Oregon Guides
United States-Wide Guides
These apply to all families of children with disabilities in United States:
General Resources
These guides work no matter where you live:
Articles for Oregon
Best Transition Resource for Parents of Teens with Significant Support Needs
Why transition planning is hardest for families of teens with autism, I/DD, and complex medical needs — and what a comprehensive resource must cover.
How to Prepare for the SSI Age-18 Redetermination Without a Benefits Planner
Step-by-step preparation for the SSI age-18 redetermination: documentation strategy, the 10-day appeal window, and what to do if you can't afford a pr…
Oregon IEP Toolkit vs. Hiring a Special Education Advocate: Which Gets Better Results?
Comparing a $14 Oregon-specific IEP toolkit with hiring a special education advocate at $100-300/hr. When each option makes sense and what most Oregon…
Best Way to Prepare for an IEP Eligibility Meeting Using Evaluation Data
How to use your child's evaluation scores — WISC-V, Woodcock-Johnson, BASC-3 — to prepare specific, data-backed arguments for the eligibility meeting …
Best Special Education Rights Resource for Parents Who Can't Afford an Attorney
The best special education resources for parents who can't afford a $300-$700/hour attorney. Free and low-cost options for enforcing your child's IDEA…
How to Plan for Life After High School with a Disability Without a Transition Consultant
You don't need a $125/hour consultant to navigate SSI, Medicaid waivers, and VR services. Here's the DIY approach that covers 90% of the work.
Special Education Rights Guide vs Hiring an Advocate: Which Do You Need First?
Compare using a special education rights guide versus hiring an advocate. Learn when each option makes sense, what they cost, and which gives you the …
Best IEP Dispute Resource for Oregon Parents Who Can't Afford an Attorney
Oregon special education attorneys charge $300-500/hr with $1,500-$5,000 retainers. Here are the best affordable alternatives for parents fighting IEP…
How to Fight an Abbreviated School Day in Oregon Without a Lawyer
Step-by-step guide to revoking consent for an abbreviated school day in Oregon under SB 819 — no attorney needed. Includes the exact legal process and…
Oregon IEP Age 18: Transfer of Rights and Supported Decision-Making
When an Oregon student with an IEP turns 18, all procedural rights transfer to them. Here's what parents need to know before that deadline arrives.