This is a phenomenological study aimed at developing an integrated educational “one-to-one
making friends” program by utilizing local communities, in which were participated by students
in high schools and their parents. The participants were involved to be one-to-one making
friends for the psychological-emotional integration. Further with the involvement of their parents
of students with disability and without disability to support their children's friends, all of them
were the agents of an inclusive program, altogether. To this end, 16 programs were planned
and implemented targeting two students with disability in a special education school, one
student with intellectual disability and the other with autism. And two general high school
students enrolled in nearby high school. Specially, the parents' programs were adapted oneself
to circumstances as their covert need and their children's need. A result showed that the
students with and without disabilities made friends with each other; the parents of students
with and without disabilities resolved conflicts by prejudices and the feeling of sympathy; the
students without disability increasingly understood and embraced characteristics of the students
with disabilities; the gap between the students with and without disabilities has been getting
closed; the parents of students without disabilities could better make a trusting relationship
between parents and their children, and search for identify as parental roles and hoped to
continue a integrated education programs. Thus, this program had positive impacts on every
participants. Furthermore, the communication between parents and children was facilitated as the
meeting progressed. And the group of parents and the group of children exchanged intensely their thoughts and experiences. Upon this result, it is assumed that promoting a psychologicalemotional
integrated education programs between students with disability and without disability
requires continuous regular meetings, not one time exchange. Also, the various numbers
including parents would be better to participate in the making friends programs. Lastly, this
paper reviews implications of the study and makes suggestions for the further studies.