$0 Nunavut IEP Meeting Prep Checklist

What Is an IEP in Nunavut? Understanding the ISSP

What Is an IEP in Nunavut? Understanding the ISSP

You've just come out of a meeting with your child's teacher. She mentioned something called an ISSP. You nodded along, but you've been searching online for "IEP" and nothing quite matches what the school is describing. The American websites talk about IDEA and due process hearings. The Ontario guides mention IPRC committees. None of it maps to anything you recognize from your child's school in Iqaluit, Rankin Inlet, or Arviat.

Here's the reason: Nunavut doesn't use the term IEP. It has its own system, grounded in its own legislation and its own set of values. Once you understand the local terminology, everything starts to make sense — and you'll be in a much stronger position to advocate for your child.

Nunavut's Word for an IEP: The ISSP

In Nunavut, the umbrella term is Individual Student Support Plan, or ISSP. This is the legal mechanism under the Nunavut Education Act (2008) that guarantees a child the right to receive "adjustments or supports" to meet their learning needs. When southern parents or websites talk about an IEP, what they're describing in Nunavut is an ISSP.

But the ISSP is actually an umbrella term that covers three distinct types of plans. Which type your child has matters enormously — especially for their future.

Individual Accommodation Plan (IAP)

An IAP is developed for a student who has difficulty accessing the curriculum but is cognitively capable of meeting standard academic outcomes. The curriculum itself does not change — the student is still working toward the same grade-level expectations as their classmates. What changes is how they access that curriculum.

Common IAP accommodations include:

  • Extra time on tests and assignments
  • Text-to-speech software
  • A scribe or reader
  • Preferential seating in the classroom
  • Reduced noise environments
  • A sign language assistant

Crucially, IAP accommodations do not appear on a student's high school transcript. This means a student completing school under an IAP graduates with the same credentials as any other student and can apply for post-secondary programs without restriction.

Individual Education Plan (IEP)

An IEP is for students whose needs are so profound that they cannot access the standard approved curriculum at all. Under an IEP, the learning competencies themselves are modified and individualized — the student is working toward different, highly personalized goals rather than the standard grade-level outcomes.

This distinction carries a significant consequence: courses completed under an IEP are flagged on the student's transcript. This can affect eligibility for certain university degree programs, though it does not prevent access to Nunavut Arctic College programs or many vocational pathways.

This is why the conversation about which type of plan your child needs is one of the most important conversations you will have with the Student Support Team. Parents sometimes discover too late that their child spent high school on a modified IEP when accommodation-only supports might have been sufficient.

Individual Behaviour Plan (IBP)

An IBP is a targeted sub-plan focused specifically on behavioral support. It identifies the triggers for a student's challenging behaviors and establishes consistent, positive strategies for the whole school team to use. An IBP typically sits alongside either an IAP or an IEP, rather than replacing them.

Who Creates an ISSP?

The ISSP is developed by the Student Support Team (SST) — known in Inuktitut as Ilinniarniqsaksiurutiit. This team is led by the school principal and the Student Support Teacher, and it includes the classroom teacher, any available itinerant specialists, and the parents.

Under IQ principles — specifically Piliriqatigiinniq (working together for a common purpose) — parents are not passive recipients of whatever the school decides. They are full members of the team. You have the right to bring a support person, a community Elder, or an advocate to any ISSP meeting. You can participate in Inuktitut or Inuinnaqtun, and the school is obligated to provide interpretation if needed.

Does My Child Need a Diagnosis First?

This is one of the most important things to understand about Nunavut's system: no, a formal diagnosis is not required before your child can receive an ISSP.

The Education Act mandates that supports must be based on demonstrated need, not a medical label. In a territory where wait times for a psychoeducational assessment routinely stretch to two or three years — because itinerant specialists must fly into fly-in communities from Iqaluit or southern Canada — requiring a diagnosis before providing support would leave hundreds of children with nothing during those years.

If your child is clearly struggling, you can demand that the SST create an ISSP based on the teacher's own formative assessments and observations. Do not let anyone tell you your child must be formally diagnosed before anything can be done.

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.

How Nunavut's System Differs From Southern Canada

If you've moved to Nunavut from Ontario, Alberta, or British Columbia, the differences are significant:

  • No 504 plans. The 504 plan is an American concept under US federal law. It does not exist in any Canadian province or territory, including Nunavut. The IAP serves a similar purpose.
  • No IPRC committees. Ontario uses an Identification, Placement and Review Committee process. Nunavut uses the Student Support Team model.
  • No due process hearings. The US Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) creates a formal legal hearing process. Nunavut has its own dispute resolution pathway through the DEA, the Minister of Education, and the Nunavut Human Rights Tribunal.
  • IQ principles are legally mandated. Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit is not optional background context — it is written into the Education Act as the philosophical foundation of the entire educational system.

The Tumit Levels

Nunavut uses a tiered intervention framework called the Tumit levels (Inuktitut for "footprints" or "steps"). Students with mild needs receive universal classroom supports at Tier 1. Students with more significant needs receive targeted interventions at Tier 2. Students at Tier 3 — with intensive, highly individualized needs — are the ones who typically receive a formal ISSP under the SST's management.

Understanding where your child sits in the Tumit framework helps you understand what level of support the system is obligated to provide.

What a Good ISSP Looks Like

A well-written ISSP is not a vague document full of good intentions. It should contain:

  • Measurable, time-bound goals. Not "the student will improve reading" but "the student will decode 50 Inuktitut sight words with 80% accuracy by the end of Term 2."
  • Specific support allocations. Not "access to SSA support" but "4 hours of 1:1 Student Support Assistant time per day for mathematics and language arts."
  • Clear review timelines. Policy calls for annual reviews, but advocates recommend requesting term-by-term reviews so the plan stays responsive.

If the ISSP on the table doesn't meet these standards, you have every right to push back before signing.

Your Next Step

Understanding the difference between an IAP, an IEP, and an IBP is the first piece. The next is knowing your rights as a parent — what you can demand, when you can escalate, and how to navigate the system when the school says there's nothing more they can do.

The Nunavut IEP & Support Plan Blueprint is a step-by-step guide built specifically for this territory, covering the ISSP process, parent rights under the Education Act, how to request specialist assessments, and what to do when the system stalls. Get the full guide at /ca/nunavut/iep-guide/.

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 →