Understanding Your Role and Rights as a Parent

As you prepare for your child’s IEP meeting, it’s important to understand that you’re not just attending as an observer—you’re an equal member of the IEP team with valuable insights and legal rights. Your knowledge of your child’s daily experiences, strengths, and challenges at home provides crucial information that school professionals need to create an effective plan. Federal law guarantees your participation in all decisions about your child’s education, and your input carries equal weight with other team members.

Before the meeting, gather documentation that shows your child’s current functioning and progress. This includes recent work samples, notes about homework challenges, observations of skills they’re developing at home, and any concerns you’ve noticed. Review the evaluation results that led to this IEP meeting, and don’t hesitate to ask for explanations of terms or scores you don’t understand. Remember that this process focuses on identifying which specific skills your child needs to develop rather than listing their deficits.

Come prepared with questions about how proposed goals will help your child build essential skills. Think about your child’s daily routine and where they might need support to access learning opportunities. Consider their social interactions, auditory processing abilities during instructions, and how they handle academic tasks that require sustained attention.