagogical differen-
tiation where the strong aided the weak, introduced heterogeneous unstreamed
classes all the way from grades 1 to 9 to facilitate education for pupils who previously
had been placed in segregated settings.
However, the implementation of the reform took time, and reports from the early
1980s showed that the reform had limited effect on education for pupils in special
schools (Basic School Council 1983). Segregated special education was still regarded
as something ‘beside’ the ordinary education system, and most of the special schools
from the 1970s were still running. A white paper titled: ‘Some aspects of special edu-
cation and the educational psychology service’ (Ministry of Church and Education
1984–1985) was a driving force in the abolition of the remaining special schools, and
since the early 1990s only a minor proportion of pupils with SEN (less than 0.5%,
GSI statistics) have been supported in special schools; i.e. pupils with severe and com-
pound disabilities and impairments (Pijl, Meijer, and Hegarty 1997; Skårbrevik 2005).
The term adapted education emerged in the mid-1980s, initially as a guideline for
preparing appropriate challenges for pupils who showed little benefit from teaching. In
the curriculum context, the term was introduced in the 1987 revision (NC-87) under the
heading ‘Equal and adapted education’ (Ministry of Church and Education 1987). One
of the first curriculum chapters emphasised the importance of accommodating the learn-
ing content and conditions to all pupils’ abilities, skills and needs – even though the
term ‘all pupils’ mainly referred to pupils showing little benefit from the schooling,
including language minority pupils. The principle of a pupil-centred ideology, focusing
on collaboration, creative learning and investigative methods, can also be traced to the
implementation of the curriculum at the school level. Every teacher was instructed to
join school-based groups and transform the general guidelines in the NC-87 into
local plans. From this viewpoint, adapted education can be regarded as an overarching
education principle by putting the pupil (or teacher) at the centre through individually
tailored teaching and participant management (Krejsler 2004).
268 R.B. Fasting
cation programme.
The main characteristics of the NC-97 reform are summarised in the following:
firstly, the curriculum turned once again towards governmental standardisation by
introducing a specific canon of content and activities to be used at each grade and
applied to all pupils. The idea was to combine ‘central management with a social demo-
cratic confidence in a strong state’ without involving the tools of liberalism (Telhaug,
Mediås, and Aasen 2006, 274). Secondly, the revision extended the length of compul-
sory schooling from 9 to 10 years by lowering the age of children’s entrance to school
to 6 years. This significant change was met with limited objections. One of the reasons
may be that the extension included a pre- and post- school supervised playground for
the pupils in grades 1–4.
In addition, the principles of inclusion and adaptation were used as cornerstones in
the curriculum. Inspired by the Salamanca Declaration (UNESCO/IBE 1994), the term
inclusion was introduced as a guideline for school policy and practice with respect to
the diversity of religions, cultures, values and beliefs, so that all pupils could: ‘... take
part in social, academic and cultural communities, equally’ (Ministry of Education
Research and Church Affairs 1996a, 53). Inclusion was given a broad foundation high-
lighted through the following three aspects:
Based on the previous discussion, inclusion can be seen as an extension of the ideol-
ogy promoted by the 1967 White Paper (Ministry of Social Affairs 1967) emphasising
that all people are inalienable parts of the society, to ‘. . . inspire individuals to realise
their potential in ways that serve the common good; to nurture humanity in a society in
development’ (Ministry of Education Research and Church Affairs 1996b, 40). The
International Journal of Inclusive Education 269
Student Assessment (PISA) report was published. The results from PISA once more
suggested that Norwegian pupils’ results were at the OECD average, and that a dispropor-
tionately high number of pupils were in the left tail of the distribution. In spite of the central
managed unitary school policy, a newly revised curricula focusing academic learning and
an extensive amount of resources spent on education, the PISA-report indicated that the
Norwegian education system had not succeeded in providing learning and knowledge as
intended. Accordingly, a government-appointed ‘Quality Committee’ (Ministry of Edu-
cation and Research 2003) was selected to work out proposals for the improvement of com-
pulsory education. The following international studies Progress in International Reading
Literacy Study (PIRLS), Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study
(TIMSS) and PISA, assessing pupils’ achievements in core subjects at various stages of
schooling, suggested repeatedly that Norwegian pupils academic performance were
lower than most other IEA-countries. The IEA-reports and the ‘Quality Committee’ sug-
gestions cleared the way for the current reform: ‘Knowledge Promotion’, NC-06 (Ministry
of Education and Research 2006). The main characteristics of the reform are summarised as
follows:
The revised NC-06 reform introduced explicit expectations in all subjects, and national
tests to evaluate whether or not the pupils have reached the levels expected. The new
measures, combined with transparency at the school level, have transferred a greater
responsibility to the school and teacher. In addition, the reform has expanded the under-
standing of adapted education, and transformed the understanding of the term into a
general principle for all learning, aiming to realise all pupils’ innate academic potential.
The school shall provide adapted education so that each pupil is encouraged to the highest
possible level of achievement. (Ministry of Education and Research 2006, 1)
Haug (2003) and Bachmann and Haug (2006) have reviewed two main understand-
ings of adapted education, and they use the terms: a broad and a narrow understanding
270 R.B. Fasting
Figure 1. Special education in primary and lower secondary schools, 2006 – 2011.
