Skip to content
main content starts here

How do I know my child needs Special Education Services?

This page is provided for general informational purposes only from Questions Often Asked by Parents about Special Education Services, a resource of the Center for Parent Information and Resources. Please speak with your school’s Special Education Chair for specific help related to your child.

Third-party links on the HFM website are not within the BOCES’ control and may not comply with accessibility standards. HFM BOCES is not responsible for the content or accessibility of third-party sites.

Why is my child struggling in school?

When children are struggling in school, it’s important to find out why. It may be that a disability is affecting your child’s educational performance. If so, your child may be eligible for special education and related services that can help. Please speak with your school’s Special Education Department about having your child evaluated.

As a first step, the school may need to try interventions in the regular education classroom and modify instructional practices before referring your child for special education evaluation.

What is special education?

Special education is instruction that is specially designed to meet the unique needs of children who have disabilities. Special education and related services are provided in public schools at no cost to the parents and can include special instruction in the classroom, at home, in hospitals or institutions, or in other settings. This definition of special education comes from IDEA, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. This law gives eligible children with disabilities the right to receive special services and assistance in school. [more]

More than 6.8 million children ages 3 through 21 receive special education and related services each year in the United States. Each of these children receives instruction that is specially designed:

  • to meet his or her unique needs (that result from having a disability); and
  • to help the child learn the information and skills that other children are learning in the general education curriculum.
Who is eligible for special education?

Children with disabilities are eligible for special education and related services when they meet IDEA’s definition of a “child with a disability” in combination with state and local policies. IDEA’s definition of a “child with a disability” lists 13 different disability categories under which a child may be found eligible for special education and related services. These categories are listed below. IDEA describes what each of these disability categories means. You’ll find those descriptions online at: http://www.parentcenterhub.org/repository/categories/

IDEA’s Categories of Disability

  • Autism
  • Deafness
  • Deaf-blindness
  • Hearing impairment
  • Intellectual disabilities
  • Multiple disabilities
  • Orthopedic impairment
  • Other health impairment
  • Serious emotional disturbance
  • Specific learning disability
  • Speech or language impairment
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Visual impairment, including blindness

States and school districts must follow IDEA’s definitions, but they also may add details to guide decision making about children’s eligibility. That’s why it’s important to know what your state and local policies are.

How do I find out if my child is eligible?

You can ask the school to evaluate your child. Call or write the director of special education or the principal of your child’s school. Describe your concerns with your child’s educational performance and request an evaluation under IDEA, to see if a disability is involved.

The public school may also be concerned about how your child is learning and developing. If the school thinks that your child may have a disability, then it must evaluate your child at no cost to you. The school must ask your permission and receive your written consent before it may evaluate your child. Once you provide that consent, the evaluation must be conducted within 60 days (or within the timeframe the state has established).

However, the school does not have to evaluate your child just because you have asked. The school may not think your child has a disability or needs special education. In this case, the school may refuse to evaluate your child. It must let you know this decision in writing, as well as why it has refused. This is called giving you prior written notice.

If the school refuses to evaluate your child, there are two things you can do immediately:

  • Ask the school system for information about its special education policies, as well as parent rights to disagree with decisions made by the school system. These materials should describe the steps parents can take to appeal a school system’s decision.
  • Get in touch with Starbridge, the New York State Parent Training and Information (PTI) center serving upstate NY. Starbridge is an excellent resource for parents to learn more about special education, their rights and responsibilities, and the law. Starbridge, 1650 South Avenue, Suite 200, Rochester, NY 14620 (585)546-1700 E-mail: info@starbridgeinc.org
What happens during an evaluation?

Evaluating your child means more than the school just giving your child a test. The school must evaluate your child in all the areas where your child may be affected by the possible disability. This may include looking at your child’s health, vision, hearing, social and emotional well-being, general intelligence, performance in school, and how well your child communicates with others and uses his or her body. The evaluation must be individualized (just your child) and full and comprehensive enough to determine if your child has a disability and to identify all of your child’s needs for special education and related services if it is determined that your child has a disability.

The article goes on to answer many more questions, such as:

  • What does the school do with these evaluation results?
  • How is my child’s eligibility for special education decided?
  • So my child has been found eligible for special education, and I agree. What’s next?
  • What’s an IEP?
  • Will my child be re-evaluated?

Access Questions Often Asked by Parents about Special Education Services.

Source: Center for Parent Information and Resources (June 30, 2016). Questions Often Asked by Parents about Special Education Services, Newark, NJ, Lisa Küpper, NICHCY. Used with permission.

Top