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IEP Transition Planning

Preparing your child for life after high school - and what the school is legally required to provide

Transition Planning: The Bridge to Adulthood

Transition planning is one of the most important - and most neglected - components of the IEP for older students. Under IDEA, the IEP must include transition services beginning no later than the first IEP in effect when the student turns 16 (and in many states, 14). Some states begin even earlier. This is not optional - it is a federal legal requirement.

Yet for too many students with disabilities, transition planning consists of a single page stapled to the back of the IEP with vague statements about "exploring career options." This is not what the law intended. Transition planning should be a comprehensive, student-driven process that prepares your child for postsecondary education, employment, and independent living.

The stakes are high. Students with disabilities face significantly worse outcomes after high school:

Only 19% of young adults with disabilities are employed full-time compared to 65% of their non-disabled peers. Only 34% of students with disabilities enroll in postsecondary education within 8 years of leaving high school. These numbers are not inevitable - they are the result of inadequate transition planning.

What the Law Requires

IDEA Transition Requirements

Under IDEA, the IEP must include:

  • Appropriate measurable postsecondary goals based on age-appropriate transition assessments in the areas of:
    • Education/Training (postsecondary education, vocational training, continuing education)
    • Employment (competitive employment, supported employment, sheltered employment)
    • Independent Living Skills (where appropriate - this includes daily living, finances, transportation, social skills, self-advocacy)
  • Transition services - a coordinated set of activities designed to move the student toward their postsecondary goals. These must include instruction, related services, community experiences, development of employment and other post-school adult living objectives, and (when appropriate) acquisition of daily living skills and a functional vocational evaluation.
  • Annual IEP goals that support the postsecondary goals - the connection between the student's annual IEP goals and their long-term transition goals should be clear.
  • Student involvement. The student must be invited to any IEP meeting where transition will be discussed. If the student does not attend, the school must ensure the student's interests, preferences, and strengths are considered.
  • Agency involvement. If a participating agency (such as Vocational Rehabilitation, the Department of Developmental Disabilities, or a community college) is likely to provide or pay for transition services, a representative of that agency must be invited to the IEP meeting (with parent/student consent).

Age-Appropriate Transition Assessments

Transition planning must be based on assessments - not guesses. The school should conduct or arrange for:

  • Interest inventories: What does the student enjoy? What careers interest them?
  • Aptitude assessments: What are the student's strengths and abilities?
  • Independent living skills assessments: Can the student manage money, cook, use public transportation, maintain hygiene, manage a schedule?
  • Self-determination assessments: Can the student advocate for themselves, make decisions, set goals?
  • Work readiness evaluations: Does the student have the skills needed for employment (punctuality, following directions, task completion, social skills in a work setting)?
  • Community-based assessments: Real-world evaluations of the student's functioning in employment, education, and community settings

If the school has not conducted any transition assessments, this is a violation of IDEA. Request them immediately.

Transition Planning by Age

Ages 14-15 (Early Transition - Required in Some States)

  • Begin exploring career interests through interest inventories and career exploration activities
  • Discuss course of study - what classes should the student take in high school to align with their goals?
  • Introduce self-advocacy skills - the student should begin attending and participating in IEP meetings
  • Start building independent living skills (time management, organization, self-care)
  • Explore extracurricular activities and community involvement related to interests
  • Discuss diploma options - understand the difference between a standard diploma, modified diploma, certificate of completion, and what each means for the future

Ages 16-17 (Active Transition Planning - Federally Required)

  • Conduct comprehensive transition assessments in all three areas (education, employment, independent living)
  • Write measurable postsecondary goals based on assessment results
  • Begin community-based work experiences - job shadowing, internships, volunteer work, or paid employment
  • Connect with Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) services - apply for services, as there can be a waiting list
  • For college-bound students: begin researching disability services offices at colleges of interest, understand the difference between IDEA (K-12) and ADA/Section 504 (college), and practice self-disclosure and self-advocacy
  • Begin teaching independent living skills with increasing intensity: cooking, cleaning, laundry, budgeting, using public transportation, making appointments
  • For students who may need adult services: begin the application process for SSI (Supplemental Security Income), Medicaid waiver programs, and state developmental disability services. These often have years-long waiting lists.
  • Teach the student to understand their disability, explain their needs, and request accommodations - they will need to do this independently in college or employment

Ages 18-22 (Final Transition - For Students Still Receiving Services)

