
Promoting Inclusion: Empowering Classroom Engagement
A real classroom moment in 2016 reshaped how Schoolze approaches inclusive, accessible communication for every family.
Strong family school communication is one of the most important predictors of student success. Yet in many classrooms, well-intentioned messages never fully reach home, not because parents don’t care, but because the format or language creates invisible barriers.
Over the years, moments like these have shaped how we think about communication at Schoolze and pushed us toward building a more inclusive system.
Inclusion Starts With Being Heard
In 2016, while working with a Schoolze classroom, we encountered a situation that made this gap impossible to ignore. A parent who had recently immigrated from the Middle East wanted to stay connected with their child’s school but struggled to understand newsletters written in English. The issue wasn’t motivation or involvement. It was access.
That experience raised a simple but powerful question:
If communication doesn’t reach everyone, is it truly communication?
Bridging the Language Gap
To address this, we introduced a newsletter translation feature supporting over 90 languages. What began as a solution for one family quickly proved valuable to many others. Parents were able to read school updates in the language they were most comfortable with, making information more approachable and meaningful.
Teachers began to see higher engagement, and parents felt more confident participating in school conversations. Communication became more inclusive, strengthening the connection between school and home. This however was still just the beginning.
When Translation Isn’t Enough
As Schoolze continued to grow, we learned that language translation alone could not solve every accessibility challenge.
In a nearby school district, we met parents who were fluent in spoken Spanish but found reading difficult in any language. Even translated newsletters created friction. Once again, the barrier wasn’t interest, it was literacy.
Expanding Inclusivity Through Text-to-Audio
Guided by direct parent feedback, we began experimenting with a text-to-audio feature for newsletters. The idea was straightforward: if reading is a barrier, listening should be an option.
Today, we have a beta version that allows newsletters to be read aloud in multiple voices and languages. Parents can now listen to school updates in approximately 13 languages, complementing our translation tools and expanding access for more families.
The Impact of Inclusive Communication
These efforts have helped thousands of parents feel more informed and more connected to their children’s education. When communication is accessible, parents become active partners rather than passive recipients. Inclusion, we’ve learned, isn’t about a single feature,it’s about removing obstacles wherever they exist.
Looking Ahead
Our commitment to inclusivity is ongoing. We continue to learn from educators, families, and research, and we remain focused on building tools that reflect the real needs of classroom communities.
If you have ideas or feedback on how we can do better, we’d love to hear from you. You can reach us directly or email avneesh@schoolze.com.
By designing communication that meets families where they are, we can help ensure that every parent feels informed, included, and empowered.
About the Author
Avneesh Kumar is the founder of Permissionless Academy — a modern learning platform built on the belief that real skills come from building real things, not collecting credentials.
He spent a decade building inside the education system before concluding that meaningful change has to come from outside it. Today he builds AI-native products through Schoolze Labs, Monterey AI Labs, and a handful of other ventures — all running without a traditional team.
He writes about education, agency, and building leverage in the age of AI.
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