Resources

Practical tools you can use straight away.

These are designed for real-world use — not just awareness, but action.

How to use these resources

Each resource comes in two versions:

1. Checklist version
A simple, practical tool you can print, fill in, and use directly.

2. Explainer version
The same content, with reasoning and context behind each step.

Why two versions?

Because knowing what to do is often not enough.

People are more likely to act when they understand why something matters.
And they are better at applying tools when they can adapt them to their own context.

The checklist helps you do the thing.
The explainer helps you understand the thing.

Both are needed. So both are here for you!

The Talk – Communication Checklist

A practical checklist to structure how you work and communicate with students or staff.

It helps you make expectations explicit, reduce friction, and build a shared way of working that actually holds up in real situations.

This ties in with the “Talk” I talk about here.

 

Event Planning – Accessibility Toolkit

Planning an event that actually works in practice is mostly about getting the details right.

This toolkit gives you two versions of the same resource:

  • The checklist – practical, printable, and designed to be used while planning

  • The explainer – the reasoning behind each step, so you understand what matters and why

Why both?
Because people are more likely to do things when they understand them — and better at adapting them to their own context.

Accessibility is not about adding a few adjustments at the end.
It is about designing events so people can actually attend, participate, and stay.