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School Refuses Dyslexia Evaluation: Your Rights and What to Do Next

School Refuses Dyslexia Evaluation: Your Rights and What to Do Next

You submitted a written request for a dyslexia evaluation. The school said no — or offered to "watch and wait," or told you your child isn't struggling enough, or claimed their RTI process needs to run its course first. Each of these responses may violate your rights under federal law.

Here is exactly what schools can and cannot legally do, and what steps to take when they refuse.

What the Law Requires

Under IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act), schools are legally obligated to identify, locate, and evaluate all students who may have a disability under what is called "Child Find." This obligation exists regardless of whether a parent requests it — but it is also triggered by a parent's formal written request.

When you submit a written evaluation request:

  • The school has a limited timeframe to respond (most states set this at 15–60 days)
  • They must either consent to an evaluation OR provide a Prior Written Notice (PWN) explaining why they are refusing
  • They must provide you with a copy of your procedural safeguards

The school cannot legally do any of the following:

  • Verbally decline without providing written documentation
  • Use the RTI/MTSS process to indefinitely delay a formal evaluation
  • Claim a child "doesn't qualify" before completing an evaluation
  • Require a private diagnosis before evaluating
  • Deny an evaluation because grades are average

The RTI Stalling Tactic

One of the most common delays: "We need to finish the RTI process before we can evaluate."

IDEA explicitly states that schools cannot use the RTI/MTSS process to delay or deny a parent's right to request a special education evaluation. If you have submitted a written request, the evaluation clock starts ticking regardless of what tier of intervention your child is currently in.

If the school tells you the RTI process must complete first, respond in writing: "I understand the school is providing Tier [X] intervention. I am not withdrawing my evaluation request. Please confirm you are proceeding with the evaluation timeline required by state law, or provide a Prior Written Notice explaining the denial."

When the School Provides a Written Refusal (PWN)

A Prior Written Notice of refusal is actually useful. It documents that you made a formal request, it states the school's reasoning, and it creates the paper trail you need for the next steps.

Read the PWN carefully. Common school justifications for refusing:

  • "The student is performing within the average range overall" — this does not disqualify a student from SLD eligibility
  • "The evaluation data from current RTI is sufficient" — RTI progress monitoring is not a comprehensive evaluation
  • "The student's difficulties are due to language/attention/behavior" — these are possible comorbidities, not disqualifiers

Each of these justifications has specific counterarguments, and the existence of a written refusal gives you documented grounds for escalation.

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Step 1: Request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at Public Expense

If the school refuses to evaluate, OR if they evaluate and you disagree with the results, you have the right under IDEA to request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) — a private evaluation of your choosing, paid for by the school district.

To request an IEE:

  1. Send a written request stating that you disagree with the school's evaluation (or refusal to evaluate) and are requesting an IEE at public expense
  2. Include "at public expense" explicitly — this triggers the district's obligation to respond
  3. The district must either fund the IEE or initiate due process to defend their evaluation

Most districts will fund the IEE rather than go to due process. The IEE gives you an independently selected evaluator — ideally a licensed psychologist or neuropsychologist who specializes in learning disabilities and will administer the full battery including the CTOPP-2.

Step 2: File a State Complaint

If the school has violated procedural requirements — missed evaluation timelines, failed to provide a PWN, used RTI to improperly delay — you can file a state complaint with your state's Department of Education special education division.

State complaints are investigated within 60 days and can result in corrective action orders against the district. This is a faster and lower-cost route than due process for procedural violations.

Step 3: Due Process Hearing

If the dispute is substantive — the school evaluated and denied eligibility in a way you believe is legally incorrect — you can request a due process hearing. Due process is an administrative hearing before an independent hearing officer. You present evidence; the school presents evidence; the hearing officer rules.

Due process is expensive and emotionally draining. Before going this route, consider whether mediation (a less adversarial middle step) could resolve the dispute. Many states offer free mediation.

Compensatory Education: When Years Have Been Lost

If your child was denied an evaluation for months or years and missed intervention they were entitled to, you may be able to pursue compensatory education — an equitable remedy that awards additional services to compensate for what was unlawfully withheld.

Compensatory education can take the form of:

  • Additional hours of structured literacy instruction beyond what the IEP would normally provide
  • Funding for private Orton-Gillingham tutoring to remediate the lost years
  • Extended school year services

Courts and hearing officers have awarded significant compensatory education when districts have systematically failed to identify and serve dyslexic students. A 2026 court ruling in Nevada ordered reimbursement of $456,990 to parents whose dyslexic child was denied appropriate services for years.

Documentation: What to Keep

From the moment you begin advocating for your child, build a paper trail:

  • Date-stamped copies of all written communications
  • The evaluation request letter (sent via email with read receipt or certified mail)
  • Any PWNs received
  • Your own notes from verbal conversations, with dates and names
  • Progress monitoring data (request this in writing)
  • Records of any interventions and their dosage

This documentation becomes essential if you escalate to a state complaint, due process, or compensatory education claim.


The Dyslexia Support & Reading Intervention Kit includes fill-in-the-blank templates for the evaluation request letter, IEE request, and response to a Prior Written Notice refusal — plus the specific legal language your state requires.

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