

The Prep Work: A Dignity Audit for Teachers - What Your Classroom Might Be Telling You
A simple dignity audit for teachers to help you notice what behaviour language often misses before changing consequences, routines, or classroom expectations.

Dr. Cameron McCuaig
Mar 75 min read


Before You Begin: A Quick Classroom Check-In for Safety, Dignity, Voice, and Belonging
Before introducing new routines or rights language, take a quick classroom check-in. Notice how safety, dignity, voice, and belonging are showing up in your room before planning your next step.

Dr. Cameron McCuaig
Mar 54 min read


Before You Change Your Classroom, Read the Room
Before classroom culture shifts, teachers need a clear view of what is already happening in the room. This post introduces two new reflection pages in the Web of Rights Starter Guide to help teachers notice patterns, protect dignity, and choose a stronger starting point.

Dr. Cameron McCuaig
Feb 275 min read


What Changes First in a Rights-Informed Classroom
When teachers try something new in the classroom, they are usually not looking for a miracle. They are looking for signs. They want to know whether the room is becoming more teachable. They want to know whether conflict is changing. They want to know whether the language is landing. Most of all, they want to know whether the work is worth continuing when the day is still full, imperfect, and very real.

Dr. Cameron McCuaig
Feb 127 min read


A Quiet Classroom Is Not Always a Healthy Classroom
What if one of the most misleading signals in education is the quiet classroom?
From the hallway, it can look like peak efficiency. Students are seated. Voices are low or absent. The room appears stable, streamlined, almost frictionless. For decades, schooling has often treated that visual as a kind of performance metric, proof that the system is functioning well and the adult is firmly in control.

Dr. Cameron McCuaig
Jan 234 min read











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