hand icon with "End collective Punishment in BC Schools"

School District 78 Fraser-Cascade

This page offers public information about the school district, along with related FAQs and news coverage. If the district has made a statement on the use of collective punishment in the district’s schools, it will appear below. Where no statement has been received, we invite a formal response. Our site aims to document policy positions with transparency, accountability, and respect.

Serving the region of:

Hope, Agassiz, Yale, Boston Bar

Click here to see which schools are in this district

Hope Secondary, Boston Bar Elem-Secondary, Coquihalla Elementary, Harrison Hot Springs Elementary, Agassiz Elem-Secondary, Kent Elementary, Fraser Cascade Continuing Education, Silver Creek Elementary, Q’aLaTKu7em School, Two Rivers Education Centre, Fraser-Cascade Open Learning, Agassiz Centre for Education

  • Collective punishment is still used in schools across British Columbia, despite growing recognition that it causes harm—especially to disabled children. Collective punishment refers to the practice of penalising a group for the actions of an individual or subset—such as cancelling recess for an entire class because one student was disruptive. Though often framed as a tool […]

    Read more: Is collective punishment legal in BC schools?

District’s statement

Provide statement on behalf of this district

If your School District wishes to provide a public statement about its position on the use of collective punishment in schools, please email us at:

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What can I do to end collective punishment?

Change begins when we act with clarity and courage. By signing the petition, you help signal that collective punishment in schools is not merely unfortunate, but fundamentally unjust—an affront to dignity and evidence-based education. Write to your principal to make your own position known; direct communication from families challenges silence and inertia, and compels schools to account for the harm inflicted under the guise of discipline.

Sign the petition

End collective punishment in BC schools

No child should be punished for another’s behaviour. Children know from a very young age that this is wrong.

We call on the BC Ministry of Education and Child Care to end collective punishment in BC Schools.

Write a letter to the principal

Use the search tool below to find your school and send a letter to the principal. Your message lets school leaders know that collective punishment is unacceptable. Change starts with your voice.




If you are ready to do more, find detailed steps for engagement on our dedicated actions page.

News