close

Blog

  • Happy Mother’s Day from BCEdAccess

    Happy Mother’s Day from BCEdAccess

    This Mother’s Day, we honour every mother, grandmother, auntie, and caregiver carrying what the school system would not.

    Read more

  • Say here, if I call your name

    Say here, if I call your name

    Families have heard the deflections for years. We’ve catalogued them and answered each one. None explain disabled students losing access to school.

    Read more

  • Dear School District Leadership,

    This was posted by a parent in our Facebook group, and speaks to what so many other parents and children are struggling with in the education system. This letter needs to be read out loud in front of those decision makers who shape education. This is so spot on. Many thanks to the parent who wrote this and for allowing us to share this with all of you. Please share widely and feel free to send this to the Trustees in your school district. ******* Another month, another email … Dear School District Leadership, I am writing as the parent…

    Read more

  • New BC data on student absences

    New BC data on student absences

    We’re sharing a new set of data on student absences in BC public schools, obtained through a provincial FOI request placed by one of our members. The dataset covers the 2022/23 and 2023/24 school years and includes absence rates and reasons for absence, broken down by inclusive education designation (for example, G designation for autistic students). We’re making this data available because we are seeing troubling patterns that are important for families to be aware of. Across every school district, students with inclusive education designations are absent at higher rates than students without designations.  Absence rates differ markedly by region and designation…

    Read more

  • The budget that cries wolf: SD61’s deficit cycle

    The budget that cries wolf: SD61’s deficit cycle

    Every spring in British Columbia, school districts present budgets that force communities to choose between necessary programming such as: music or speech therapy, career education or school counselling, enrichment for all students or baseline access for disabled ones. No one should have to make these choices. It is like asking people to choose between clean air or clean water. These ‘choices’ are presented as the unavoidable arithmetic of balanced budgets and provincial funding formulas. It isn’t that simple. What is on the chopping block also signals what a district values, what they treat as negotiable, whose needs matter. For many…

    Read more

  • March back in after spring break

    March back in after spring break

    For families of children with disabilities and complex needs, spring break is rarely a break. It is two weeks in which the school layer is stripped away and you are left with what is actually happening: your child’s needs, your capacity, and the gap between the two that school was supposedly bridging. The equinox passed recently, and with it a cascade of thresholds: Nowruz, Eid al-Fitr, the tilting of the hemisphere toward longer light. Spring, in almost every tradition, is supposed to mean renewal. For many of our families, it means something harder. What the break reveals Different families come…

    Read more

  • Does Your Bully Wear Pink?

    We reposted our important BCEdAccess blog written in 2023 by Tracy Humphreys and started a conversation in our Facebook group about people’s feelings about Pink Shirt Day. Many families expressed concerns about how Pink Shirt Day functions as a declaration that replaces the work it claims to represent: schools distribute shirts, take photos, post to social media, and generate the appearance of a community that takes bullying seriously, which is precisely what allows the deeper, ongoing harm to continue. It feels performative for many. “I think the idea of it started with good intent, its lost its meaning. We don’t…

    Read more

  • The Mother of all Battles

    This is a blog about topics that people write large books about. Patriarchy, motherhood, disability, economy, and oppression. All of these topics intersect when we talk about employment —specifically, when it’s mostly women giving up their jobs to fill a gap in government support. All of their stories show a pattern of a single story. “I work in healthcare and hold a master’s degree and currently only work part-time so I can support my child, whose lack of inclusion and supports in middle school makes attending school a significant daily hurdle” – Anonymous How is it that our education system…

    Read more

  • An Open Letter to Trustees and Advocates in the BC Public School System in Advance of the Upcoming Budget Season

    NOTE: This guest blog is written by a fellow parent, advocate and member of BCEdAccess. THANK YOU!! Dear Trustees and Fellow Advocates, We’ve all been told that participation in the district’s budget process is a great way to advocate for more support for students with disabilities, but what exactly does that mean and how can we do that in a meaningful way? As we approach the upcoming budget season, I want to share with you some things I have learned and observed over the past few years while I’ve been following the BC Education system budget process. These observations are…

    Read more

  • Year in Review – A Collective Scream

    While we are nearing the end of 2025, we are still not even halfway through the 2025-2026 school year.  In the upcoming year, it won’t be long until we reach spring, and there will be even more talks on how to cut from the budget, which has already been cut so much.  For this blog, we wanted to focus on the voices and experiences of our community. Your labour, advocacy and contributions that push for change.  Here are parent testimonials from our previous 3 community blogs from 2025, along with additional testimonials and wishes for the education system. To read…

    Read more