



Updated: December 15, 2025. Reviewer: Dr. Rose Sebastian, Ed.D.
How to read, get, understand, and evaluate IEPs
How to create, teach, and thrive in inclusive classrooms
IDEA is clear. Students are supposed to be assessed in all areas of suspected disability and given services in all of those areas. That might mean social work support, counseling, or occupational therapy to work on self-regulation. Students are also supposed to have real, proper and detailed behavior support plans and, if their behaviors are really problematic, functional behavior assessments to understand and address the behaviors.
Most of the times, schools and districts just pay lip service to this part of the law because counselors and social workers are hard to hire and school psychologists are overworked. That’s where understanding what the law says can help– it gives you leverage to get your students what they need.
IDEA states that students have the right to “social and emotional” assessments to better understand their behaviors. The law also says that students have the right to “positive behavioral interventions and supports, and other strategies” to address their behaviors (20 U.S.C. § 1414(b)(2)(A)).
Students have a right to a comprehensive assessment. A comprehensive assessment means an assessment in all areas of need. For a child with socioemotional challenges that might mean that they need:
Here are the relevant parts of the IDEA in 34 C.F.R. § 300.304(c)(4):
(4) The child is assessed in all areas related to the suspected disability, including, if appropriate, health, vision, hearing, social and emotional status, general intelligence, academic performance, communicative status, and motor abilities;
Special education is NOT just about academics. Once students qualify, they have a right to services in all areas of need. This can include:
Here is what the federal law says in 34 C.F.R. § 300.324(a)(2)(i):
300.324 Development, review, and revision of IEP.
In addition to services, students are entitled to supports. In the IEPs, these are often included either under a BSP/BIP or in the accommodations and modifications section. These should be designed collaboratively by the full IEP team, including parents and related services provider– not just made by the teacher! These might include:
While there are many more, the biggest thing here is that whatever goes into the IEP, the student has the legal right to in ALL settings. One teacher CANNOT opt out. That’s an administrator’s headache not your, but any supports must be available in all settings, not just your classroom. The law is on your side here.







