Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Find Special Olympics Near Me
We are helping to make the world a better, healthier and more joyful place—one athlete, one volunteer, one family member at a time.
Your Program
Based on your location, your local program is %location%.
Your location could not be automatically determined. Choose a program below:
Your Special Olympics Local Program:
Looking for a different local program? Choose a program from the list below:
In the News

The Global State of Inclusion in Education: The Year of the Teacher

A global call to action urging governments and systems to invest in teachers as the foundation of inclusive, equitable education for all learners.
Tim Shriver talking to a young girl.

In the lead up to International Day of Education, Special Olympics issued its third annual letter on the Global State of Inclusion in Education. Here is an excerpt from the letter:

In my first days as a “practice” teacher in New Haven, Connecticut, I remember being overwhelmed by the complexity and quantity of the work—preparing lessons, grading papers, communicating with families and connecting with students. I had been taught to be a teacher, but once in the classroom, I realized I was almost entirely unprepared. I quickly learned what every teacher knows: being a teacher is a huge responsibility that demands enormous effort and comes with precious little support.

In recent years, I've seen teachers doing more than I could ever have imagined. I’ve visited dozens of schools supporting Special Olympics' efforts to make schools more inclusive and have seen teachers working miracles. In places as different as rural India and suburban Rhode Island, I've watched teachers lead inclusive classrooms, coach Unified Sports teams, facilitate student leadership programs, organize pep rallies, lead schoolwide campaigns for inclusion and dignity and do everything imaginable to nurture each child entrusted to their care. The challenges of teaching and, in particular, of teaching inclusively, remain enormous. The good news is that teachers are stepping up in ways we may have once thought beyond the realm of possibility.

The bad news is that teachers continue to get little support, and that lack of support is taking its toll, leading to a worldwide shortage of qualified, trained and well-equipped teachers. We should all be alarmed and awakened to a crisis building right before our eyes: We face an urgent global teacher shortage, and the future of all our children is at stake.

Two people at the front of a room talking to people sitting in chairs.

Global State of Inclusion in Education: Promises Made Must Become Promises Kept

The infrastructure of exclusion wasn’t built in a day, and it won’t be dismantled in a day. Moving beyond incremental steps in transforming education systems will require urgent, coordinated action—led by governments, civil society and international organizations—to transform education systems and deliver true inclusion for all learners.
2 Min Read

Global State of Inclusion in Education: A Letter, an Invitation and a Challenge

For International Day of Education, Special Olympics’ has issued its first annual letter on the Global State of Inclusion in Education.
1 Min Read