
Voices for Education Justice
This series is for parents, caregivers, educators, and community members who are ready to speak, but unsure where to begin. Whether you’re holding a story that still feels too big to name, or you’ve already filled a folder with voice notes and unsent emails, these guides will help you shape your words into something public, resonant, and politically powerful. From choosing a platform to navigating legal safety, from crafting posts in your own voice to publishing hard truths without apology, these are tools for anyone ready to turn private pain into public testimony. Education justice begins with refusing silence—and your words already matter. They’re in chronological order, so start from the bottom, if you want to start from the beginning of the series.
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How to write for your people, not for the institution
If you’ve ever written an email with trembling hands, rehearsed a question in an IEP meeting and swallowed it down, or rewritten your child’s story until it sounded palatable to someone in power—then you already know what it means to shrink yourself for institutional comfort.
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Structuring your site when your thoughts feel chaotic
A guide to emotional architecture: building a site that honours your spiralling thoughts and empowers your audience. You don’t need to organise your pain into neat folders to begin.
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Writing about trauma without exposing yourself
A guide to writing in ways that honour your truth, protect your family, and challenge systems without burning yourself out, with concrete tools for staying safe, understanding defamation law in Canada, and deciding what to name and what to hold close—so your story can live in the world without putting you at risk.
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Where do the ideas come from?
You already have the material. The moment your brain caught fire after a school meeting, the voice note you whispered in your car, the email thread that hollowed you out—these fragments hold more power than you realise. This post is a guide to naming those moments, structuring them into posts, and recognising that your rage…
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Using AI to empower your advocacy blog voice
Reclaiming technology as a tool of witness and using it to support and shape the transformation of thousands of pages of grief, rage, and strategy.
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So you want to write a blog? I think you should!
If you’ve been carrying stories that feel too heavy to hold alone—email drafts, meeting memories, car-cry voice notes, or a feeling in your chest that something must be said—then I believe you’re ready. You don’t need perfect grammar, a polished voice, or a plan.






