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The Canary Collective

The Canary Collective is the public voice of one educator—an advocate, a witness, and a system insider determined to name harm and protect what is precious. Though it carries the word “collective,” it begins with a single voice breaking the silence so others might join. Like the canaries once sent into coal mines to warn of toxic air, it speaks early and urgently—about discrimination, exclusion, and the quiet violences buried inside school routines. It is a space built on truth-telling and care, calling others toward a shared future where belonging is the norm, not the exception. This is a place for those ready to stop whispering and start building.

  • Why families feel betrayed when they finally reach the school board

    Why families feel betrayed when they finally reach the school board

    An editorial reflection and response to The Canary Collective’s July 29 post When families reach the end of their rope with a school—when they’ve tried everything they can think of and their child is still suffering—the next instinct is often to go higher. In British Columbia, that usually means the Board of Education. The assumption, deeply…

  • On toxic positivity, rationed support, and the betrayal of collaboration

    On toxic positivity, rationed support, and the betrayal of collaboration

    “At the head of the table is almost always the school principal. Not a neutral facilitator, but a gatekeeper balancing limited resources, district priorities, and political pressures.” That sentence from Canary Collective landed in my body like a gavel. It captured what years of documentation, grief, strategic disillusionment, and moral injury have etched into my…

  • Meditating on Canary Collective’s “Filed and Forgotten”

    Meditating on Canary Collective’s “Filed and Forgotten”

    When Canary Collective named the truth about incident reports, they articulated something already deeply known—something felt in the gut, carried in the silences of meetings, and confirmed by the absence of a child’s voice in the official version of events. Their words moved slowly and powerfully, affirming what many parents have experienced but been denied…

  • I only asked for gentleness: on parenting a PDA child in a punishing world

    I only asked for gentleness: on parenting a PDA child in a punishing world

    There is a certain kind of child—intuitive, emotionally articulate, wired with a startling perceptiveness about power and tone, about coercion and choice, about the invisible terms of adult authority—whose presence in the classroom becomes, almost immediately, a threat to the institution’s rhythm, a disruption to its hierarchy, a mirror held up to its limitations.

  • The poison of silence: on complicity, healing, and speaking the truth

    The poison of silence: on complicity, healing, and speaking the truth

    I had so much pain stuck in my chest and throat. Cancelled screams. Unsaid truths. Every meeting where I stayed quiet, every time I swallowed my words to seem reasonable, every time I hoped that portraying myself a certain way might stop my children from being harmed—those moments didn’t disappear. They got stuck. I stopped…

  • Teacher speaks out on exclusion

    Teacher speaks out on exclusion

    An experienced teacher alleges that her school punished her for exposing how it pushes vulnerable students out of class. She claims administrators send students with disabilities home early, force them onto reduced schedules, and isolate them without formal suspension or notifying families. She says that when she reported those illegal, unethical practices, administrators investigated her,…

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