Parent VoicesOhio

"Your Child Doesn't Qualify" — What to Do Next

How this applies in Ohio

13 min readFebruary 26, 2026

By Adam Matossian · Founder of IEP Says. Father, advocate, and builder — helping parents understand and navigate their child's IEP.

Quick Answer

If your child was found ineligible for an IEP, you have the right to request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at the school's expense to challenge the findings. You can also request a 504 Plan for accommodations, ask the team to reconsider with additional data, or file for due process if you believe the evaluation was inadequate.

If the school found your child ineligible for an IEP, you are not out of options. You have the right to request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at the school's expense, challenge the eligibility decision through mediation or due process, or request a 504 Plan. An ineligibility decision is a starting point for a dispute — not a final answer.

"My daughter struggles every single day. She cries over homework, she has no friends, and the school says she doesn't qualify because her grades are fine. How is that possible?"

— Parent of a child evaluated for special education, via online support group

You know your child. You see the struggles every single day — the tears over homework, the anxiety before school, the exhaustion that no amount of sleep can fix. You went through the evaluation process because you knew something was wrong. And then the school sat across from you at a table and said: "Your child doesn't qualify."

It feels like a door slamming shut. Like the system looked at your child's pain and said, "Not enough."

It is not the end. That door is not the only one. And some of the most powerful tools available to you as a parent are specifically designed for this exact moment — when the school says no, and you know they are wrong.

This article walks you through why school evaluations miss things, what your legal options are right now, and exactly what to say to keep fighting for your child.

Why School Evaluations Miss Things

Before we talk about next steps, you need to understand something important: the evaluation that found your child "ineligible" may not have been wrong — it may have been incomplete. School evaluations miss things all the time, and here is why.

The scope was too narrow

School evaluators test what they are asked to test — and sometimes what they are equipped to test. If you asked about reading difficulties and the school tested reading comprehension but skipped processing speed, working memory, or executive function, they may have missed the root cause entirely. Your child's reading might test "fine" while the cognitive machinery underneath is grinding to a halt.

School bias toward existing programs

This is uncomfortable but real: some schools evaluate through the lens of what services they already offer. If the district has a strong reading intervention program but limited support for executive function or social-emotional needs, the evaluation may unconsciously lean toward finding — or not finding — what fits within their existing framework.

The "grades are fine" fallacy

This is the most infuriating one. Your child is passing. Maybe even getting Bs. And the school points to those grades as proof that everything is working. What those grades do not show is the three hours of crying over homework every night, the parent re-teaching every lesson at the kitchen table, the child who has learned to mask their struggles so well that teachers never see the collapse that happens at home.

The testing environment is artificial

Your child sat in a quiet room, one-on-one with an evaluator, with no social pressure, no sensory overload, no transitions, and no peers. Of course they performed better. The evaluation environment is the opposite of a real classroom. A child who can focus beautifully in a controlled setting may fall apart completely in a room with 25 kids, fluorescent lights, and unpredictable noise.

Two hours vs. ten years

The evaluator spent a few hours with your child. You have spent your child's entire life with them. You have seen the patterns, the cycles, the slow erosion of confidence. An evaluation is a snapshot. You have the full film.

"Good Grades" Does Not Mean "Fine"

This myth needs to die. Schools use it constantly to deny eligibility, and it is not supported by IDEA.

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) guarantees every eligible child a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE). Appropriate does not mean "passing." It does not mean "surviving." It means making meaningful progress toward their potential with the support they need.

Here is what "good grades" can actually mean for a struggling child:

  • Compensating at an unsustainable cost. The child is using every ounce of energy to hold it together at school, then falling apart at home. They are passing, but they are breaking.
  • Masking. Children — especially girls, especially children with ADHD or autism — learn to hide their struggles. They watch other kids for cues, they stay quiet when confused, they develop coping strategies that work until they don't.
  • Parent-powered success. Those Bs exist because you are spending hours every night re-teaching, organizing, coaching, and carrying the weight that should be shared by the school. Remove your support and the grades collapse.
  • Low expectations. Some children receive passing grades not because they have mastered the material but because the teacher has informally reduced expectations — giving fewer problems, accepting less writing, grading on effort instead of mastery.

