Individualized Education Plans

Individualized Education Program (IEP)

Adapted from the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education

To better understand an IEP, consider that:

Individualized means that the IEP must be written for your particular child, not a group or class. It addresses the educational needs of your particular child.

  • Education indicates that the IEP should address your child's problem areas of learning. It need not identify areas in which there is no concern; for example, if the student is not having problems with reading, there is no reason for reading to be addressed in the IEP.
  • Program tells you that the IEP includes statements about your child's present educational abilities and needs, and outlines goals and objectives or benchmarks to be accomplished in the coming year. It lists necessary services that the school will provide during the year to assist your child in reaching those goals, including any assistive technology devices and/or related services that may be required.

If your child is age 16, or younger if appropriate, the district must tell you that one purpose of the IEP meeting is to consider any needed transition services, including those provided in the community, and that your child will be invited. Service providers from the community who may be providing services should be invited to each IEP meeting where transition services are discussed. (Transition is discussed in a later section.)

How do you prepare for an IEP meeting?

Your participation in any IEP meeting will be easier and more effective if you have thought about your concerns and what you have in mind for your child. Know what you want to say. Advocates and support from parent organizations can be helpful in preparing for an IEP meeting. (The Resource section of this guide can give you information about such organizations.)

The following suggestions are designed to help you prepare to participate effectively in the IEP meeting:

1. Gather information about your child. Review the most current evaluation report and the last IEP if your child is already receiving services. You might bring progress reports, other school evaluations, your observations, or doctors' reports.

2. If your child is already in school, you may want to request permission to observe the regular education classroom. You may want to take notes on your observations to use during the IEP meeting.

3. Watch and make notes of your child's behavior at home. Write down what your child can and cannot do, likes and dislikes, and interactions with other children and family members.

4. Find out what your child's feelings are regarding school, home, and friends.

5. Check the IEP meeting information provided by the district to determine who will be attending the meeting. Call the school if you have questions.

6. You may tell school personnel if you will be bringing someone with you, but you do not have to. Who you want to bring is up to you, as long as the person(s) have knowledge or special expertise about your child.

7. Notify school personnel in advance if you will not be able to attend the meeting as scheduled. Try to arrange for a meeting that is convenient for everyone. You may wish to see if arrangements can be made for your participation by phone if you cannot attend the meeting.

8. Keep records of your child's schoolwork, parent conferences, phone calls with teachers, progress reports, etc. Use this information to monitor your child's progress and to prepare for IEP meetings.

What will an IEP include?

There are several required components to the Individualized Education Program that need to be discussed and developed at the meeting and written in the IEP document.

1. Present level of performance

The present level of performance should provide a snapshot of your child. It should be written so clearly that you can easily identify the child's needs and know your child's strengths. It is the bridge between the evaluation and the instruction.

The present level must state:

  • How your child's disability affects his or her participation and progress in the general education curriculum-the same curriculum as for children without disabilities--or appropriate preschool activities.
  • The strengths of your child
  • Your concerns for improving your child's education
  • Changes in your child's functioning since the last IEP
  • The results of the evaluation or reevaluation
  • Your child's performance on State or district-wide assessments

Although it is not a required component of the IEP, the team may also consider the dreams and visions of all those involved with your child as well as your child's dreams and visions in order to develop an IEP that will help your child to become an independent and productive member of society.

2. Measurable annual goals including benchmarks or short-term objectives

Goals must address your child's needs. Goals should be clear and simply stated. You should be able to understand what is needed to implement the IEP. A goal should state what your child can reasonably be expected to learn during the twelve (12) months of the IEP. Goals must be measurable and the IEP must indicate how the progress toward the annual goals will be measured. What is your child expected to do by the end of the IEP's twelve (12)month period and how well will he or she do it? Goals must support your child's involvement in and progress in the general education curriculum. Goals must relate to meeting each of your child's educational needs.

