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Between withdrawal and resistance: parents’ strategies in navigating preschool education in Russia for children with developmental disabilities and autism

Irina Kuznetsova (School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK)
Layla Garapshina (Kazan State Medical University, Kazan, Russian Federation)
Laysan Mukharyamova (Kazan State Medical University, Kazan, Russian Federation)

Journal of Children's Services

ISSN: 1746-6660

Article publication date: 9 July 2021

Issue publication date: 26 November 2021

230

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to fill the gap in social sciences research on parents’ strategies in navigating preschool education in Russia. It focusses on the barriers that children with developmental disabilities and autism face in preschool education in Russia and highlights the emerging facilitators of inclusive education.

Design/methodology/approach

It uses a modified labelling approach analysing strategies of withdrawal and resistance. The research included semi-structured interviews with parents of children with Down syndrome, Rett syndrome and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) in 2013–2014 and 2018–2019 and semi-structured interviews with professionals in Tatarstan, Russia. The data analysis was based on constructivist methods and grounded theory.

Findings

Although Russian law guarantees equal access to education for every child and requires the development of inclusive education, children with developmental disabilities, including autism, are often stigmatised at the preschool stage, both in special needs and mainstream institutions. Parents use various strategies to navigate access to preschool education and try more than one strategy from secrecy and withdrawal to resistance. Parents challenged the mainstream educational structures in Kazan and established groups for children with autism in some mainstream kindergartens and classes in mainstream schools.

Research limitations/implications

There should be informational support for parents with different options for special needs education, providing integrative and inclusive education. It is necessary to increase the number of trained specialists in special needs and mainstream kindergartens in Russia for children with developmental disabilities and ASD. More study is required to overcome stigmatisation and increase tolerance towards persons with developmental disabilities in Russia both on a national and local level.

Practical implications

The research findings can be useful for countries which have recently recognised ASD and do not have inclusive preschool educational practices and where labelling towards children with developmental disabilities is still common. The study recommends that resources are required to provide free or affordable preschool education for children with developmental disabilities. It is also crucial to help parents navigate preschool education and select the best options for each child’s needs.

Social implications

This study’s findings add value to the importance of addressing the stigma towards people with disabilities within professional groups and broader society, which form barriers for preschool education and in some cases result in withdrawal from preschool education. To overcome the stigmatisation of children with developmental disabilities in preschool education, it is necessary to establish modern targeted pedagogical approaches and training for professionals and informational campaigns for the broader audience.

Originality/value

The paper is novel as there was no sociological research into preschool education of children with developmental disabilities in Russia. It argues that the parents’ experiences are much broader than just interactions with special needs or mainstream education. Parents navigate across special needs institutions, specialised groups in mainstream and private kindergartens, mixed groups in mainstream kindergartens and home education with various strategies from secrecy and withdrawal to resistance and challenge. Preschool education for children with developmental disabilities in Russia is hindered by a lack of professional resources and the stigma embedded into professional and societal responses.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Thanks are given to all interviewees who took part in the study. Authors are grateful to Dr Zhanna Savelieva for her work on a project as well. Authors thank the anonymous referees and the editorial team for their insightful comments which helped to improve the paper. This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research ‘Children with autism spectrum disorders: the problem of social integration in the context of convergence of biomedical and socio-humanistic paradigm of knowledge’ (project 18-00-01682/18-00-01529).Russian Foundation for Basic Research. Grant 18–00-01529 ‘Children with autism spectrum.

Citation

Kuznetsova, I., Garapshina, L. and Mukharyamova, L. (2021), "Between withdrawal and resistance: parents’ strategies in navigating preschool education in Russia for children with developmental disabilities and autism", Journal of Children's Services, Vol. 16 No. 4, pp. 304-317. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCS-08-2020-0051

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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