None of these scenarios means your child is "fine." All of them may indicate a disability that is meaningfully impacting the child's ability to learn at school — even when the report card says otherwise.

Your Immediate Options After a Denial

You just found out your child did not qualify. Here is what to do right now — before you do anything else.

1. Get the full evaluation report

You are entitled to a complete copy of every evaluation, test result, and report the school used to make their determination. Not a summary. Not a verbal explanation. The full written report. Read it carefully. Look for areas that were not assessed, scores that seem inconsistent with what you observe, and conclusions that do not match the data.

2. Get Prior Written Notice (PWN)

The school is legally required to provide you with Prior Written Notice any time they refuse to identify your child as eligible for special education. This document must explain what they decided, why they decided it, what data they used, what other options were considered, and your rights. If you did not receive PWN, ask for it in writing: "I am requesting Prior Written Notice for the team's decision that my child is not eligible for special education."

3. Ask which eligibility categories were considered

IDEA has 13 disability categories. Your child only needs to qualify under one. Ask the team: "Which eligibility categories were considered during this evaluation, and why was each one ruled out?" If the team only considered one category — say, Specific Learning Disability — but never looked at Other Health Impairment (which covers ADHD) or Emotional Disturbance (which covers anxiety), the evaluation may have been incomplete.

Option 1: Request a 504 Plan

If your child does not qualify for an IEP under IDEA, they may still qualify for a 504 plan under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. These are two different laws with two different eligibility standards — and 504 has a much broader definition of disability.

How 504 eligibility differs from IEP eligibility

  • IEP (IDEA): Requires a disability under one of 13 specific categories AND a need for specially designed instruction.
  • 504 (Section 504): Requires any physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities — including learning, reading, concentrating, thinking, and communicating.

That second definition is significantly broader. A child with ADHD who can pass classes but cannot concentrate without exhausting themselves. A child with anxiety who is physically present but mentally paralyzed. A child with dyslexia who compensates so well that their reading scores look "fine" — all of these children may qualify for a 504 even if they did not meet the IEP threshold.

What a 504 plan provides

A 504 plan provides accommodations — changes to how your child accesses education. It does not provide specially designed instruction (that is what an IEP does). But accommodations can be powerful:

  • Extended time on tests and assignments
  • Preferential seating
  • Breaks during long tasks
  • Reduced homework load
  • Access to notes or audio recordings
  • Testing in a separate, quiet room
  • Check-ins with a school counselor
  • Modified grading for specific assignments

A 504 plan is not an IEP — it does not have the same procedural protections or level of detail. But for many children, the right accommodations can make the difference between surviving school and actually learning. For a deeper comparison, read our guide to IEP vs. 504 plan differences.

Option 2: Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE)

This is your most powerful tool after a denial. If you disagree with the school's evaluation, you have the legal right to request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at public expense. That means the school district pays for an outside evaluator to assess your child — someone who does not work for the school.

The legal basis

This right is established under 34 CFR 300.502. When a parent disagrees with an evaluation obtained by the school, the parent has the right to an IEE at public expense. The school district must either:

  1. Fund the IEE — pay for an independent evaluator of the parent's choosing (within the district's criteria), or
  2. File for a due process hearing — go before a hearing officer and prove that their own evaluation was appropriate.

Most school districts will fund the IEE. Filing for due process is expensive and time-consuming for the district, and they know it. This is leverage — use it.

Why an IEE matters

An independent evaluator is not employed by the school. They do not have a caseload of 500 students. They are not influenced by what programs the district offers or does not offer. They evaluate your child based on your child — not based on what fits the school's existing framework.

Independent evaluators often:

  • Assess more areas than the school did
  • Use more comprehensive testing instruments
  • Spend more time with your child
  • Include detailed parent interviews
  • Provide specific, actionable recommendations — not just scores

How to request an IEE

Write a letter or email to the special education director. You do not need to explain your reasons in detail. Here is what to say:

Dear [Special Education Director],

I disagree with the evaluation conducted by the school district for my child, [child's name]. I am requesting an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at public expense under 34 CFR 300.502.