Benchmarks describe the amount of progress your child is to achieve within specific segments of the year. Short-term instructional objectives separate the skills described in the goals into discrete components. Objectives or benchmarks must be included only for student's eligible for MAP-A.

3. Special education, related services, supplementary aids, program modifications, and/or supports that school personnel will provide for your child

Services the team decides your child needs to meet her/his goals are listed in the IEP. These services include special education and related services that are needed for your child to:

  • Advance toward the annual goals
  • Progress in the general curriculum
  • Participate in extracurricular and nonacademic activities, such as sports and school clubs
  • Be educated and participate with other children with and without disabilities in these activities

Services could also include supplementary aids and services, program modifications, or supports for school staff to meet your child's goals.

Special education services include, specially designed instruction to meet the unique needs of a child with a disability, including instruction in the classroom, home, hospital or institution, and in any other setting; instruction in physical education; travel training to learn to move about the environment, and vocational education.

Related services can be any service that allows your child to benefit from their Special Education Services. The IDEA lists examples of related services that may be needed:

  • Audiology
  • Counseling services
  • Occupational therapy
  • Physical therapy
  • Early identification and assessment
  • Psychological services
  • Parent counseling and training
  • Rehabilitation counseling
  • Speech-language pathology services
  • Social work services
  • Recreation and leisure education
  • School health services
  • Medical services for diagnostic or evaluation purposes
  • Transportation
  • Orientation and mobility services for visually impaired students

4. Participation in state and district-wide assessments

The IEP team must make decisions about how your child will participate in State and district-wide assessments. The decisions include if your child will participate in the Missouri Assessment Program (MAP) subject area assessments or the Missouri Assessment Program-Alternate (MAP-A). When making this decision, the team must consider what accommodations your child needs. If the MAP subject assessments are not appropriate for your child, even with accommodations, then the team will consider your child's eligibility for MAP-A.

The IEP must also address these same considerations for any assessment of student achievement that is administered by the district for all children that are in the same grade as your child. If the team decides your child cannot participate in a district-wide assessment, even with accommodations, the IEP must state why and how your child will be assessed.

5. Initiation, duration, frequency and location of services and modifications

The IEP must state when each special education, modification, accommodations, supplementary aids and services, and related service will begin, when it will end, how often it will be provided, and where it will be provided. The services must be provided as stated.

6. Procedures for evaluating progress and reporting to parents

The IEP must state how your child's progress on the annual goals will be measured. You must be informed of progress at least as often as parents are informed about the progress of children without disabilities and whether that progress is sufficient to achieve the goals by the end of the IEP period.

7. Transition services

Transition planning may begin earlier than age 16, but no later than by age 16 the IEP must include a statement of transition service needs (addressing courses of study your child will need to reach goals for life after school). No later than age 16, or earlier if needed, the IEP must also include a statement of needed transition services. This may include linkages with other agencies that might provide transition services for your child. Consideration will be given to cooperative work programs, vocational-technical training, supported employment, college preparation, and other considerations to help your child transition from school. If transition is discussed, your child must be invited to attend the IEP meeting. If your child cannot attend this meeting, then the district must assure that his or her needs and interests have been considered in the development of the transition services. Encourage your child to attend and explain her or his role to them so he or she feels comfortable in that role.

8. Transfer of rights

At least one year before your child turns 18, the age of majority, the IEP must include a statement that your child has been informed of his or her rights that will transfer to him or her at age 18. If your child is still ad dependent under Internal Revenue Service rules (living at home and supported by you), you still have the right to receive copies of any notices given to your child, to attend IEP meetings, and to access your child's educational records. When your child turns 18, the district will notify you that the transfer of rights has occurred.

9. Assistive technology

If the IEP team believes your child needs an assistive device and/or service, that information must be included in the IEP. This may be a device your child needs to improve function, or technology services needed for selecting, acquiring, or using an assistive technology device. Such services might include evaluation, including trying several different devices to find the one best suited for your child; providing, maintaining, customizing or replacing devices; coordinating other therapies with assistive technology; and training and technical assistance for your child, family, or others who work with your child.

