A Parent's Guide to Proactive IEP Planning: Parent Input & Draft IEP Reviews
You will be prepared to have meaningful participation in your child’s next IEP meeting.
This is a step-by-step guide to set you up for success. When we prepare and communicate AHEAD of time, the actual meeting can end up being more of a Think Tank that is working together to develop the most effective IEP.
Your child’s IEP meeting is coming up and your head is swimming with a million thoughts about what areas you want to target. You feel overwhelmed by trying to figure out what to bring up.
This guide will take you from overwhelmed and unsure to focused and ready to participate in a meaningful way. You will clarify your thoughts and put them into words in a way that communicates your concerns while also sharing what you want the end results to be. You get a tool that makes this incredibly easy and a letter template where you just need to drop your information in it and it’s ready to be sent.
But that’s not it! Sharing your input is only the beginning. Once your team has a draft IEP, it is your job to review it. I also guide you through this review process and give you the tools to communicate with your team based on what you see in the draft IEP review.
As a bonus, I’ve also included tips for how you can handle common IEP meeting challenges!
Being proactive in your child’s IEP development, gives you the ability to help set the agenda and have true collaboration with your IEP team.
You will be prepared to have meaningful participation in your child’s next IEP meeting.
This is a step-by-step guide to set you up for success. When we prepare and communicate AHEAD of time, the actual meeting can end up being more of a Think Tank that is working together to develop the most effective IEP.
Your child’s IEP meeting is coming up and your head is swimming with a million thoughts about what areas you want to target. You feel overwhelmed by trying to figure out what to bring up.
This guide will take you from overwhelmed and unsure to focused and ready to participate in a meaningful way. You will clarify your thoughts and put them into words in a way that communicates your concerns while also sharing what you want the end results to be. You get a tool that makes this incredibly easy and a letter template where you just need to drop your information in it and it’s ready to be sent.
But that’s not it! Sharing your input is only the beginning. Once your team has a draft IEP, it is your job to review it. I also guide you through this review process and give you the tools to communicate with your team based on what you see in the draft IEP review.
As a bonus, I’ve also included tips for how you can handle common IEP meeting challenges!
Being proactive in your child’s IEP development, gives you the ability to help set the agenda and have true collaboration with your IEP team.
You will be prepared to have meaningful participation in your child’s next IEP meeting.
This is a step-by-step guide to set you up for success. When we prepare and communicate AHEAD of time, the actual meeting can end up being more of a Think Tank that is working together to develop the most effective IEP.
Your child’s IEP meeting is coming up and your head is swimming with a million thoughts about what areas you want to target. You feel overwhelmed by trying to figure out what to bring up.
This guide will take you from overwhelmed and unsure to focused and ready to participate in a meaningful way. You will clarify your thoughts and put them into words in a way that communicates your concerns while also sharing what you want the end results to be. You get a tool that makes this incredibly easy and a letter template where you just need to drop your information in it and it’s ready to be sent.
But that’s not it! Sharing your input is only the beginning. Once your team has a draft IEP, it is your job to review it. I also guide you through this review process and give you the tools to communicate with your team based on what you see in the draft IEP review.
As a bonus, I’ve also included tips for how you can handle common IEP meeting challenges!
Being proactive in your child’s IEP development, gives you the ability to help set the agenda and have true collaboration with your IEP team.