Partner With CAN
Collaborate with us to strengthen programs, expand reach, and create more inclusive opportunities for children with disabilities.
Get Involved
Inclusion grows through people, partnership, compassion, and action. Whether you want to volunteer, collaborate, support, or advocate, there is a place for you in the CAN journey.
Real inclusion takes committed people who are willing to support children, families, and communities in practical ways.
Why Get Involved
Children with disabilities need more than awareness. They need communities, schools, professionals, supporters, and partners who are willing to help build spaces of dignity, belonging, and opportunity.
At CAN, involvement is not about standing on the sidelines and cheering. It is about contributing to real support, real partnerships, and real progress in the lives of children and families.
Ways to Get Involved
There are different ways to stand with CAN, depending on your skills, resources, network, or area of interest.
Collaborate with us to strengthen programs, expand reach, and create more inclusive opportunities for children with disabilities.
Offer your time, skills, energy, or professional support to help CAN carry out meaningful work with children and families.
Contribute through resources, funding, visibility, networks, or practical assistance that helps CAN grow its impact.
Use your voice, influence, and platform to help raise awareness, challenge stigma, and promote dignity and inclusion.
Who Can Get Involved
CAN welcomes involvement from individuals, organizations, and groups who share a commitment to inclusion and child-centered support.
Support inclusive learning, collaboration, and awareness in educational spaces.
Partner with CAN on outreach, programs, awareness, and shared impact work.
Contribute your knowledge, expertise, or support to strengthen children and families.
Help provide resources, opportunities, and momentum for CAN’s mission.
Take Action
Your involvement can help create stronger support systems, inclusive opportunities, and more hopeful futures for children with disabilities.