5 Red Flags in Your IEP
Vague goals, missing services, and other warning signs to look for in your child's IEP. Learn how to spot them before the next meeting.
Read morePractical guides to help you understand your child's IEP, prepare for meetings, and know your rights.
Vague goals, missing services, and other warning signs to look for in your child's IEP. Learn how to spot them before the next meeting.
Read moreA step-by-step checklist for parents heading into an IEP meeting. From documents to bring to questions to ask, set yourself up to advocate effectively.
Read moreFAPE, LRE, IDEA, OT, SLP — the alphabet soup of special education can be overwhelming. Here's a plain-English glossary of the terms you'll hear most.
Read moreGood grades alone don't disqualify a child from special education. Learn what IDEA actually requires — and what to do if a school uses grades to deny services.
Read moreFive things every parent should bring to an IEP meeting — from the previous IEP and outside evaluations to a trusted support person at your side.
Read moreA plain-language walkthrough of the key sections of an IEP — Present Levels, Goals, Services, Accommodations, and Progress Monitoring.
Read moreA measurable IEP goal needs four parts: a specific behavior, a baseline, a target, and a timeframe. Here's how to tell the difference between a vague goal and a strong one.
Read moreService logs prove whether your child actually received the services in their IEP. Learn what a complete log looks like — and what to do when one is missing or incomplete.
Read moreWhen a school fails to deliver the services in an IEP, it may owe your child compensatory education. Here's what that means and how to request it.
Read moreAccommodations change how a child learns; modifications change what they're expected to learn. The distinction matters for grades, diplomas, and long-term outcomes.
Read moreLRE is a core requirement of IDEA — children with disabilities must be educated alongside non-disabled peers to the maximum extent appropriate. Here's what that means in practice.
Read moreIf a school denies your written request for an evaluation, you still have options — including a Prior Written Notice and an Independent Educational Evaluation at the school's expense.
Read moreProgress monitoring is how schools prove a child is actually growing toward IEP goals. Here's what proper monitoring looks like — and what to do when reports are vague or missing.
Read moreAn FBA identifies why a behavior is happening; a BIP is the plan to address it. Here's what each should include and what parents can do when the plan isn't working.
Read moreTen essential questions every parent should bring to the IEP table — covering progress, services, data, accommodations, and what happens if a goal isn't met.
Read moreProcedural safeguards are the legal rights IDEA guarantees you as a parent — from prior written notice to dispute resolution. Here's what they actually cover.
Read moreFive warning signs that an IEP goal won't hold up — no baseline, no target, no way to measure success — plus a side-by-side example of a vague goal versus a strong one.
Read moreThe IEP meeting isn't the end of the work — it's the start. Five steps every parent should take after the meeting to protect their child and document what was agreed to.
Read more