$0 Nunavut IEP Meeting Prep Checklist

How to Get Classroom Accommodations in Nunavut Without a Diagnosis

If your child is struggling in school and the assessment waitlist is two to three years long, you don't have to wait. Under the Nunavut Education Act, a student does not need a formal medical or psychological diagnosis to receive an Individual Student Support Plan (ISSP) and classroom accommodations. The territory's Ilitaunnikuliriniq framework — dynamic assessment as learning — is explicitly designed to provide support based on observed need, not diagnostic labels. This means the school is legally required to act on what teachers can see happening in the classroom right now.

This matters enormously in Nunavut, where the gap between when a parent first raises concerns and when a psychoeducational assessment actually happens can stretch to three years or more. The itinerant psychologist visits most communities once or twice per academic year. A private assessment in southern Canada costs $3,200–$5,500 plus $1,400–$2,300 in flights. Your child cannot afford to lose two or three years of academic progress while the system catches up.

What the Law Actually Says

The Nunavut Education Act states that all children can learn, that learning is an individual process, and that diverse learning needs should be supported in an inclusive education system. Section 15 and the Inclusive Education Regulations guarantee a student's right to receive "adjustments or supports" to meet their learning needs.

Critically, these provisions are triggered by the student's observed difficulties in meeting curriculum competencies — not by a diagnosis. When the classroom teacher documents that a student is not achieving expected outcomes despite standard instruction, the Student Support Team is required to develop a support plan. The legal threshold is functional need, not medical classification.

The Ilitaunnikuliriniq foundation document reinforces this by establishing dynamic assessment — evaluating a student's learning needs through ongoing observation, classroom-based assessment, and responsive intervention — as the territory's preferred model. This approach explicitly rejects the gate-keeping function of formal diagnosis as a prerequisite for support.

Step-by-Step: How to Secure Interim Accommodations

1. Document what you're seeing at home

Before contacting the school, write down specific, concrete observations: your child takes three hours to complete homework that should take 30 minutes, reverses letters consistently in Grade 4, melts down every Sunday night before school, can't follow multi-step instructions, or struggles to read at grade level. Dates and examples are more persuasive than general concerns.

2. Submit a written request to the principal

Don't rely on verbal conversations. Put your request in writing — email is fine. State that your child is experiencing difficulty meeting curriculum competencies, describe what you've observed, and formally request that the Student Support Team assess your child's needs and develop an IAP or ISSP. Cite the Education Act requirement for individualized support.

3. Request a Student Support Team meeting

The SST — which includes the principal, Student Support Teacher (if available), classroom teacher, and you — is the body responsible for developing the ISSP. You have the right to attend this meeting, bring a support person, and participate in the plan development. Do not accept a plan that arrives pre-completed without your input.

4. Push for specific, measurable accommodations

Vague goals like "improve reading" are inadequate. Push for specific accommodations tied to your child's observable needs:

  • Extended time on tests and assignments
  • Preferential seating (near the teacher, away from distractions)
  • Visual schedules and graphic organizers
  • Modified assignment length (fewer questions covering the same skills)
  • Movement breaks during extended work periods
  • Text read aloud for reading-dependent subjects
  • Reduced copying from the board
  • Chunked instructions (one step at a time)
  • A quiet workspace for independent work

These are accommodations any classroom teacher can implement without specialized equipment or itinerant specialist support — which makes them realistic for remote Nunavut communities.

5. Get the IAP vs. IEP classification right

This distinction matters for your child's future. An Individual Accommodation Plan (IAP) provides support while keeping grade-level curriculum expectations — accommodations are not noted on the transcript. An Individual Education Plan (IEP) modifies the curriculum itself — and those modifications appear on the transcript, which can affect post-secondary eligibility. If your child can meet grade-level outcomes with the right support, insist on an IAP, not an IEP.

6. Set a review date

Don't let the ISSP sit untouched for a year. Request term-by-term reviews — at minimum, three per school year. This ensures accommodations are adjusted based on how your child responds, and creates a documented record of progress or continued difficulty that strengthens your case when the formal assessment finally happens.

What to Do When the School Pushes Back

The most common response parents hear is some version of "we can't do anything until the assessment comes back." Here's how to handle it:

If the school says they need a diagnosis first: Cite the Education Act and Ilitaunnikuliriniq. The law does not require a diagnosis for an ISSP. The dynamic assessment framework explicitly supports intervention based on observed need. Ask the school to identify which specific provision of the Education Act requires a medical diagnosis before providing accommodations — there isn't one.

