Your child has dyslexia, and reading is a daily struggle. Here is what most parents are not told plainly: dyslexia qualifies for an IEP as a Specific Learning Disability under federal law, and your child has the right to real, evidence-based reading instruction, not just extra time. Here is how to get it.
Does dyslexia qualify for an IEP?
Yes. Dyslexia falls under the IDEA category of Specific Learning Disability in basic reading and reading fluency. If your child needs specialized instruction to learn to read, that is an IEP, not just a 504. Schools sometimes offer accommodations only. Accommodations help your child cope, but they do not teach reading. Push for instruction.
Reading instruction and supports to ask for
- Structured literacy instruction (explicit, systematic phonics), often called Orton-Gillingham based.
- Instruction delivered by a trained specialist, with enough minutes per week to make progress.
- Progress monitoring with real reading data, not just report-card grades.
- Audiobooks and text-to-speech for content subjects, so reading struggles do not block science and social studies.
- Extra time and a reader for tests when appropriate.
- Spelling and writing support.
Goals that matter
Look for goals in phonological awareness, decoding, reading fluency, and comprehension, each measurable with a baseline and a target. "Will improve reading" is too vague. Ask for words-per-minute or accuracy targets.
Your rights, in one breath
Request an evaluation in writing at any time, the school must respond within your state's timeline, and it is all free. If you disagree with the evaluation, request an Independent Educational Evaluation. If the school says no to instruction, get that no in writing.