Practical Insights on Accessible Learning and K-12 Professional Development
This blog is for K-12 leaders and instructional designers who want training that actually works, digital content that everyone can access, and practical guidance they can use. No jargon. No unnecessary complexity. Just clear thinking on the work that matters.
WCAG 2.1 vs. WCAG 2.2: What Changed and What Your District Needs to Know
Image Description: A woman wearing dark glasses sits at a desk with a laptop and open books, with a white cane visible in the background.
WCAG Levels Explained: What Level AA Actually Means for Your District
Image Description: A Deaf Black man wearing glasses and a KN-95 mask leans back in a chair while signing in a video meeting via laptop. A community library filled with books and social justice posters serves as the backdrop.
Image by Disabled And Here from the Disabled And Here project page.
What Is WCAG? A Plain-Language Introduction for K–12 Leaders
Image Description: A woman using a power wheelchair smiles while working on a laptop, with the wheelchair's joystick visible in the foreground.
Special Education Staff Training: Where Instructional Design and IDEA Meet
Image Description: Two professionals wearing lanyards review a document together during a training session, with other attendees visible in the background.
The Hidden Compliance Risk in Your K–12 District's Digital Content
Image Description: A professional woman wearing glasses reviews documents alongside a calculator at a bright office desk.
ADA Title II complaints can be filed against your district today — before any deadline passes. Here's what's actually at stake and how to get ahead of it.
New federal digital accessibility rules for schools: what’s changing, by when, and what to do now
Image Description: Accessibility symbol with disability flag colors in the background.
The 2024 ADA Title II rule for K–12 districts explained: WCAG compliance deadlines, what content is covered, and practical first steps.
If what you're reading here resonates
The next step is a conversation. Book a free 30-minute intro call to talk through what you're working on.
Not ready to talk yet?
Explore free accessibility and learning resources you can use today.