How we source information
Short answer: listings need useful public information families can check directly. Coverage is growing, not complete.
Public sources first
Listings are built from official public sources such as provider websites, registration pages, public recreation agencies, nonprofit directories, camp directories, and provider-submitted updates. New listings are added weekly as these sources are checked.
Why some providers may be missing
We only publish a listing when we can connect the program's adaptive, inclusive, sensory-friendly, disability, or special-needs support to a public source families can review. We do not add a provider just because it seems likely, and Google or map/contact matches do not replace program-specific source language.
How listing labels work
Source checked means a public source clearly mentions adaptive, special recreation, disability, sensory-friendly, inclusion, accommodations, or similar programming. Inclusive details mentioned means the source references accommodations, accessibility, inclusion, or all-abilities support, but details may still be limited.
How families should read a listing
Start with the provider website, contact page, registration link, program details, and last-checked date. Then confirm the practical pieces that matter for your family, including current openings, ages, cost, schedule, support model, location, and required forms.
Useful pages first
The guide is organized across the country, but we only highlight pages when they have enough useful public information for families to review. Areas with fewer checked listings are labeled as still growing.
Careful review
Tools can help organize public information, but listing changes still need source, duplicate, sensitive-information, and wording checks before families see them.
Common questions
What sources are used for listings?
Listings are built from public sources such as provider websites, registration pages, public recreation agencies, nonprofit directories, camp directories, and reviewed provider-submitted updates.
Can Google or map information verify a program by itself?
No. Google or map information can help cross-check contact or location details, but it does not replace public program-specific language about adaptive, inclusive, sensory-friendly, disability, accommodation, or special recreation support.
Why are some pages labeled as growing or limited?
Coverage labels show how much useful public information has been checked so far. The guide avoids claiming completeness, especially in areas where sources are still being reviewed.