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Autism is a neurodevelopmental difference that affects how a person experiences communication, sensory input, social interaction, movement, and patterns of attention or interest. Autistic people are highly diverse, and no single presentation describes everyone. In schools, autistic students may need supports related to communication, sensory regulation, predictability, transitions, executive functioning, or social safety. Many barriers arise not from autism itself, but from environments that are rigid, overwhelming, or built around non-autistic norms. This tag is used for content about autistic students’ educational experiences, rights, and supports, including masking, dysregulation, accommodation, exclusion, bullying, and access to inclusive education.

The apology is probably not coming. It is worth saying plainly, before anything else, because so much of what keeps families suspended in the aftermath of institutional harm is the unspoken anticipation of it — the sense that healing cannot properly…

Success in school complaints rarely looks like the resolution families imagined when they began. There is almost never an apology. There is rarely an admission that something went wrong. The school will not, in most cases, say plainly that your child…

Complaints are stressful for the whole family, and children are perceptive in ways that adults consistently underestimate. A child does not need to overhear a specific conversation to absorb the tension that a complaint process generates — they feel it in…

Institutional normalisation is not a legal defence, and it is not a satisfactory answer. “This is our practice” is one of the most common responses families receive when they challenge something a school has been doing for a long time without…

Yes. Many families assume they must choose one path and exhaust it before opening another. In reality, different pathways address different dimensions of the same harm, and pursuing them in parallel is not only permitted — it is often strategically essential.…

The biggest risk is not conflict. It is lost options. BC’s formal complaint pathways carry hard deadlines that run whether or not you are aware of them. A human rights complaint must generally be filed within one year of the last…

Documentation threatens ambiguity, and ambiguity protects institutions. When parents begin keeping clear records — dates, quotes, follow-ups — schools may shift tone. You might be labelled “adversarial” or “untrusting.” This response is about risk management, not your behaviour. Documentation is not…

Procedural unfairness is about how decisions are made, not just what decisions are reached. Common examples include: Procedural unfairness matters because it is reviewable. Bodies like the Ombudsperson do not re-decide educational policy — they assess whether the process was fair, transparent, and…

“Collaboration” is often presented as a moral requirement, but it is not always appropriate — especially when serious harm is occurring. Collaboration assumes shared power and good faith. Many complaint situations involve neither. When a school controls information, staffing, documentation, and…

Advocacy becomes a time trap when it consumes increasing amounts of energy while producing diminishing returns. Parents often describe this as constantly preparing: drafting emails, gathering documentation, attending meetings, following up, waiting — only to find themselves back where they started.…