IEP

What are the steps to take before my child gets an IEP or 504 plan?

For this blog post, we’ll discuss how to ask for meetings when you think your child might need academic support for ADHD, dyslexia or another learning disability. You need to know that there is a process, driven by Federal law and state regulations, that spells out timelines and procedures for getting extra support at school. As a school psychologist in the public schools, I worked frequently with families navigating this process. To help you understand what is involved with seeking student support services, let’s break it all down.


I have a concern about my child’s Academic abilities

You are the parent. You know your kid best. Something is concerning you, and some common things pop up. You notice they are not acquiring academic skills as quickly as their friends (trouble reading, not memorizing math facts, etc.). Social skills need to catch up. Their attention wanders at home, and the teachers tell you they have trouble paying attention in class. Your child has received many office disciplinary referrals, and you feel the teachers/administrators call you almost daily about behavior challenges. You know something is getting in the way of their education, but you don’t yet know what it is. And the school may not know yet, either. You’ve heard about learning disabilities, dyslexia and ADHD, and from what you’ve read, your kid exhibits some of the behaviors and symptoms of these diagnoses. You wonder if the school is being proactive, getting educational supports in place, and keeping you informed. If they’re not, here is what you can do.

Step 1: talk to your child’s teacher

Set up a meeting with your child’s teacher, or if your schedule does not allow that, summarize it all in an email. At the meeting or in the email, it is important to ask for an MTSS intervention plan. What is MTSS? It stands for Multi-Tiered Systems of Support. This gives a student an intervention to address what is concerning, whether it is additional academic support, behavioral support such as counseling, or implementing executive functioning strategies to help them focus. The MTSS plan might not be written at that first meeting, but your request kicks off the process. Also important, copy the administration on your correspondences with the teacher so it is also on their radar, and they can help hold the teacher accountable for addressing your concerns.

Step 2: Developing an MTSS plan

Schools often develop plans without parents being directly involved, and that is ok; they should at least share the plan with you. MTSS is part of general education and is available to all students. But you have every right to be involved in the plan’s development, so do not hesitate to ask to have input. Plans will first define the problem; what is it that is concerning? What does it look like in terms of observable behavior? Or what do academics look like? Compare that to what is expected. This helps develop a specific goal for the intervention plan. Where should the kid be? Now, how to get them there. The school team needs to select an intervention that matches the problem. For example, if a student has trouble decoding, then they need to receive supplemental instruction for decoding; an intervention addressing reading comprehension would not be appropriate. Interventions should be scientifically validated, meaning someone did a study and concluded that the intervention is effective; you don’t want schools doing something ineffective! Once the intervention has been selected, the school team needs to tell you how they will track progress.

Step 3: Stay Informed

Ask for what data collection method they will use to help them know that your child is seeing success with the intervention. Let’s go back to a decoding intervention. Perhaps the data collection is how many new sight words a student knows each week. Next, they will implement the plan and collect data. MTSS plans typically run for six to eight weeks, and the team will then analyze the data and see if the intervention worked. If it did, great! If not, they may select another intervention or look at the possibility of special education if the school suspects a disability. Something you can ask along the way is whether or not the intervention is being implemented with fidelity; that is, are school people doing it the way it was intended to be done. There needs to be a meeting after the intervention cycle to see if it was effective, and you can ask to attend.

What if nothing changes?

My kid has been receiving MTSS interventions, and they are not progressing; what next? Suppose a student has gone through an intervention (or two) and is still not making expected gains. It may be time for a full case study evaluation to see if they qualify for special education and related services. As the parent, you have the right to request an evaluation at any time, and the school has to respond to your request within 14 school days. If you request an evaluation for special education, put it in an email so there is a record of it. The school may say no, we do not suspect a disability, and they would have to give you a reason why; this could include they are seeing progress with interventions and that an evaluation is not appropriate at this time. If they agree to an evaluation, you will have a domain meeting with the special education team to discuss what is known about the student, what questions people have, and what data will be collected as part of the evaluation. 

What happens next is the evaluation process, a topic I’ll talk about in-depth in my next blog post.


As a parent, it can be difficult to watch your child struggle academically. There is no need to do this alone. As a school psychologist, I have helped many families through this process. Please don’t hesitate to contact me with questions.





Breaking down the IEP referral process

Summer can be the best time for academic assessments

Summer is here! For your kids, it means a respite from the work and studying of school, and long, fun days filled with outdoor play, movies, video games and friends. However, as a parent, you know its only a few months until your child returns to school. As it happens, for many parents who requested academic testing and assistance over the school year, the assessment and services are postponed over the summer months. I want to help you become more acquainted with terms and processes involved with academic assistance.

Last post, I talked about Section 504 plans. This time let’s discuss IEPs.

What is an IEP?

An Individualized Education Plan is a legal, living document that describes what a child’s learning challenges are and how the school is addressing them. It spells out what modifications to the curriculum (i.e., what is being taught) a child needs for their education in order to be successful in school. It includes present levels of performance, annual goals and benchmarks for measuring success, accommodations, and minutes per week of services.

Why do kids need IEPs?

When students have an identified disability that adversely affects their educational achievement, then an IEP is required by Federal law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Students in every state can have an IEP. It is for students who need the curriculum substantially modified from the general education curriculum in order to be successful.

The list of disabilities under the IDEA include:

  • Autism

  • Deaf/Blindness

  • Developmental Delay (for ages 3-9)

  • Hearing Impairment

  • Orthopedic Impairment

  • Speech/Language Impairment

  • Visual Impairment

  • Intellectual Disability

  • Deafness

  • Emotional Disability

  • Multiple Disabilities

  • Other Health Impairment

  • Traumatic Brain Injury

  • Specific Learning Disability

How do kids get an IEP?

A parent, teacher, or special education team member could request an evaluation if they suspect a disability. Once an evaluation is requested, the school must respond within 14 school days whether or not they agree to an evaluation. The team will come together at a domain meeting to discuss what they know about the student, what further information is needed, and who will be collecting the information. Team members include the parent, general education teacher, a special education teacher, an administrator, school psychologist, and school social worker. Depending on the student, other clinicians may be included in the evaluation, such as an occupational therapist, physical therapist, vision specialist, hearing specialist, school nurse, or speech/language pathologist.

Parents have to sign consent to conduct the evaluation. The next step is for the team to conduct the evaluation, and they have up to 60 school days to carry it out and write an IEP if the student is found eligible. Parents are provided with draft reports prior to an eligibility determination meeting, where the evaluation results are presented and discussed as a team. All team members, including the parents, have a say as to whether or not they feel the child needs specialized services and under which of the above mentioned categories. What category depends on what the student needs, and the needs will drive the services in the IEP.

What happens once a kid has an IEP?

When a child has an IEP, they get the modifications and accommodations that they need (identified in the evaluation) in order to be successful in school. A special education teacher serves as a case manager, and will keep track of progress and share data with the parents at report card times. At minimum, the IEP team will meet and discuss the annual goals once a year, where new goals will be written based on progress and current needs. Every three years, a student will undergo a reevaluation to see if they still qualify for special education services (the goal is to close the gap and catch the student up to their same age peers’ academic levels). Important: a parent has the right to request an IEP meeting at any time if they feel there are issues impacting their child and they want to get the team back together to discuss.

I think my child has a disability, what do I do next?

Stay tuned for my next post, about how to ask for IEP and 504 meetings. There are some key people you need to talk to to get the ball rolling. I look forward to helping you out and making sure your child gets what they need from your school.



If you have any questions, or need any support with anything IEP, 504 or accommodations related, please contact me at richard@chinpsyd.com