Training Resources have now moved and can be found here.

Inclusion: All Children, All Needs

Behaviour support strategies for all children, using inclusive practices.

Inclusion in education is a commitment to creating environments where every learner can participate and thrive. However, it is sometimes interpreted in different ways.

For some, it means ensuring students with additional needs can access lessons. For others, it refers to adapting the curriculum, differentiating tasks, or providing extra adult support.

But true inclusion is far deeper and far more human than any policy, checklist, or intervention strategy.

At its heart, inclusion is about belonging. It is about ensuring that every child feels seen, heard, valued, and safe enough to learn. It is about creating environments where difference is not simply accommodated but respected, and where every member of the school community has their part to play.

In our webinar, Inclusion – All children, All needs: Behaviour Support Strategies for All Children, Through Inclusive Practice, we were joined by educational psychologists, behaviour specialists, inclusion leaders, and school-based practitioners, to explore what effective inclusive practice looks like, why behaviour must be understood as communication, and how to create cultures where all children are included and can thrive.

Inclusion is not presence; it is belonging

One of the strongest messages from experienced inclusion leaders is that simply being ‘in the room’ is not the same as being truly included.

As Dr Zachary Berezowski, Director of Student Support at The Kaust School, Saudi Arabia, says,

Inclusion is not merely about presence. It is fundamentally defined by creating a deep sense of belonging and ensuring equitable access for every student.”

Belonging is an emotional state, not a logistical arrangement. A child can sit in the middle of a classroom and still feel isolated. They can complete every piece of work to the best of their ability and still feel disconnected.

Unlock this content. Login / Register.

Post Rating

You must be logged in to vote.

SHARE
Access Content

To view this content, you must have active Team Teach certification. Please register or log in and check your certificate number is added to your profile.

Global Community

The Team Teach Knowledge Hub is a global community containing content from around the world. Please exercise your professional judgment to determine the appropriateness of any of our resources for your specific sector and geographic region, and be aware of the applicable laws and guidelines governing your organisation.