Please provide me with the district's criteria for IEEs, including the approved evaluator list and any applicable cost guidelines.

Thank you,
[Your name]
[Date]

Option 3: Private Evaluation

If you do not want to wait for the IEE process, or if the district's approved evaluator list is limited, you can get a private evaluation on your own. You choose the evaluator and you pay for it.

The advantages

  • You choose. You pick the evaluator — a neuropsychologist, educational psychologist, or specialist in your child's specific area of concern. No approved list, no district criteria.
  • Speed. You can schedule it now. You do not need the school's permission or cooperation.
  • Depth. Private evaluations are often more comprehensive than school evaluations, sometimes spanning 6-10 hours of testing across multiple sessions.

What the school must do with your private evaluation

Under IDEA, the school is required to consider any evaluation you submit — whether it was done at public or private expense. "Consider" means they must review it at a team meeting and address the findings. They are not required to agree with it, but they cannot ignore it.

If the private evaluation reaches different conclusions than the school's evaluation — especially if it identifies a disability the school missed — that creates a strong basis for requesting a new eligibility determination or an IEE.

The cost

Private neuropsychological evaluations typically cost between $2,000 and $6,000 depending on the evaluator and the scope. It is a significant expense. But if the evaluation reveals what the school missed and leads to eligibility, the services your child receives through an IEP are worth far more over time.

Option 4: Request Reevaluation Later

A "no" today is not a "no" forever. Children change. Conditions evolve. Compensatory strategies that worked in second grade collapse in fourth grade when the academic demands increase. You have the right to request a new evaluation — and the school must respond.

When to request reevaluation

  • After a new diagnosis. If your child receives a medical diagnosis (ADHD, autism, anxiety disorder, learning disability) after the initial evaluation, that is new information the school must consider.
  • When demands increase. Many children hold it together in early elementary but start struggling as the work gets harder, the social demands get more complex, and the safety nets disappear.
  • When compensatory strategies break down. The masking, the extra effort, the parental support — eventually something gives. When it does, the data looks different.
  • When you have new data. A private evaluation, a new medical report, documented behavior changes — any of these can support a new request.

The timeline

Under IDEA, a child can be reevaluated no more than once per year unless the parent and school agree otherwise — and must be reevaluated at least once every three years. But you can request a reevaluation at any time, and the school must either agree or provide Prior Written Notice explaining why they are refusing.

If circumstances have changed significantly, even if it has been less than a year, make the case: "New information has emerged since the last evaluation, and I am requesting a reevaluation to determine whether my child now meets eligibility criteria." For more on the evaluation process, see our guide to how to request an IEP evaluation.

What to Say at the Next Meeting

You do not need to be a special education attorney. You need to ask clear questions and hold the team accountable. Here are exact phrases you can bring to the table.

When you want to understand the decision

"I'd like to understand which eligibility categories were considered for my child, and why each one was ruled out."

When grades are used as the reason

"My child's grades do not reflect their effort level or the emotional cost of achieving those grades. IDEA does not require a child to be failing to qualify. Can you explain how you measured educational impact beyond report card grades?"

When you want to challenge the evaluation

"I disagree with these findings. I am requesting an Independent Educational Evaluation at public expense under 34 CFR 300.502."

When you want a 504 considered

"If my child does not qualify under IDEA, I would like to discuss eligibility for a 504 plan under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. My child has a condition that substantially limits their ability to [learn / concentrate / regulate emotions]."

When the team wants to close the door

"I am not accepting 'doesn't qualify' as the final answer. I want to understand every option available to my child — including a 504 plan, an IEE, and the process for requesting reevaluation. Please provide me with Prior Written Notice for this decision."

For a broader understanding of your rights during any IEP or special education meeting, see our guide to IEP rights: what schools must do.

