Quick Answer
Under IDEA, parents have legally enforceable rights throughout the IEP process: the right to participate in all meetings, consent to evaluations and placements, access all educational records, request independent evaluations at district expense, and challenge decisions through mediation or due process. These rights cannot be waived by the school.
Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), parents have specific, legally protected rights in every stage of the IEP process. Schools are required to honor these rights — and knowing them is the most powerful tool you have at the table.
Most parents don't learn what those rights are until after something goes wrong. This guide covers all of them.
This guide covers the rights that matter most, in plain English, so you can walk into your next meeting knowing exactly where you stand.
The Foundation: You Are an Equal Member of the IEP Team
This isn't a courtesy. It's federal law.
IDEA requires that parents be equal participants in developing their child's IEP. You're not there to observe. You're not there to rubber-stamp decisions the school already made. You're there to co-create the plan.
What this means in practice:
- The school cannot hold an IEP meeting without you (unless they've made multiple documented attempts to include you and you didn't respond)
- The school must consider your input when writing goals, choosing services, and making placement decisions
- You have the right to bring anyone you want to the meeting — an advocate, a family member, a friend, a private evaluator
- Meetings must be scheduled at a mutually agreed-upon time and place
Right #1: You Can Request an Evaluation at Any Time
If you suspect your child has a disability that's affecting their education, you can request an evaluation — in writing — at any time. The school must respond.
They have two options:
- Agree to evaluate — and complete the evaluation within a set timeline (typically 60 days, but varies by state)
- Refuse to evaluate — but they must give you Prior Written Notice (PWN) explaining exactly why they're refusing
The school cannot ignore your request. They cannot verbally dismiss it. They must respond formally. For a step-by-step walkthrough of the process, see our guide on how to request an IEP evaluation.
Right #2: Prior Written Notice (PWN) — The Right Most Parents Don't Know About
This might be the single most important right you have, and most parents have never heard of it.
Prior Written Notice means the school must give you a written document every time they:
- Propose to change your child's identification, evaluation, placement, or services
- Refuse to change your child's identification, evaluation, placement, or services
The PWN must include:
- A description of what the school is proposing or refusing
- An explanation of why
- A description of the data and evidence they used to make the decision
- Other options the team considered and why they were rejected
- Your rights and how to exercise them
Why this matters: PWN forces the school to put their reasoning on paper. It's much harder for a school to make an indefensible decision when they have to write down why they made it.
Right #3: You Don't Have to Sign Anything on the Spot
This is worth saying clearly: you are never required to sign the IEP at the meeting.
You can say:
- "I'd like to take this home and review it before I sign."
- "I need time to think about this."
- "I'd like to consult with an advocate before I agree."
All of these are completely within your rights. No one should pressure you to sign before you're ready.
Right #4: You Can Disagree with the School's Evaluation
If the school conducts an evaluation and you don't agree with the results, you have the right to request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) — at the school's expense.
An IEE is conducted by a qualified professional outside the school district. The school must either:
- Pay for the IEE, or
- File for a due process hearing to prove their evaluation was appropriate
They cannot simply say no.
When to consider an IEE:
- The school's evaluation doesn't match what you see at home
- The evaluation was rushed or felt incomplete
- Your child was evaluated in areas that don't capture the full picture
- The results were used to deny services you believe your child needs
Right #5: You Can Request an IEP Meeting at Any Time
You don't have to wait for the annual review. If something isn't working — if your child is struggling, if services aren't being delivered, if circumstances have changed — you can request an IEP meeting in writing at any time.
The school must respond within a reasonable timeframe. They cannot tell you to "wait until the annual review." Need help getting ready? Our IEP meeting preparation checklist walks you through everything to do before, during, and after.
Good reasons to request a meeting mid-year:
- Your child's needs have changed significantly
- Goals are too easy or too hard
- Services aren't being delivered as written
- A new diagnosis or evaluation changes the picture
- Your child is being disciplined for behavior related to their disability (learn about FBAs and Behavior Intervention Plans)
- You want to add or change accommodations
Right #6: You Have Access to All Records
Under IDEA and FERPA (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act), you have the right to:
- Inspect and review all educational records related to your child
- Request copies of those records (the school can charge a reasonable copying fee, but can't charge a fee that prevents you from accessing them)
- Request that records be amended if you believe they're inaccurate or misleading
- Know who has accessed your child's records
This includes evaluations, progress reports, IEP documents, communication logs, behavioral records, and anything else in your child's file.
Right #7: Stay Put — Your Child's Placement Can't Change During a Dispute
If you disagree with the school and file for due process or mediation, your child has the right to stay in their current placement until the dispute is resolved. This is called the "stay put" provision.
The school cannot move your child to a different classroom, remove services, or change the IEP while the dispute is pending — unless both parties agree.
This is a critical protection. It means the school can't pressure you into accepting changes by threatening to remove your child from their current setting.
