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The Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT) is a framework developed by Bruce D. Perry that explains how trauma affects brain development and behaviour. The model emphasises that the brain develops in stages and that interventions should match a child’s developmental needs rather than focusing only on behaviour. In education settings, the framework highlights the importance of regulation, safety, and supportive relationships before expecting complex learning or self-control.

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…

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…

This page addresses physical restraint, isolation, crisis intervention, and unsafe school conditions in BC schools, and specifically their impact on disabled and neurodivergent children, who are disproportionately subjected to these practices. A child in crisis is a child whose nervous system…

This page addresses punitive discipline and behaviour management practices in BC schools, and specifically their impact on disabled and neurodivergent children, who bear a disproportionate share of their harm. When a school applies a behaviour system to a disabled child without…