Jennifer Abbott (The Corporation, The New Corporation) premiers Magnitude of All Things in Vancouver Oct 29-Nov 4. If “The Problem” of climate 911 has you in grief and you contemplate the utility of hope come c this staggeringly beautiful & essential film https://t.co/V8gOPF3hm3
@InclusionBC@FSIBC and @BCEdAccess hear from too many families whose children and youth have been restrained and/or secluded at school in #bced Here are the Ministry of Education guidelines for school districts around the practice: https://t.co/MMFm4UT6EF
Come listen to the brilliant Maggie Milne Martens, Cissie Fu, Adiba Muzaffar, Yeonoo Park as part of an SFU symposium on community engaged research entitled Research as Advocacy https://t.co/mswsA1yycD
Come join Trish Walsh and myself on Feb 29 for an embodied and connected practice workshop deepening a trauma sensitive response to building resilience personally, professionally or in your organization. https://t.co/mcz2h2PZj2
The @bctf is asking parents to have their kids wear masks in the classroom and create “a culture of mask-wearing.”
“While masks are not mandatory at all times in #bced schools, we’re hoping you can help us support a culture of mask-wearing.” https://t.co/0QYEVVB4Zu
This thread could not be more important. #bced needs to see a real commitment to a long term plan to support the mental health of students AND educators. That there are still cuts to counselors, EAs and other critical supports during #COVID19 is atrocious.
This is one of the consequences, and evidence of, underfunding. The next time you hear about the ‘highest funding ever’ in #bced, think about this. We don’t have enough School Psychologists, Learning Support Teacher, EAs, etc to assess and support all diverse learners. #bcpoli
Today is #WorldStatisticsDay. We cannot act on what we do not know. Data allows us to make change and improve #HumanRights4BC. Read our report on the importance of collecting race and other disaggregated #data and stay tuned for upcoming translations: https://t.co/OK5sM2T79R
A B.C./University of British Columbia research project gave homeless people $7,500 each — the results were 'beautifully surprising' | CBC News https://t.co/pBn2BRo3Pe