  • Age of majority: In most states, IEP rights transfer to the student at age 18. The school must notify the student and parent at least one year before this happens. If the student cannot make educational decisions, explore guardianship or alternatives (supported decision-making, power of attorney, educational representative).
  • Intensify community-based instruction and employment experiences
  • For students pursuing college: complete applications, arrange accommodations, practice navigating the campus, and develop strategies for academic independence
  • For students pursuing employment: develop a resume, practice interviewing, learn workplace social skills, build stamina for a full workday
  • Finalize connections with adult service agencies
  • Create a Summary of Performance (SOP) document that details the student's disability, functional limitations, and accommodations that have been effective - this document will be needed for college disability services or workplace accommodations

Services Through Age 22

Critical information many parents do not know: Under IDEA, students with disabilities are entitled to receive a free, appropriate public education until they either graduate with a regular diploma or reach the maximum age for services in their state (typically 21 or 22). This means:

  • If your child has not met their IEP goals and is not prepared for post-school life, they do not have to leave school at 18.
  • Students aged 18-22 can continue to receive transition services including community-based instruction, job coaching, independent living skills training, and supported employment through the school district.
  • Some districts operate 18-22 transition programs in community settings (college campuses, community centers, workplaces) rather than in the high school building.
  • A certificate of completion is NOT a regular diploma. If your child receives a certificate of completion instead of a standard diploma, they are still eligible for continued services through age 22. Do not let the school "graduate" your child with a certificate and end services.
  • If your child does graduate with a regular diploma, IDEA services end. This makes it critical to ensure your child is truly ready before accepting a diploma.

What Schools Must Provide

Vocational Training & Employment

  • Career exploration activities (career fairs, guest speakers, career interest inventories)
  • Job shadowing opportunities in fields the student is interested in
  • Community-based work experiences - actual work in real workplaces with support from school staff (job coach)
  • Pre-vocational skills training - punctuality, following directions, task completion, appropriate workplace behavior, communication with supervisors
  • Job skills training specific to the student's career interests
  • Referral to Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) and coordination with VR services
  • Supported employment - a job coach who works alongside the student in a real job until they can perform independently
  • Customized employment - for students with significant disabilities, creating or customizing a job based on the student's strengths and an employer's needs
  • Resume development, interview practice, and job search skills

What to demand: If your child's "vocational training" consists of filing papers in the school office, this is not adequate. Transition services should involve real work in real community settings related to the student's interests and goals.

College Preparation

  • College visits to schools the student is interested in, including meetings with disability services offices
  • Understanding the shift from IDEA to ADA/504: In K-12, the school must identify and serve the student. In college, the student must self-identify and request accommodations. This is a massive shift that requires preparation.
  • SAT/ACT accommodations: If your child receives testing accommodations on their IEP, they can request the same accommodations on college entrance exams. Apply early - the process takes time.
  • Self-advocacy training: How to explain their disability, request accommodations, communicate with professors, and use disability services
  • Academic independence skills: Note-taking strategies, study skills, time management, using assistive technology, managing a course schedule
  • Documentation: The school should help compile documentation of the disability that meets college requirements (which often differ from IEP documentation)
  • Dual enrollment or college courses while still in high school, with support

What to demand: If your child wants to go to college, the transition plan should include specific, actionable steps toward that goal - not just "student will explore post-secondary options."

Independent Living Skills

  • Daily living skills: Cooking, cleaning, laundry, personal hygiene, health care management
  • Financial literacy: Budgeting, banking, understanding bills, managing money, avoiding financial exploitation
  • Transportation: Using public transit, ride-sharing apps, understanding maps, or driver's education if appropriate
  • Housing: Understanding leases, tenant rights, finding housing, living with roommates
  • Community access: Navigating grocery stores, government offices, medical appointments, and community resources
  • Self-advocacy and self-determination: Making decisions, setting goals, understanding rights, speaking up for needs
  • Social skills for adult contexts: Workplace social skills, romantic relationships, community involvement
  • Health and safety: Managing medications, understanding health insurance, recognizing unsafe situations, emergency procedures
  • Technology skills: Using a phone, email, internet, and relevant apps for daily functioning

What to demand: Independent living skills should be taught in actual community settings, not just discussed in a classroom. If your child needs to learn to use public transportation, the school should be practicing this in the real world.