International Journal of Inclusive Education 271
years, however, the volume of special education has increased from an average 5.9% in
2006–2007 to 8.2% in 2010. In addition, the chart shows that the percentage of pupils
involved increases as they get older. In lower secondary (grades 8–10) more than 10%
of the pupils receive special education (GSI statistics 2010 –2011) (Figure 2).
The data for segregated special education – special schools – show stable figures
and include about 0.4% of pupils over the last decade. On the other hand, and in spite of
the ongoing debate emphasising adapted education within a unitary school, segregated
special education – special groups and special classes – in mainstream schools has
increased from approximately 0.3% of pupils in 2005 to about 1.2% in 2009 –2010
(GSI statistics 2010 –2011). The data suggest a significant change in the way Norwe-
gian schools cope with the diversity of pupils. It may be questioned whether the
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reform’s focus on academic learning and accountability has affected the way teaching
is organised. It seems that pupils who struggle to fulfil the curriculum expectations are
more often placed in homogeneous groups across classes. This kind of segregated prac-
tice represents a new trend in Norway, in spite of policy documents and reports that
question the approach (UNESCO/IBE 2000, 2008; Hattie 2009). It may be that the
reform has affected school leaders’ and teachers’ understanding of the standards for
inclusive classroom practice, and the understanding of how to implement the principle
of adapted education in an inclusive manner.
Discussion
Inclusion rests upon humanistic values and man’s inviolability (Persson 2006), and
implies ‘. . . fundamental changes in educational thinking about children, curriculum,
pedagogy and school organisation’ (Slee 2011, 110). The focus is not merely on the
extensions of ordinary schools in order to increase the recruitment of pupils with differ-
ent backgrounds and abilities, but in addition, inclusion is an ‘ethical project’, involving
all participants in the school community, which invites politicians, staff and scholars to
think about the world we live in and our role in this context (Slee 2011). Accordingly,
the development of inclusive education has to be considered as a process rather than a
state, including the norms and standards that comprise school policy and practice,
where all human beings are respected as individuals, and where the processes of learn-
ing and interaction are in focus (UNESCO/IBE 1994; Meijer, Pijl, and Hegarty 1997;
UNESCO/IBE 2000).
At the heart of the debate is the understanding of what is ‘expectable’ and whether
‘aberrations’ are social constructions or unchangeable characteristics (Fulcher 1989;
Gallagher et al. 2004; Vehmas 2008). Pupils defined in terms of special characteristics,
special needs or learning difficulties are compared to curriculum expectations and tea-
chers’ understanding of normality. When pupils’ with unexpected characteristics show
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up, they challenge our understanding of normality in regard to the standards we all want
our children to experience and achieve. Emanuelsson (2001) pinpoints the mechanism
in force when there is a discrepancy between what the pupil is able to do and what is
expected:
Concluding remarks
The article draws parallels between the revised understanding of the Norwegian principle
of adapted education and the increased use of special education in Norway, and questions
whether the current change in practice is in accordance with the ambition to develop
International Journal of Inclusive Education 273
inclusive schools. The present data indicate that Norwegian school policy is drifting in
the opposite direction. One characteristic is the change in focus from fostering the collec-
tive aspects of education, where learning and interaction are reciprocal connected, to first
and foremost request individual academic performance. The trend is applauded by local
school policy-makers advocating individual tailored teaching for every pupil, a greater
focus on basic subject learning and the use of comparative assessment both nationally
and internationally. This individual-centred ideology is closely related to neo-liberalism,
emphasising that all human beings are mainly consumers and not interacting citizens,
where freedom of choice and individuals opportunities is put in the foreground. Although
the principle of inclusion is a basic premise in Norwegian education policy, the principle
seems to have partly vanished in the name of providing efficient education. The basis of
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inclusive education: access, active participation and success at all levels of education to
prevent discrimination and marginalisation (UNESCO/IBE 2008), are currently chal-
lenged by ideologies anchored in the ‘individual benefit principle’. However, the
figures themselves do not provide evidence on the consequences of the reform at the
school level. A next step will be to collect information from schools and teachers to
give an insight into the interplay between the curriculum’s ideology, given requirements
and school practices. From this perspective, it is important to note that special education
comprises a variety of individuals with a broad spectrum of needs and characteristics, and
for some pupils, the teaching has to go beyond traditional schooling and address objects
and goals to obtain successful post-school participation in society (DeSeCo 2005). From
this perspective, it can be useful to recall that the chief use of goals and objects is through
the ‘eyes’ of the individual pupil, because: ‘. . . it is the student work that we want to
improve, not standards or scholars’ ideas about standards’ (Cohen 1995, 155)
Taken together, Norwegian schools and teachers are once more in charge of two
partly contradictory ambitions: the expectation of increasing all pupils’ yield from edu-
cation and the development of inclusive schools – schools for all – where individual
differences are acknowledged and respected. To succeed with these partly contrasting
ambitions, a significant factor seems to be the teachers’ understanding of how to
develop an inclusive classroom that cares for and respects the diversity of pupils.
Note
1. Grunnskolens Informasjonssystem (GSI statistics) provides information about primary and
lower secondary schools on local and national levels; the allocation of pupils, teachers and
resources, special education, bilingual education, etc. The database is provided by Stat-
istics Norway.
Notes on contributor
Dr Rolf B. Fasting is a professor of Special Education at the Department of Primary and
Secondary Teacher Education, Oslo, and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences.
His academic interests include focusing inclusive and adaptive education, special needs
education, educational policy, assessment and didactics perspectives.
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