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Three Tips for Highlighting and Color-Coding Your Child’s Draft IEP

Special Needs Parents: The IEP Meeting Tip You Need to Be A Better Advocate

We suggest that once parents have requested evaluations and draft IEPs before scheduled school meetings, they read through the documents and then highlight in various colors any questions they have (strengths/positives; what helps the child learn).

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Any weaknesses, what might be limiting learning, or any other concerns, etc.) so that you can discuss/re-examine these items during the meeting.

Color coding is an effective way to organize information that you need to know or reference quickly. 

The bright highlighter colors are eye-catching and can also serve as a form of mental shorthand. Label the color highlighters you use to know what they stand for.

Four highlighters with text about color-coding IEPs

Three tips for highlighting and color-coding your child’s draft IEP

Tip #1Be consistent, avoid confusion,

Use the same colors to signify the same information each time.

Create a highlighter color guide or table and keep it with your IEP copies to reference it.

Tip #2 – Limit Your Color Selection

Stick with 3 to 4 highlighter colors (maximum) to keep it simple. This will also allow you to remember what each color means.

Think of color-coding like visual cues/road signs to help you navigate your way through the IEP document you’re reading.

The goal of color-coding is to be able to focus your attention and organize the information logically.

Tip #3Don’t over color-code

Don’t highlight everything…only the important things. Give each color a name or label so that it has a specific purpose and you know what it stands for. Each color should help you keep your focus as you navigate through the IEP in the right direction.

 

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As Doreen Franklin says:

Don’t go into your IEP meeting blindly!

Prepare!

You are your child’s voice!

Advocate!

 

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Related: Request Evaluation Reports and Draft IEP’s [1]

 

Suggested highlighter colors/meaning:

Yellow: For questions and concerns, things you need to have explained for more clarity, and important parts/information.

Blue: For any weaknesses, deficiencies, or what might hinder learning

Pink: For your child’s strengths and positives. What helps your child learn?

Green: For proof of evidence, time, objective, and current data.

 

 

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