Right #8: Dispute Resolution — Mediation and Due Process
When you and the school can't agree, you have formal options:
Mediation
- A neutral third party helps you and the school reach an agreement
- Free to parents
- Voluntary — both sides must agree to participate
- Often faster and less adversarial than due process
- Any agreement reached is legally binding
Due Process Hearing
- A formal, legal proceeding before an impartial hearing officer
- You present evidence, call witnesses, and make arguments
- The hearing officer makes a legally binding decision
- You can represent yourself or hire an attorney
- If you win, the school may be required to pay your attorney fees
State Complaint
- A written complaint filed with your state's department of education
- Alleges that the school violated IDEA
- The state investigates and issues a decision within 60 days
- Can result in corrective action against the school
Right #9: Informed Consent — Nothing Happens Without Your Permission
The school must get your informed, written consent before:
- Conducting an initial evaluation
- Providing special education services for the first time
- Reevaluating your child (in most cases)
"Informed consent" means the school must explain — in language you can understand — what they're proposing, why, and what it means for your child. You must agree voluntarily. And you can revoke consent at any time.
Right #10: Your Child's IEP Must Be Implemented
This sounds obvious, but it's one of the most commonly violated rights: once an IEP is signed, the school must follow it.
Every goal. Every accommodation. Every service. Every minute.
If your child's IEP says 30 minutes of speech therapy twice a week, that's what must happen. If the IEP says extended time on tests, every teacher must provide it — not just the ones who feel like it.
What to do if services aren't being delivered:
- Document it — keep a log of missed services, unimplemented accommodations, and any communications
- Email the case manager or special education coordinator, noting the specific IEP provisions that aren't being followed
- Request an IEP meeting to address the issue
- If it continues, file a state complaint — failure to implement an IEP is a clear IDEA violation
What Schools Hope You Don't Know
Let's be direct. Most schools have dedicated, well-intentioned educators. But the system often works in the school's favor simply because parents don't know the rules. Here's what tends to stay unsaid:
- "We don't do that here" is not a legal basis for denying a service. If your child needs it, the school must provide it or explain in writing why they can't.
- You can bring an advocate to every meeting. The school may not love it, but they can't stop it.
- The school works for your child. Not the other way around. The IEP process exists because Congress decided that children with disabilities deserve an education tailored to their needs — and that parents are essential to making that happen.
- Silence is not agreement. If you didn't say yes, you didn't consent. If you felt pressured, that's worth revisiting.
- Everything should be in writing. Verbal promises mean nothing in the IEP process. If it's not written in the IEP document, it doesn't exist.
Your Next Steps
- Request a copy of your child's current IEP — read it, and check whether what's written matches what's actually happening
- Request your child's complete educational file — know what's in there
- Start an email trail — any request, concern, or disagreement should be in writing from now on
- Save this guide — reference it before your next meeting
- Know your state's specific timelines and procedures — IDEA sets the floor, but your state may offer additional protections
Sources
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) — U.S. Department of Education
- Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) — U.S. Department of Education, Student Privacy Policy Office
Alabama — State-Specific Guidance
Alabama
Alabama: Your written request bypasses the 8-week BBSST pre-referral wait
Alabama has a pre-referral intervention process called the Building Based Student Support Team (BBSST) that typically requires at least 8 weeks of documented general education interventions before a child can be formally referred for a special education evaluation (Ala. Admin. Code r. 290-8-9-.01). Schools sometimes use this process to delay evaluation — telling parents they must "wait and see" how the child responds to classroom supports.
What many parents in Alabama do not know: when a parent makes a written request for evaluation, the school may not use the BBSST process as a reason to delay. A parent-initiated written referral triggers the school's obligation to respond and either consent to evaluate or provide Prior Written Notice explaining why they are declining. Put your request in writing, keep a copy, and make clear it is a parent-initiated referral. Once you provide signed consent, the school has 60 calendar days — running through summers and breaks — to complete the evaluation (Ala. Admin. Code r. 290-8-9-.02).
Alabama: IDEA rights transfer at 19, not 18 — you remain your child's rights-holder longer
In most states, parental IDEA rights transfer to students at age 18. Alabama is one of the very few states where rights transfer at age 19, because Alabama's age of majority under state law is 19 (Ala. Code § 26-1-1). This means you remain your child's educational decision-maker for an additional year compared to the federal default and most states.
As a parent, this gives you a full additional year to be involved in IEP meetings, consent to changes, and receive notices directly — without needing to be designated by your adult child. The school must notify both you and your child of the upcoming rights transfer no later than one year before your child turns 19. After age 19, all IDEA notices go to the student; you may still receive copies if your child agrees. Note that FERPA records rights still transfer at 18, so your child can control access to their own records independently at 18 even while IDEA rights remain with you until 19.
Verified Mar 2026