After sitting in hundreds of IEP meetings as a licensed Speech-Language Pathologist, I can tell you with certainty that preparation is the single biggest factor that determines whether a parent walks out satisfied or frustrated. The school team will have documents, data, and a prepared agenda. The parents who match that preparation — or exceed it — are the ones whose concerns get taken seriously and whose children get stronger IEPs.
This checklist covers everything you should bring to any IEP meeting, whether it is your first or your fifteenth.
Documents to Bring
- The current IEP with your notes and questions written directly on it — bring a printed copy so you can reference specific sections during the meeting
- The most recent evaluation report — the full psychoeducational, speech, or occupational therapy evaluation that was used to qualify your child or inform the current goals
- Previous IEPs — having last year's IEP lets you compare goals and track whether your child has actually made progress
- Progress reports from the current IEP period — if your child has not made expected progress toward goals, this is documented evidence
- Any private evaluations or reports from outside therapists, pediatricians, or specialists
- Your parent concerns statement — written in advance, describing your observations at home, your child's strengths, and your specific concerns
- Any independent assessment results you have gathered, including functional skills data
Your Own Observations and Data
- Specific examples of challenges at home — written out with dates and details, not general impressions. "On three separate occasions in the last two weeks, he could not complete his homework independently without two hours of support" is data.
- A list of skills your child has gained since the last IEP — acknowledging growth builds goodwill and creates a balanced conversation
- Notes on which accommodations are working and which are not — the team needs your perspective on implementation, not just the school's
- Observations about daily living skills — what your child can and cannot do independently at home in areas like hygiene, meal prep, money, safety, and time management
- Any concerns from outside providers — if a private speech therapist or OT has shared observations with you, document them and bring them
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Your Questions List
- How is progress toward each goal being measured, and how often?
- Can you walk me through how each goal connects to the present level data?
- Which accommodations are being implemented consistently across all settings — including lunch, specials, and transitions?
- What happens if my child does not make expected progress toward a goal?
- Has less restrictive placement been considered and if so why was it determined not appropriate?
- Who is responsible for implementing each accommodation and how is compliance tracked?
- How will I be notified if something in the IEP is not working?
- Can I request a copy of any data collected on goal progress to date?
Practical Items
- A notebook and pen — take notes on everything discussed, especially verbal commitments that may not make it into the written document
- A recording device or phone — in many states you have the right to record IEP meetings with notice. Check your state's law and notify the team in advance if you plan to record.
- Contact information for an advocate — if you anticipate disagreement, having an advocate's number available gives you confidence and an immediate resource
- A copy of your procedural safeguards — the school is required to give you this document, which explains your rights. Having your own copy means you can reference it if needed.
- Water and something to eat — IEP meetings can run long. Being physically comfortable helps you stay focused and calm.
What Not to Bring
Leave your emotions about past meetings at the door — not because they are invalid, but because leading with them makes it easier for the team to dismiss your substantive concerns. Come in calm, specific, and solution-focused. You can acknowledge that past meetings were difficult without letting that set the tone for this one.
Also leave unrealistic expectations. IEP meetings rarely produce dramatic changes in a single session. Your goal for any given meeting is to move the IEP closer to accurately reflecting your child and providing the support they need. That is meaningful progress even if it does not feel revolutionary.
Within 24 hours of the meeting, send an email to the case manager summarizing any verbal commitments made during the meeting that are not reflected in the written document. Start it with: "Thank you for today's meeting. I wanted to follow up to confirm the following points that were discussed..." This creates a paper trail and is one of the most powerful tools available to parents.
The Bottom Line
Preparation is not about being adversarial. It is about being taken seriously. When you walk in with documents organized, observations written down, and questions prepared, you signal to the team that you are an equal partner in this process. That changes the dynamic of the meeting — and ultimately the quality of the IEP your child receives.
Use this checklist before every meeting. Share it with other IEP parents. The more prepared every family is, the better outcomes every child gets.
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