When your school board cites budget constraints to deny services, you need the Moore discrimination test — not another policy guide. Here's the best tool for that fight.
The Moore v BC discrimination test is the strongest legal tool for Canadian parents. Here's exactly how to deploy it — at the table, in a letter, and in a complaint.
When you move provinces in Canada, your child's IEP doesn't follow. Here's the best resource for translating rights, terminology, and dispute pathways across all 13 jurisdictions.
AIDE Canada's toolkit is strong on policy but has no advocacy templates and stops at theory. Here are the alternatives that fill its three biggest gaps.
Section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is the constitutional foundation for your child's education rights. Here's how it works and when to invoke it.
Ontario calls it an IEP. Alberta calls it an IPP. NWT calls it a Student Support Plan. A complete guide to what each province calls its special ed plan.
When Canadian schools fail students with disabilities, human rights law offers real recourse. Here's how the complaint process works in every province.
A poorly worded school letter gets ignored. Here's how to write advocacy letters for Canadian schools that use the right legal language to get results.
Canada has no federal special education funding for schools. Each province funds special education differently. Here's how the money flows and what it means for your child.
Ontario's special education system is under severe strain in 2025-2026. Here's what the data shows about exclusions, EA shortages, and how to protect your child.
The Accessible Canada Act doesn't directly govern schools — but it's reshaping the standards parents can cite when fighting for their child's accommodations.