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IEP Meeting Checklist
for Parents

Everything you need to do before, during, and after your child's IEP meeting — so you walk in prepared and walk out with answers.

Before the meeting During the meeting After the meeting 10 questions to ask
1

Before the Meeting

Do these at least 3 days before your scheduled IEP meeting.

Your right

Under IDEA, you are an equal member of the IEP team. Not a guest. You have the right to request any meeting at any time, not just at the annual review.

2

During the Meeting

Stay grounded, take notes, and remember: you do not have to sign anything today.

3

After the Meeting

The work is not over when you leave the room.

10 Questions to Ask at Every IEP Meeting

You do not need to memorize these. Pick the ones that apply and write them in your notes before you walk in.

1

How is my child progressing toward each of their current annual goals, and what data are you using to measure that?

Progress reporting is required by law. If they cannot show you data, that is a problem.

2

Why was this goal chosen, and how does it connect to my child's present levels?

Goals should be driven by your child's current performance, not a template.

3

Is my child in the least restrictive environment (LRE) appropriate for them, and how was that decision made?

LRE is a federal requirement. Schools must justify any placement that is not in the general education classroom.

4

What accommodations and modifications are in place, and are all teachers implementing them?

A great IEP means nothing if the general education teacher has not read it.

5

Is there anything in the evaluation results that surprised you, and what does it mean for my child's instruction?

Forces the team to connect the assessment data to actual classroom practice.

6

What can I do at home to support these goals between now and the next meeting?

Gets you active in the plan and signals to the team that you are engaged.

7

If my child is not making sufficient progress by the next quarter, what is the plan?

Makes the team commit to a contingency before there is a crisis.

8

Are there any related services (speech, OT, PT, counseling) that my child could benefit from that are not currently on the IEP?

Schools do not always proactively offer services. You have to ask.

9

How will I receive progress reports, how often, and in what format?

Progress reports must be at least as frequent as report cards. Nail down the when and how in the meeting.

10

What is the process if I disagree with something in this IEP after I take it home to review?

Ask this every time. It reminds everyone in the room that you know your rights.

Your Rights at Every IEP Meeting

ParticipationYou are a required, equal member of the IEP team — not a guest.
Prior Written NoticeThe school must notify you in writing before making any change to your child's education.
RecordsYou can request any school record related to your child within 45 days.
Independent EvaluationIf you disagree with the school's evaluation, you can request an IEE at the school's expense.
No forced signaturesYou never have to sign the IEP on the spot. Take it home and review it first.
DisagreementYou can disagree in writing, file a state complaint, or request mediation at no cost to you.

Ask Claudia anything before your meeting

Claudia is IEP Compass's AI advocate. Upload your child's IEP and ask her to explain any goal, term, or section in plain English or Spanish before you walk into the meeting room.

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Also available in Spanish: Lista de verificacion para la reunion del IEP