Abstract:
This dissertation was developed within the research line Education, Culture, Theories
and Pedagogical Processes of the Postgraduate Program in Education - Academic
Master's Degree from the Faculdade de Inhumas. We start from the premise that the
Salamanca Statement, which presents the idea of inclusive education as education
for all, influences Brazilian educational policies aimed at school inclusion, being
related to a global economic project. Thus, we focused our efforts on answering the
following question: have the school education goals implicit in the Salamanca
Statement been materialized in public policies for school inclusion in Brazil? Thus,
the general objective was to highlight the school educational goals implicit in the
Declaration of Salamanca. As specific objectives, we listed: to present elements that
demonstrate the process of internationalization of educational policies in Brazil and
its relationship with the school educational purposes aimed at school inclusion; to
contribute theoretically with reflections about the concept of school educational
purposes; and to analyze the Salamanca Statement, with the concept of school
educational purposes as theoretical support. The methodological procedure followed
two paths: a literature review and a document analysis. The literature review aimed to
contextualize the object of study in the set of productions published in the Theses
and Dissertations Catalog of the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de
Nível Superior (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel)
and to identify the research related to the theme. The discussion on educational
purposes was based on Fiala, Freitas, Lenoir et al., Libâneo, Noddings and Pessoni.
The documentary analysis focused on the Salamanca Statement, in order to highlight
the evidence of educational purposes in this document, emphasizing how they were
materialized in the educational public policies in Brazil. For qualitative data collection
and analysis, we used the content analysis proposed by Laurence Bardin. The
analysis pointed to the existence of evidence of educational purposes in that
declaration and in the Line of Action on Special Educational Needs, proposed by this
document, which aims to define policy and inspire the action of governments,
international and national aid organizations, non-governmental organizations and
other bodies in its implementation. However, inclusive education is discussed
considering the neoliberal vision, in which the school becomes a company that
promotes competition for all, including those with special educational needs, reducing
their rights to the search for a standard of normality, aiming at competitiveness and
meritocracy. Moreover, the neoliberal principles of individualization of the right to
education remove from the State the responsibility to guarantee good to all
individuals, making them responsible for their choices and blaming them for their
defeats, exempting the exclusionary processes of schooling from the causes of
school failure. To face this process, we understand that an education with a vision
based on the cultural-historical theory is necessary, aiming at a curriculum of
educational experiences, that is, the formation of individuals by means of
sociocultural experiences lived in educational situations.