College Accommodations: What Your Child Needs to Know

The transition from K-12 special education to college disability services is one of the biggest adjustments students with disabilities face. The rules change dramatically, and students who are not prepared often struggle or drop out.

Key Differences Between K-12 (IDEA) and College (ADA/Section 504)

  • K-12: The school is responsible for identifying and evaluating students with disabilities. College: The student must self-identify and provide documentation of their disability.
  • K-12: The school must provide FAPE - whatever the student needs to access education. College: The school must provide "reasonable accommodations" - equal access, not guaranteed success.
  • K-12: The IEP team determines accommodations. College: The student requests accommodations through the Disability Services Office (DSO) and works with a coordinator.
  • K-12: Teachers must implement IEP accommodations. College: The student must deliver accommodation letters to each professor each semester and advocate for themselves if accommodations are not being honored.
  • K-12: Modified curriculum and grading may be provided. College: Curriculum and grading standards are generally not modified. Accommodations provide equal access to the same curriculum.
  • K-12: Parents are involved in all decisions. College: The student is the sole decision-maker (FERPA prevents the school from sharing information with parents without student consent).

Common College Accommodations

  • Extended time on exams (typically 1.5x or 2x)
  • Testing in a distraction-reduced environment
  • Note-taking services or permission to record lectures
  • Assistive technology (text-to-speech, speech-to-text, screen readers)
  • Priority registration (to select classes at optimal times)
  • Reduced course load while maintaining full-time status (for financial aid purposes)
  • Housing accommodations (single room, specific building, emotional support animal)
  • Alternative format textbooks (audio, digital, large print)
  • Accessible classroom locations
  • Flexibility with attendance policies (for disability-related absences)

What Parents Should Do Before Their Child Leaves High School

  1. Ensure your child has current documentation (within the last 3 years) of their disability that includes a diagnosis, functional limitations, and recommended accommodations. College DSOs may not accept an IEP alone.
  2. Practice self-advocacy extensively. Role-play conversations with professors. Have your child lead their own IEP meetings in high school.
  3. Visit the Disability Services Office at prospective colleges before applying. Ask about their process, required documentation, available services, and support programs.
  4. Research college support programs that go beyond basic accommodations. Some colleges offer structured support programs with regular check-ins, tutoring, coaching, and mentoring (these sometimes have an additional fee).
  5. Make sure your child knows how to use their assistive technology independently. In college, there will not be a special education teacher setting up their tools.
  6. Discuss medication management if applicable. Your child will need to manage their own medications, refills, and medical appointments.

Common Mistakes Schools Make with Transition Planning

  • Treating transition planning as a paperwork exercise. Checking boxes on a form is not transition planning. Real transition planning involves active instruction, community experiences, agency connections, and skill development over several years.
  • Not starting early enough. Even though federal law requires transition by age 16, the best outcomes come from transition-focused thinking starting at age 14 or earlier. If your child is 14 and the school says "we don't do transition yet," push back.
  • Not involving the student. The student must be invited to IEP meetings where transition is discussed. More importantly, the student's interests, preferences, and goals should drive the transition plan - not what the school finds convenient to offer.
  • Only focusing on one pathway. Some schools push all students with disabilities toward either "college" or "employment" without exploring the student's individual goals. Some students want to pursue a trade. Some want to go to community college. Some want to work and live independently. The plan should match the student.
  • Not connecting with adult service agencies. Vocational Rehabilitation, Developmental Disability services, Social Security, Medicaid - these agencies have long waiting lists and complex application processes. If the school waits until the student's final year to make referrals, critical services may not be in place when the student exits school.
  • Providing no community-based instruction. Transition skills must be taught in real-world settings. A student cannot learn to ride a bus from a worksheet, learn to shop from a classroom simulation, or develop workplace skills from a textbook. If all transition instruction happens within the school building, it is inadequate.
  • Not preparing students for the end of IDEA protections. After high school, there is no IEP, no FAPE, no Child Find, and no requirement for the system to identify and serve your child. The transition plan should explicitly prepare the student for this shift.
  • Pushing students to graduate before they are ready. Some schools encourage students with disabilities to graduate with a standard diploma before they have the skills they need, ending their eligibility for IDEA services. Before accepting a diploma, make sure your child is truly prepared - once they graduate, services end.

