Education Rights

Your Child's Right to a Free Appropriate Education

Under federal law, every child with a disability — including Autism Spectrum Disorder — has the right to a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) in the Least Restrictive Environment (LRE). This means your child is entitled to receive the services and supports they need to access the general education curriculum alongside their peers to the maximum extent appropriate.

As a parent, you are your child's most important advocate. Understanding your rights under IDEA and Section 504 — and knowing how to work effectively with your child's school — is essential to ensuring they receive the supports they deserve.

IDEA

Understanding IDEA

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act protects your child's educational rights.

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) is the federal law that governs special education services. Under IDEA, your child is entitled to:

  • ⚖️
    Free evaluation: The school must evaluate your child at no cost to you if you suspect a disability
  • ⚖️
    Individualized Education Program (IEP): A written plan with specific, measurable goals and the services your child will receive
  • ⚖️
    Related services: Speech therapy, occupational therapy, counseling, and other supports as needed
  • ⚖️
    Least Restrictive Environment: Your child should be educated with non-disabled peers to the greatest extent appropriate
  • ⚖️
    Parental participation: You are a full member of the IEP team and must consent to all decisions
  • ⚖️
    Due process rights: You can challenge decisions you disagree with through mediation or due process hearings
IEP Guide

Individualized Education Programs (IEPs)

Everything you need to know about your child's IEP.

An IEP is a legally binding document that outlines the special education services your child will receive. It is developed by a team that includes you, your child's teachers, school administrators, and any relevant specialists.

What's Included in an IEP

  • 📋
    Present Levels of Performance: A description of your child's current abilities and challenges
  • 🎯
    Annual Goals: Specific, measurable goals your child should achieve within the year
  • 📐
    Benchmarks: Short-term objectives to measure progress toward annual goals
  • 🛠️
    Services & Supports: The specific services (e.g., speech therapy, 1:1 aide), frequency, duration, and location
  • 📝
    Accommodations & Modifications: Changes to how your child is taught and tested
  • 📅
    Transition Plan: Beginning at age 16, a plan for life after high school

Tips for IEP Meetings

📚

Come Prepared

Review your child's current IEP, bring progress reports, ABA data, and a list of your concerns and priorities. Write down your questions in advance.

🤝

Bring Support

You have the right to bring anyone to the IEP meeting — your child's BCBA, an advocate, a family member, or a friend. You don't have to go alone.

📝

Take Notes

Document everything discussed at the meeting. If you disagree with a proposal, state your concerns in writing. You can also request to record the meeting.

⏸️

Don't Sign Under Pressure

You do NOT have to sign the IEP at the meeting. Take it home, review it carefully, and discuss with your BCBA or advocate before agreeing.

504 Plans

Section 504 Plans

An alternative to IEPs for students who need accommodations but not specialized instruction.

A 504 Plan is developed under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. While it doesn't provide the same level of specialized instruction as an IEP, a 504 Plan ensures your child receives accommodations to access the general education curriculum equally.

When a 504 Plan May Be Appropriate

  • Your child has autism but doesn't qualify for an IEP
  • Your child needs accommodations but not modified curriculum
  • Your child has sensory or attention needs impacting learning
  • Your child is transitioning out of special education services

Common 504 Accommodations

  • Preferential seating (near teacher, away from distractions)
  • Extended time on tests and assignments
  • Sensory breaks during the school day
  • Visual schedules and advance notice of transitions
  • Modified homework expectations
  • Access to a quiet space for de-escalation
Classroom

Classroom Supports for Students with Autism

Strategies that help students with autism succeed in the classroom.

📊

Visual Supports

Visual schedules, first/then boards, social stories, and picture cues help students understand expectations and navigate transitions throughout the school day.

🧘

Sensory Accommodations

Noise-reducing headphones, fidget tools, flexible seating, dim lighting options, and designated sensory break areas support students with sensory processing differences.

👥

Peer Support

Structured peer buddy systems, social skills groups, and inclusive activities help students with autism build friendships and practice social interaction in natural settings.

🎯

Behavioral Supports

Positive behavior intervention plans, token systems, clear and consistent expectations, and proactive strategies to prevent challenging behaviors before they occur.

Collaboration

Aligning ABA Goals With School Goals

How your ABA team can work with your child's school for consistency.

When ABA therapy and school services are aligned, your child benefits from consistent approaches across all environments. Here's how to build that bridge:

  • 🔗
    Invite your BCBA to the IEP meeting: Your ABA supervisor can provide data, share progress, and help develop goals that align with your child's treatment plan
  • 🔗
    Share ABA data with the school: Progress reports from your BCBA provide objective, measurable data that can inform IEP goals and demonstrate your child's needs
  • 🔗
    Request coordination meetings: Ask for periodic meetings between your ABA provider and school team to ensure consistency in behavioral strategies and skill-building
  • 🔗
    Align behavioral strategies: The same reinforcement systems, visual supports, and communication methods used in ABA sessions should be reflected in the classroom environment
  • 🔗
    Set complementary goals: ABA goals (e.g., requesting help, turn-taking) should support IEP academic and social goals for maximum skill generalization

Need Help Advocating at School?

Our BCBAs can attend IEP meetings, provide data for school teams, and help align ABA goals with your child's education plan. Contact us today.

Contact Our Team