10. Behavior intervention plan
If your child's behavior prevents his learning or the learning of others, the IEP team must consider positive behavioral interventions to address that behavior. If a behavior intervention plan is developed for your child, it must be a part of the IEP. This plan is not the same as your district's discipline plan.

11. Extended school year
The IEP must also indicate if extended school year services (education for more than the traditional school term) are needed. These are special education and related services provided during the summer months, Christmas break, or spring breaks, and are not the same as "summer school." The decision of whether or not your child needs extended school year services is an IEP team decision and is based on your child's unique educational needs, as are all other education decisions. Extended school year is not intended to initiate learning of new skills, but to reinforce learning connected to the annual goals. The school district should have an extended school year policy and guidelines to assist the team in making this decision.

One factor in determining if your child needs extended school year services is the difficulty your child may experience remembering information or skills previously learned (regression) and the amount of time it takes your child to learn those skills again (recoupment). Most children forget some skills they have learned during extended breaks in school programming, and it takes them some time to relearn those skills; it takes some children longer to relearn these skills than others. Other factors in determining if your child needs extended school year might include:

  • The nature and severity of your child's disability
  • Your child's progress in relation to behavior and physical needs
  • The opportunities for your child to practice skills
  • Areas of development that need continuous attention
  • Your child's transition needs
  • Opportunities your child has to interact with children without disabilities
  • Areas of learning critical to your child's progress toward self-sufficiency
  • Level of independent functioning

An example of a critical learning area might be that your child is just learning to feed him or herself; or your child is just beginning to understand the meaning of letters (critical to reading), or beginning to learn sign language (for a child who is unable to speak). All of these factors will be considered in relation to your child's goals, as indicated in the IEP. A new IEP is not developed for extended school year. It is a continuation of the IEP.

12. Participation in regular education and placement-Least Restrictive Environment
The IEP must address your child's participation in regular education. Regular education includes academic instruction as well as recess, lunch, and assemblies. If your child does not participate 100% of the time with nondisabled peers in regular education, a statement must be made describing the extent your child will not participate and why full participation is not possible. For preschool children, if participation with nondisabled peers is determined to be unnecessary for FAPE, the IEP must explain why.

After annual goals have been developed for your child in the IEP meeting, the team determines which services are needed and where they will be provided. This decision is referred to as the placement decision and is made each year. Your child's education should be in the least restrictive environment, which means: to the maximum extent appropriate, children with disabilities are to be educated with children who do not have disabilities. For preschool children with disabilities, consideration must be given to the provision of special education services in the child's current daytime setting.

Special classes, separate schooling, or other removal from the regular education classroom occurs only when the nature or severity of the disability is such that education cannot be achieved in regular classes with supplementary aids and services. (A description of the types of placement alternatives is available in the Appendix for both ECSE and K-12 placements.) There are a variety of placement options in which a child with disabilities can receive special education and related services, but the regular classroom with supplementary aids and services must always be the first consideration. A child with a disability is not removed from education in age-appropriate regular classrooms or daytime settings solely because of needed modifications in the curriculum. Unless the IEP requires another arrangement, your child will attend the public school he or she would attend if not disabled.

When making the placement decision, the IEP team should consider whether or not education in the regular classroom with the use of supplementary aids and services can be achieved satisfactorily and if not, whether integration with nondisabled peers has been achieved to the maximum extent appropriate. To make these decisions the IEP team should consider:

  • The curriculum and goals of the regular education program
  • The other efforts that have been made to accommodate or modify the regular education program to meet your child's needs.
  • The potential positive effects your child may experience from regular education related to cognitive, academic, physical, social, or other areas of development
  • The potential harmful or disruptive effects for your child or other children in the regular classroom environment
  • The need for alternative instruction that cannot be achieved in the regular class
  • When your child receives special education services for the first time, the school will need your written consent for placement. You will receive a "Notice of Consent for Initial Placement." It must include the following:
  • A description of the proposed placement and why it is considered appropriate for your child
  • The other placement options considered and the reasons why they were not selected; for example, a self-contained program may require more time in special education than your child needs
  • The information that was used to make the placement decision (all the evaluation information)
  • A description of other relevant factors, if any
  • A statement that you, as a parent, have protection under procedural safeguards, where you can obtain a copy, and who you can contact to assist you in understanding these safeguards