State-Specific Options: NH and MA

New Hampshire

  • IEE at public expense: Under Ed 1120.07 and 34 CFR 300.502, parents who disagree with the school's evaluation can request an IEE at district expense. The district must either fund it or file for due process.
  • Neutral conference: Before escalating to due process, NH parents can request a neutral conference through the Department of Education. This is an informal step that can sometimes resolve disputes without a formal hearing.
  • Prior Written Notice: NH requires PWN for any refusal to identify a child as eligible (Ed 1120.04). If you did not get one, demand it.
  • Complaint process: You can file a complaint with the NH Department of Education if you believe the school violated IDEA procedures during the evaluation or eligibility determination.

Massachusetts

  • IEE in any area assessed: MA parents have the right to request an IEE at public expense in any area the school district assessed. If the school tested five areas, you can request an independent evaluation in any or all of them.
  • Facilitated IEP meetings: Available free through the Bureau of Special Education Appeals (BSEA) at 781-397-4750. A neutral facilitator runs the meeting to keep both sides focused and productive. You can request this at any time.
  • PQA complaint: You can file a complaint with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education's Program Quality Assurance (PQA) office within one year of the disputed decision. PQA investigates whether the school followed proper procedures.
  • Broader IEE rights: Under MA regulations (603 CMR 28.04(5)), parents are entitled to receive IEE results and have them considered by the team at a meeting convened within 10 school days.

Your Next Steps

  1. Get the evaluation report and PWN. If you do not have both in hand, request them in writing today. You need to see what the school tested, what they found, and how they justified the denial.
  2. Review which eligibility categories were considered. If the team only looked at one or two of IDEA's 13 categories, the evaluation may have been incomplete. Write down which categories fit your child's profile and bring them up.
  3. Request a 504 evaluation. If your child has any condition that substantially limits a major life activity, they may qualify for accommodations under Section 504 — even if IDEA eligibility was denied.
  4. Request an IEE at public expense. Send the letter. The school must either fund an independent evaluation or go to due process to defend their own. This is your strongest leverage.
  5. Start a documentation file. From today forward, keep everything: emails, evaluation reports, report cards, behavior logs, homework time logs, and your own written observations. This is your evidence.
  6. Review your documents. Get started to get a plain-language breakdown of what the evaluation found, what it missed, and what language to bring to your next meeting.

Sources

Ohio — State-Specific Guidance

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Ohio

Ohio has several parent-protective rules when challenging a denial:

  • The eligibility document is called the ETR. Ohio's evaluation culminates in an Evaluation Team Report (ETR) — the state's required eligibility form (PR-06) under OAC §3301-51-06. The ETR must answer three questions: Does the child have a disability? Does it adversely affect educational performance? Does the child need specially designed instruction? If you do not have the full ETR, request it in writing immediately.
  • IEE at public expense. If you disagree with the ETR, you can request an Independent Educational Evaluation at district expense under OAC §3301-51-06 and 34 CFR 300.502. The district must either fund it or file for a due process hearing to defend their evaluation. They cannot simply refuse.
  • 60-calendar-day evaluation deadline. Once parental consent is obtained, Ohio requires the evaluation to be completed within 60 calendar days (OAC §3301-51-06(B)(4)(a)). If the district missed this timeline, document it.
  • Two-tier due process — IHO then SLRO. Ohio is one of the few states that still uses a two-tier due process system. First, an Impartial Hearing Officer (IHO) hears the case. Any party aggrieved by the IHO decision may appeal within 45 days to the State Level Review Officer (SLRO). Only after exhausting both tiers can you go to court (ORC §3323.05(B); OAC §3301-51-05(K)). This gives parents two independent decision-makers.
  • State complaint to ODEW. You can file a written complaint with the Ohio Department of Education and Workforce (ODEW) Office for Exceptional Children (OEC) alleging a procedural violation. The state must resolve complaints within 60 calendar days.
  • Jon Peterson Scholarship as a parallel option. Students with active IEPs who are denied services they need in their local district may qualify for the Jon Peterson Special Needs Scholarship (ORC §§3310.51–3310.64), which funds approved services at registered private providers. There is no income cap.

Verified Mar 2026

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This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific questions about your child's IEP, consult a qualified special education attorney or advocate.