Red Flags That Transition Planning Isn't Working

  • The transition section of the IEP is copy-pasted language that could apply to any student - it should be unique to YOUR child based on THEIR assessments, interests, and goals
  • No transition assessments have been conducted - goals should be based on formal and informal assessments, not assumptions
  • The student has never participated in a community-based work experience despite being 16 or older
  • No outside agencies have been contacted or invited to IEP meetings
  • The student cannot explain their disability, their IEP, or how to request accommodations - self-advocacy should be actively taught
  • The student is approaching 18 and the family has not discussed age of majority, guardianship options, or transfer of rights
  • The postsecondary goals are vague ("will explore career options" instead of "will complete a certified nursing assistant program at [specific program] within one year of leaving high school")
  • Independent living skills are not being addressed even though the student will need them
  • The school is focused only on academics while ignoring employment readiness, daily living skills, and community participation
  • Your young adult child is about to leave school with no job, no college plan, no connections to adult services, and limited independent living skills - this means transition planning failed

What Parents Should Demand

  1. Comprehensive transition assessments beginning no later than age 14-16, updated regularly, and covering interests, aptitudes, independent living skills, and self-determination.
  2. Measurable postsecondary goals in all three areas (education/training, employment, and independent living where appropriate). These goals should be specific enough that you could objectively determine whether they were achieved.
  3. Annual IEP goals that connect to transition goals - every annual goal should build skills the student needs for their postsecondary objectives.
  4. Community-based experiences - real-world work experiences, community outings for independent living skills, visits to colleges or training programs, and use of public resources (libraries, transportation, banks).
  5. Agency connections - timely referrals to Vocational Rehabilitation, developmental disability services, Social Security Administration, and any other relevant agencies. These referrals should happen years before the student exits school, not months.
  6. Student participation and leadership in IEP meetings. Teach your child to run their own IEP meeting by the time they are in high school. This is the ultimate self-advocacy skill.
  7. Instruction in self-advocacy and self-determination - understanding their disability, their rights, how to request accommodations, how to solve problems, and how to make decisions about their own life.
  8. A Summary of Performance (SOP) document prepared before the student exits school, detailing their disability, functional performance, academic achievement levels, and accommodation recommendations for postsecondary settings.
  9. Consideration of whether the student should remain in school through age 22 if they have not yet met their transition goals. Do not allow the school to push your child out before they are ready.
  10. A clear plan for what happens after school ends - on the day your child leaves school, there should be no gaps. Adult services should be in place, a job or education program should be identified, and housing and transportation should be addressed.

Important Resources for Transition

Government Agencies to Connect With

  • Vocational Rehabilitation (VR): Every state has a VR agency that provides employment-related services including assessment, job training, job placement, and supported employment. Apply by age 16 at the latest.
  • Social Security Administration (SSA): If your child may qualify for SSI (Supplemental Security Income) or SSDI (Social Security Disability Insurance) as an adult, begin the application process before they turn 18. The rules for adult eligibility differ from childhood eligibility.
  • State Developmental Disability Agency: If your child has an intellectual disability, autism, or other developmental disability, they may qualify for Medicaid waiver services including residential support, day programs, supported employment, and respite care. Waiting lists can be 5-10 years or more - apply early.
  • Centers for Independent Living (CIL): Nonprofit organizations that provide services and advocacy for people with disabilities, including independent living skills training, peer support, and community integration.
  • State Protection and Advocacy Organization: Free legal services for people with disabilities, including assistance with special education disputes and transition issues.

Key Legal Concepts for Transition-Age Youth

  • Age of Majority: In most states, at age 18, all IEP rights transfer from the parent to the student. The school must notify both the parent and student at least one year before this happens.
  • Guardianship vs. Alternatives: If your child cannot make educational, medical, or financial decisions independently at 18, explore options: full guardianship, limited guardianship, conservatorship, supported decision-making agreements, power of attorney, or educational representative designation. Guardianship removes legal rights and should be a last resort.
  • FERPA: At 18 (or when the student enters postsecondary education), FERPA rights transfer to the student. Schools can no longer share educational records with parents without the student's written consent.
  • ABLE Accounts: Tax-advantaged savings accounts for people with disabilities that do not affect SSI or Medicaid eligibility (up to certain limits). An excellent tool for financial planning.

Plan Today for a Successful Tomorrow

Transition planning can determine whether your child enters adulthood with opportunities or with barriers. Let us help you ensure the school does its job - preparing your child for the life they want to live.

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