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Information asymmetry

Schools have access to insider language, policy, and support networks. Families are expected to catch up, decode, and prove eligibility in a system that hides the map.

  • Justice and dignity too expensive for BC NDP

    Justice and dignity too expensive for BC NDP

    In 2018, experts told BC exactly how to fix special education funding. The government has spent five years “consulting” instead. Meanwhile, your child sits in hallways. The 192% problem nobody wants to fund Between 2015 and 2024, autism designations in BC schools exploded by 192%. Total student enrolment? Up just 11.6%. The province knows this. They…

  • When delay becomes policy: British Columbia’s strategic abandonment of disabled students

    When delay becomes policy: British Columbia’s strategic abandonment of disabled students

    In 2018, an independent panel reviewed how British Columbia funds kindergarten through grade twelve education and recommended a prevalence model for special education funding, a shift that would allocate resources based on statistical prevalence of disability within the general student population rather than on individual diagnostic designation. The proposal threatened to expose what the existing system carefully…

  • Flourishing as an ethical imperative

    Flourishing as an ethical imperative

    Like many of you, I caught CBC’s Ideas episode the other day, where philosopher Angie Hobbs spoke about the ancient Greek concept of eudaimonia—a term sometimes translated as happiness or welfare, but more richly understood as human flourishing. In a world flooded by crisis, it may seem indulgent or impractical to contemplate the good life,…

  • You’re not wrong: reflections on motherhood and advocacy

    You’re not wrong: reflections on motherhood and advocacy

    This piece is for the mothers who have become unrecognisable to themselves in the crucible of advocacy—those who perform calm while their bodies tremble with rage, who write polite emails through tears, who scream in the car and smile in the meeting. It is for the women whose clarity was framed as aggression, whose persistence…

  • Barriers in the Vancouver school system: a parent’s perspective

    Barriers in the Vancouver school system: a parent’s perspective

    For families raising neurodivergent children, navigating the school system can feel like surviving a labyrinth built to exhaust you. What should be a place of growth becomes a terrain of harm and dismissal. Beneath the polished language of equity and inclusion lies a set of invisible barricades—attitudinal, communicative, spatial, systemic, and technological—that quietly erode trust…

  • Lawyers over learning: how much is VSB paying Harris & Co

    Lawyers over learning: how much is VSB paying Harris & Co

    As a parent of two children with learning challenges, I found myself deep in the Vancouver School Board’s appeals process. Early on, I heard officials say our children would be supported with “inclusive” classroom resources. In reality, every step felt like an uphill battle. For example, during our Level 1 appeal meeting the board’s own summary…

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