If the school says resources are exhausted: Invoke Qanuqtuurniq (being resourceful and innovative in solving problems). This is one of the territory's own Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit principles, and the school is mandated to operate under these values. Frame the conversation as collaborative problem-solving: "Given the resources available, what accommodations can we implement right now for my child?" This approach respects community dynamics while holding the school accountable.

If the school says the teacher can't manage another ISSP: This is a staffing and workload issue that belongs to the principal and the Regional School Operations office — not your child. The Education Act doesn't limit the number of ISSPs a teacher can support. Document the refusal in writing and escalate to the District Education Authority.

If the school offers only informal, verbal accommodations: Insist on a written ISSP. Verbal agreements disappear when the teacher changes — and in Nunavut, teacher turnover is the norm. A formal, written plan with specific accommodations, measurable goals, and review dates is the only tool that survives staff changes.

The Nunavut IEP & Support Plan Blueprint includes pre-written advocacy emails for each of these scenarios, with specific Education Act citations and IQ principle references built into every template.

Free Download

Get the Nunavut IEP Meeting Prep Checklist

Everything in this article as a printable checklist — plus action plans and reference guides you can start using today.

Why Interim Accommodations Are Not "Second Best"

Some parents worry that pursuing interim accommodations means settling for less than their child deserves. The opposite is true.

Interim accommodations serve two functions simultaneously. First, they provide your child with immediate classroom support — which means two or three years of continued learning instead of two or three years of falling further behind while waiting for a diagnosis. Second, they create a documented record of how your child responds to specific interventions. When the formal assessment finally happens, the psychologist has a rich body of evidence — what worked, what didn't, how your child progresses with support — that leads to a more accurate diagnosis and a stronger, more targeted ISSP.

A child who receives interim accommodations for three years while waiting for an assessment enters the formal process with detailed classroom data. A child who receives nothing enters the process three years behind, with no intervention data, and an assessment that captures where they are after years of unsupported struggle — not where they could be.

Who This Is For

  • Parents whose child is on a multi-year waitlist for a psychoeducational assessment and who need classroom support now
  • Parents who've been told the school "can't do anything" without a diagnosis
  • Parents in fly-in communities where itinerant specialists visit once or twice a year
  • Parents who suspect a learning disability or behavioural concern but haven't been able to access formal testing

Who This Is NOT For

  • Parents whose child has already been assessed and has a formal ISSP in place (your next step is monitoring and enforcing that plan)
  • Parents seeking the assessment itself (see How to Request a Special Education Evaluation in Nunavut for assessment pathways including private evaluations)

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the school refuse to create an ISSP because there's no diagnosis?

No. The Nunavut Education Act and Ilitaunnikuliriniq framework do not require a medical or psychological diagnosis before an ISSP can be developed. If the school refuses, put the refusal in writing by emailing a summary of the conversation and asking the principal to confirm their position. Then escalate to the District Education Authority citing the Education Act's requirement for individualized support.

What's the difference between informal classroom support and a formal ISSP?

Informal support is a verbal agreement between you and the teacher — "I'll give her extra time on tests." It has no documentation, no measurable goals, no review dates, and disappears completely when the teacher leaves. A formal ISSP is a written document with specific accommodations, measurable objectives, and scheduled reviews. It survives teacher turnover and creates a legal record that holds the school accountable.

How many accommodations can I request without a diagnosis?

There's no limit. The question isn't how many accommodations you can request — it's which accommodations address your child's specific observed needs. Start with the accommodations the teacher has already noticed would help (they often know what would work but haven't formalized it), then add specific supports based on your observations at home.

Will pursuing interim accommodations delay the formal assessment?

No. Pursuing interim accommodations does not affect your child's position on the assessment waitlist. In fact, the documentation created through the ISSP process — teacher observations, intervention results, and progress monitoring data — often strengthens the referral when the formal assessment finally happens, because the assessor has detailed baseline data to work with.

What if the accommodations aren't working?

Request an immediate ISSP review. You don't have to wait for the scheduled annual review. If specific accommodations aren't producing the expected results, document what you're seeing and request a meeting with the Student Support Team to adjust the plan. The dynamic assessment model is built on this cycle — intervene, observe, adjust, repeat.

Can I use IQ principles to push for accommodations even if I'm not Inuit?

Absolutely. Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit principles are the legal foundation of Nunavut's education system — they apply to every student in every community, regardless of cultural background. Invoking Piliriqatigiinniq (working together for a common cause) or Qanuqtuurniq (being resourceful) in an ISSP meeting demonstrates that you understand and respect the territorial framework, which builds credibility with the school team.

Get Your Free Nunavut IEP Meeting Prep Checklist

Download the Nunavut IEP Meeting Prep Checklist — a printable guide with checklists, scripts, and action plans you can start using today.

Learn More →