IEP (Individualized Education Program)
IEP Process and Information
The Individualized Education Program (IEP) is a written record of the special education services a student will receive for one calendar year. The organization and contents are highly standardized by law to maintain consistency from state to state and district to district. Seattle Public Schools uses online computer software, IEP Online, to compile all IEPs.
While the structure is standardized, the contents are individualized to each student.
IEP implementation and maintenance is a repetitive cycle intended to grow and adapt with each individual student.
IEP Contents and Documents
Information in the IEP is recorded in narrative, table, or multiple-choice checkbox formats in a standardized by the template. The format of an IEP is standardized, but the details are specific to each student.
The IEP team creates, reviews, and revises the student’s IEP. Each IEP team meets at least once a year to review their student’s IEP.
Learn about IEP MeetingsIEP Implementation
Students in Seattle Public Schools
The IEP start date is listed on the signature page of the IEP and this is when implementation begins. Once the IEP is completed, a team led by the case manager will provide the services and/or accommodations included in the document for one year until the next IEP is written.
Private School and Homeschooled Students
Students voluntarily attending approved private schools or homeschool have two service delivery options: dual enrollment or a service plan. IEP implementation may vary depending on the option selected.
Link to Learn
IEP Implementation Center for Parent Information and Resources (CIPR)
Annual IEP Renewal and Amendments
IEPs must be reviewed annually at minimum. This is called an Annual IEP Review. The IEP Review must be completed within one calendar year of the previous IEP meeting date. The team will determine how the existing IEP is serving the student and what changes are necessary.
Additional IEP meetings may be convened when:
- A student has received a formal assessment
- An IEP team member, including the parent/guardian, requests a meeting to develop, review, or revise the individualized education program (should be considered when there are concerns that a student is not making progress or has exceeded expectations)
- When a change of placement is considered or selected by the IEP team
- There is a change is eligibility category or a change of areas of service, including SDI, Related Services, or Assistive Technology
- To conduct a manifestation determination on disciplinary issues
- Following a three year or off-schedule reevaluation
Parents are invited and expected to participate in all of the IEP team meetings, including annual renewals.
Measuring student progress is a crucial step in the IEP process.
Learn more about Reviewing ServicesProblem Solving
10 Defusing Phrases to Use at IEP Meetings from Understood.org
Service Types in the IEP
Four types of services are defined in the IEP: special education services, related services, supplementary aids and services, and transportation services.
Special Education Services
Special education services are academic, functional or behavioral instruction that differs from the general education curriculum. It is specially designed for the individual student’s needs. Under The Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) it is called specially designed instruction (SDI).
Related Services
Related services are a broad category encompassing any services that assist a student to access and gain benefit from their special education services. Related services may include: speech-language pathology and audiology, interpreting (sign-language), psychological, physical and occupational therapy, recreation, identification and assessment, counseling, orientation and mobility (for vision impaired), medical, nursing, social work, or parent counseling and training services.
Supplementary Aids or Services
The term “supplementary aids and services” means aids, services, and other supports that are provided in general education classes or other education-related settings to enable students eligible for special education to be educated with nondisabled students to the maximum extent appropriate in accordance with the least restrictive environment requirements.
These services, like accommodations and modifications, support a student’s participation in their education. The difference is that they fall outside of the scope of what the general education teacher is expected to adjust. They may include additional staffing resources, specialized equipment, assistive technology, or modified materials for instruction.
Transportation Services
Transportation services include: travel to and from school and between schools, travel in and around school buildings, and adapted busses, lifts, and ramps if required.
IEPs for Students not attending SPS
Students not attending SPS include those voluntarily enrolled by their parents in private school settings, home schooled students, and those in contracted placements.
Regardless of their daily school setting, all qualified students must have an Individual Education Plan (IEP) that fully and accurately reflects his or her evaluation and areas of qualification. Therefore, no difference should exist between the IEP of a student not enrolled in SPS.
The delivery of services for students not attending SPS may be different.
Students Entering the District with an IEP
Students of any age transferring into the District with an IEP must first enroll in the District through the Admissions Department.
Parents/Guardians must notify Admissions that their student has a pre-existing IEP. This triggers an out of District placement process including: review of the existing evaluation and IEP, forwarding of existing materials to the student’s new assigned school, or recommendation for reevaluation.
If a reevaluation is recommended, services equivalent to the existing IEP will be provided until a new IEP is in place.
Archiving Individualized Education Plans
Students who have been out of Seattle Public Schools for six years or more will have their special education records removed and destroyed in accordance with state archiving regulations and federal mandates.
Students who were last in school before Friday, June 30, 2017 were eligible for this archiving. This included students who turned 21 or moved out of the district, or were not in school for any other reason during that time period.
Families of a students with records on track to be destroyed were able to obtain a copy of the records by contacting the Special Education department by Saturday, March 2, 2024. If the department did not hear by this date, records are no longer available.
Privacy is of utmost concern, and the records were destroyed carefully and without any release of information.
Note: For students over 18 years of age, their signature was required to obtain records unless the parent still has legal guardianship.
The address for the written request is:
Seattle Public Schools/Special Education Records
MS 31-725
PO Box 34165
Seattle, WA 98124-1165.
Note: For students over 18 years of age, their signature is required to obtain records unless the parent still has legal guardianship.
If the department does not hear by March 2, these records will no longer be available.