Saturday, March 23, 2019

IEP Look Fors



1st.  Look For Progress on the Last IEP:  

The Individualized Education Program (IEP) team should review progress toward the last/previous IEP.  This is the one that has been implemented over the course of the last year.  At the end of an annual - the student has either achieved the goals or they have not. If the school staff mark "making sufficient progress" - the student may have been making some progress but they have not achieved the goal.

If the student has not achieved the IEP goal and the team agrees the student needs more time to work on the goal, it may be carried over into the new IEP.  Parents should pay particular attention to the  IEP progress report before moving into the draft of the new annual IEP. 

2nd.  Look For How the Previous IEP Goals and Objectives Compare to the Proposed.

Look for goals that stay the same from year to year.  When students are making progress, the student will be closing the gap between their level of performance and the grade or age level expectations.  One sign that a student is not making progress, is when the goals and objectives stay the same or the expectations decrease.  For instance, if the goal had previously been that the child would complete a task with no more than 1 verbal prompt and is now that the child will complete a task with no more than 3 verbal prompts, the expectations have decreased.  The previous goal may have been too ambitious, but the student may also have needed some additional supports they did not receive and thus did not make progress.  When goals are carried over from one IEP to the next, the team must discuss what will be done differently since the student did not master that goal.

3rd.   Look for Defined Instructional Levels.

Look for present levels and goals written for "instructional level" without defining what that level is.  For example:  A student's instructional reading level is mid 2nd grade.  The goal is the student will read and comprehend instructional level text with 80% accuracy.  If the student's instructional level is still mid 2nd grade level at the end of the annual - the school may say the student met the goal if they are demonstrating 80% accuracy even though the student is still reading at a 2nd grade instructional level.  

If the goal is the student will read and demonstrate comprehension of mid 3rd grade level text by answering explicit and implicit comprehension questions with 80% accuracy - you can measure a year later whether that goal has been mastered and whether the student is making progress.  

I encourage families to track their child's progress over time to monitor progress.  This can be done with a simple table such as the one below:

Fountas and Pinnell Data

Date





Level





Accuracy





Comprehension





Fluency





Indep/Instr/Frust







4.  Look at What Supports are Being Provided and Proposed.

Is the IEP team able to remove some of the supports?  Is the student gaining skills?  When students are making progress and gaining skills, they often need less supports from adults.  When a student is not making progress, they need more supports or services.  Parents should look for whether the student's team is using accommodations or whether they are helping a student learn skills.


If you have questions, please contact me at ashley@lawforparents.com or 410-206-5997.

Disclaimer:  This blog is made available by the Law For Parents, LLC for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this blog site, you understand that there is no attorney client relationship between you and the publisher. The blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.

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