Questions you may want to ask during the IEP conference

  • What do the tests and observations show about my child?
  • What are my child's strengths?
  • Are the evaluation results the same or different from what the teacher observes about my child?
  • In which classes will my child be with students without disabilities?
  • What goals are realistic for my child?
  • How do these goals lead to my child's long-range plans (adult living and work)?
  • How much time is required to meet the goals and objectives that we have developed?
  • Where will my child best be served?
  • How will my child's progress be checked and reported to me?
  • Is there a need for supplemental aids or services?
  • Are there ways we can help with our child's educational program at home?
  • Is my child ready to participate in the development of the IEP?
  • Does my child need a positive behavioral support plan?
  • Does my child need assistive technology?
  • Can my child's needs be met in his current daytime setting(s) (for preschool children)?

Remember, goals may not always be reached. During the year, you or your child's teacher(s) may realize the goals that were developed in the IEP meeting are not appropriate, have already been achieved, or that your child is not benefiting from the current services. If this occurs, your child's program may need to be changed. Either you or the district personnel may request that a meeting be held to change your child's IEP. The IEP must be reviewed or revised at least once a year, but may be reviewed or revised more often if necessary.

Disagreement with the services developed during the IEP meeting may be discussed at the meeting or it may be resolved by requesting another IEP meeting to discuss the issue.(If it is not possible to resolve the difference during the first or later IEP meetings, you may seek mediation or due process as discussed later in this guide.)

Do I have the right to see my child's school records?

The school district is required to keep copies of certain documents and reports pertaining to the identification, evaluation, placement, and special education services of a child with a disability. These records are confidential. Only school district personnel who need the information to provide educational services for your child may use them. Those reviewing the files must sign that they have done so. With few exceptions specified in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), the school district must receive your written permission to share your child's records with any other person or agency. As a parent, you have the right to review your child's records. If you disagree with any of the information included in your child's records, you may request that it be changed. If the district disagrees, you have the opportunity to challenge the school district's decision. It is important for you to view your child's records and make sure the information contained in them is accurate.

You may request a full description of the rights you have under FERPA, including who may access your child's records without your consent, from the school district. You will receive a copy of your child's evaluation report and IEP after those meetings. The district must provide the copies within a reasonable period of time, generally 15-20 days. If you wish to view any of your child's other records, contact your school district to make arrangements to view those records. The school must make the arrangements for you within a reasonable period of time but cannot exceed 45 days.

Your rights under IDEA

Children with disabilities and their parents are guaranteed certain basic rights by state and federal laws (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, Americans with Disabilities Act, and Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act are the most commonly referred to laws.) This guide is based on the special education process set forth in the IDEA and Missouri regulations.

1. All children with disabilities must be provided a free and appropriate public education.

2. The special education services for each identified, eligible child with a disability should be designed to meet the child's unique needs, and the parents cannot be required to pay for those special education services. Usual fees such as lunch, locker fees, etc., assessed to all students may be charged to students in special education programs.

3. The school program for a child with a disability must be based on a complete and nondiscriminatory evaluation of the child.

4. Parents must give signed permission for their child to be tested.

5. Parents must give their written permission for their child to receive special education services for the first time.

6. Parents have the right to participate in decisions about the identification, eligibility, free appropriate public education and placement of their child with a disability.

7. Parents must be notified in writing of any proposed change in their child's IEP before it occurs.

8. Parents must be told how they can challenge and appeal any decisions or proposed actions concerning identification, evaluation, free appropriate public education, or placement of their child.

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