How to use your child's evaluation scores — WISC-V, Woodcock-Johnson, BASC-3 — to prepare specific, data-backed arguments for the eligibility meeting instead of going in unprepared.
Your child's eligibility meeting is this week. Here's the fastest way to understand the evaluation report — scores, scatter, and eligibility — before you walk in.
The specific assessment tools used in special ed evaluations — cognitive, achievement, behavioral, and autism-specific — and what each one is designed to measure.
Exactly what to include in a written special education evaluation request letter — language, format, who to send it to, and how to make it legally effective under IDEA.
The best resource for understanding a 2e child's evaluation is one that explains subtest scatter, masked deficits, and why a 'gifted but struggling' profile still qualifies for services under IDEA.
A practical guide to reading your child's psychoeducational evaluation report — what each section means, which red flags signal a flawed evaluation, and what to do next.
Why schools use Response to Intervention to stall special ed evaluations, why this is illegal under IDEA, and exactly how to force the district to evaluate your child now.
Comparing a self-service assessment decoder guide against hiring a special education advocate for understanding your child's evaluation report and IEP meeting prep.
The WJ-IV and WIAT-4 are the two most common academic achievement tests in school evaluations. Here's what each measures, how scores are reported, and what to look for.
What standard scores, percentile ranks, T-scores, and scaled scores mean in a psychoeducational evaluation — and why a score of 85 can mean very different things.
How to formally request a special education evaluation under IDEA, trigger the 60-day clock, and make sure the school tests everything it's required to assess.
A written evaluation request is the legal trigger that starts the 60-day clock. Here's what your letter must include — and what to say when requesting an IEE.
Private neuropsych evaluations run $3,000–$8,000 depending on complexity and location. Here's what's included, how to reduce costs, and when the school must pay.
You don't need a $4,000 neuropsychological evaluation to understand your child's school assessment. Here's how to decode the report yourself and know when a private eval is actually warranted.
Schools cannot attribute a disability to limited English proficiency, but they also cannot use language barriers to avoid evaluating for real disabilities. Here's how ELL evaluations must work.
A medical autism diagnosis doesn't automatically mean school eligibility. Here's why schools can say no — and what parents can do when they disagree with the evaluation.
ADHD alone doesn't guarantee an IEP. Here's what the school must prove to deny one, and how to challenge a decision that doesn't account for your child's full profile.
Decode your child's WISC-V scores — index scores, subtest scatter, processing speed, and when the Full Scale IQ is not a valid summary of your child's ability.
SLD is the most common IDEA category but also the most disputed. Here's how schools identify dyslexia, dyscalculia, and dysgraphia — and where evaluations fall short.
Children transitioning from early intervention at age 3 face a new eligibility process under Part B. Here's what the evaluation involves and what parents need to know before the transition meeting.
What to do when the school refuses to evaluate your child, conducts an evaluation that wasn't comprehensive enough, or produces results you disagree with.
Advocates and attorneys play different roles in special education disputes. Here's how to decide which help you actually need — and when the distinction matters most.
A practical guide to free and paid resources for understanding special education evaluations, with clear explanations of what each type of resource covers.
ADHD typically qualifies under Other Health Impairment, not Emotional Disturbance. Here's how schools determine which category fits — and why it matters for IEP services.
What the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) measures, how to read T-scores, and how an FBA differs from a psychoeducational evaluation in special education.
Autistic girls are vastly underidentified in school evaluations. Here's what masking looks like, why standard tools miss it, and how to advocate for a complete evaluation.
Before spending $2,000–$8,000 on a private evaluation, explore these alternatives: decoding the school's report, requesting additional testing, and demanding a district-funded IEE.
The evaluation standard for a 504 Plan is much less formal than for an IEP under IDEA. Here's how schools assess eligibility differently — and which path leads where.
School evaluation reports use four different types of scores. Here's what each one means, why some are more reliable than others, and how to use them to advocate for your child.
How twice-exceptional students are identified through special ed evaluations, why standard testing often misses them, and what WISC-V scatter patterns reveal about 2e profiles.
Parents have the right to an IEE at public expense when they disagree with a school evaluation. Here's exactly when to request one and how the process works.
What the Stanford-Binet 5 and DAS-II measure, why evaluators choose them over the WISC-V, and how to read the results in your child's evaluation report.
The three models schools use to identify specific learning disabilities — discrepancy, RTI, and PSW — and why the model matters for whether your child qualifies.
Evaluation scores showing low processing speed or working memory require specific, well-matched IEP accommodations. Here's how to connect the data to actionable supports.
The US has 1 school psychologist per 1,182 students — more than double the recommended ratio. Here's how that shortage affects your child's evaluation timeline and what you can do.
How schools test for dyslexia, dyscalculia, and dysgraphia — and the three competing identification models that determine whether your child qualifies.
The BRIEF-2 and Vineland-3 measure how a child actually functions in daily life. Here's what each tool measures, how scores work, and what they mean for IEP services.
The CELF-5 is the most widely used language assessment in school evaluations. Here's what it measures, how scores are reported, and what they mean for your child's IEP.
The ADOS-2 is the gold standard autism observation tool used in school evaluations. Here's how it works, how scores are interpreted, and why it's not the whole picture.
What a psychoeducational evaluation actually costs in the US, why private neuropsychological testing runs $3,000–$8,000, and how to get the district to pay.