In India.. Especially West bengal specifically few districts.. I observed government teachers are hardly aware of the very term.. 'Inclusion' UDL.. Pedagogy for children with disabilities..
Yes. Researchers can provide the names of the schools which are fully implementing inclusive education. In South Africa for instance, we have what we call Full-service schools, where learners with different impairments are put together in the same classrooms with all learners whom we regard as normal, and the teaching and learning run smoothly. However, they are few, and it is because of lack of enough resources, and somehow the parents' denial to take their children to those schools, because of fear of stigma from other learners and parents. Such parents prefer to take their children to special schools, because there all learners are the in the same situation@@, although their conditions differ, but they will not isolate or discriminate each other.
In Zimbabwe it is done on paper only. I have not seen a single school that fully implements inclusive education. May be the private ones that I have never had an opportunity to visit them.
A big no until and unless you have the agreement document signed. If that school is extraordinary for its novice agenda, it has big data or longitudinal study on the same practice or domain. We can highlight that particular school's specific domain of practicing pedagogy. It's better to mention the private/public/aided school and the relevance of selecting a 'particular school.'