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Tips & Tricks :: 10 Tips for IEP Writing Success

Tips for Writing IEP Goals

If you’re anything like me, you entered special education, social work, speech-language, or counseling for the IEP paperwork, right? Oh, wait yeah…no! Well, nevertheless, it’s part of all of our jobs for better or for worse, so here are a few tips to make you look awesome to your supervisor (and/or any lawyers you may encounter along the way…ugh).

1.Each goal should address a need your student has. If they’re eligible for special education services for a learning disability in reading fluency, math problem solving, and written expression, you should have at least one goal for each of those areas (plus, speech-language, social work, O/T, or other areas if appropriate).

2.A stranger with little to no education knowledge should be able to pick up each goal and know how to measure it. Most of our parents don’t know what terms like “fluency” mean. Instead, use “read x words per minute,” or give examples of the types of skills you’re looking for.

3.Your goal should be MEASURABLE! Things like “improve social skills” or “develop friendship skills” cause lots of headaches in legal situations. Try “spend X minutes with peers at recess,” “keep hands and feet to self for x out of x random trials,” “receive fewer than x discipline referrals,” or other measurable behaviors and skills.

4. Avoid mentioning specific curriculum names when writing goals. Something like, “read x words per minute on an AIMSweb probe,” will be impossible for another district to implement if they don’t have AIMSweb. Instead, “read x words per minute on a 3rd grade level probe,” is much more doable by any district!

MC900441458 5.Back up goals, placement decisions, etc. with ACCURATE data! One of the worst IEP meetings I’ve ever been to involved a special education teacher saying she thought the child was at a 5th grade level when he was actually performing at an ending 1st grade level. His placement decisions were made on her information, which led to another IEP meeting 2 weeks later to change his placement again because official achievement assessments were performed. Know your kids and have testing, behavior charts, discipline/attendance data or other information to back it up.

6.Include the student in the process whenever possible. I personally love having students attend meetings, but if that is not appropriate in a particular situation, get their thoughts beforehand. What do they see as their needs? If they had a magic wand and could change something at school, what would they do? What are they really good at? Not only can it help guide the team, it gives them ownership over their own program and teaches self-advocacy and self-reflection skills!

7.Keep track of your deadlines! Highlight, sticky note, phone alarm – do whatever you have to do! 60 days, 10 school days, whatever they are. You don’t want to miss them. I’ve been involved in too many due process situations because someone missed a timeline. NOT worth it! Oops! Road Sign

8.IEPs are legal documents. So, make sure you proofread for grammatical/spelling errors. Don’t forget  to capitalize job titles, names, etc. Double check their/there/they’re, affect/effect, its/it’s, etc. too. You work in education!

9.If you used a version of another student’s goal, make sure you changed the name. We never do that, right?! Yeah…oops.

10.Don’t forget the reason for the paperwork. Sure, state and federal regulations may feel like the bane of our existence, especially come May, but we’re in it for the kids! Our goal is to help them learn the skills and have the confidence to live healthy, productive lives as adults. Don’t lose site of the kiddo behind the checkboxes!
Teacher and Student In A Classroom At School

For more help on goal writing and tons of social/emotional goal examples, check out my Social Emotional Goal Writing Guide!

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Fun Freebie :: Self-Esteem Rubrics

Self-Esteem Social Skills Rubrics

Recently, I designed a bunch of social skills rubrics covering a variety of skills:  school success, problem-solving, friendship, feelings, communication, and self-esteem goals.

Well, if you’d like to try some of them out for free, you can download the self-esteem pack! These rubrics were designed to help counselors, teachers, social workers, or SLPs keep track of a student’s progress on self-esteem goals. The set includes 5 rubrics in both a teacher and student version (for a total of 10 rubrics) in PDF format.

This pack contains the following skills:
– Positive Self-Talk
– Goal Setting
– Understanding Strengths
– Dealing with Peer Pressure
– Dealing with Mistakes

Goal Setting Rubric Positive Self-Talk RubricIf you’d like to save a little money, you can download the Complete Social Skills Rubric Pack for a discount! It includes 42 rubrics in both a teacher and student version (for a total of 84 rubrics + 2 blank ones to customize).

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New Product :: Social Skills Rubrics

These rubrics were designed to help counselors, teachers, social workers, or SLPs keep track of a student’s progress on school success, problem-solving, friendship, feelings, communication, and self-esteem goals. Each individual set includes 7 rubrics in both a teacher and student version (for a total of 14 rubrics + 2 blank ones to customize).

Rubrics are presented in PDF and editable Microsoft Powerpoint Format, so the wording can be customized to fit your students’ ability levels and needs. Also, you can use Powerpoint’s printing settings to print multiple rubrics per page. Great for when you have multiple students working on the same goal!

If you’d like to save a little money, you can download the Complete Social Skills Rubric Pack for a discount! It includes 42 rubrics in both a teacher and student version (for a total of 84 rubrics + 2 blank ones to customize). The following skills are included:

Enjoy 🙂

School Success Social Skills Rubrics

School Success Skills
– Following Directions
– Work Completion
– Remaining On-Task
– Asking Questions
– Being Prepared
– Attendance
– Following School Rules

Problem Solving Social Skills RubricsProblem-Solving Skills
– Debugging
– Tattling and Reporting
– Compromise
– Point of View
– Fact and Opinion
– Dealing with Disagreements
– Dealing with Gossip

Friendship Social Skills Rubrics

Friendship Skills
– Choosing Friends
– Feeling Left Out
– Being a Good Sport
– Apologizing
– Taking Turns
– Giving a Compliment
– Accepting a Compliment

Feelings Social Skills Rubrics

Feelings Skills
– Feelings Identification
– Reading Body Language
– Responding to Negative Emotions
– Feelings Demonstration
– Expressing Feelings
– Dealing with Anger or Frustration
– Dealing with Anxiety

Communication Social Skills Rubrics

Communication Skills
– Introducing
– Having a Conversation
– Talking on Topic
– Interrupting
– Conversation Body Language
– Personal Space
– Mental Filtering

Self-Esteem Social Skills Rubrics

Self-Esteem Skills – some skills offered as a freebie
– Positive Self-Talk
– Goal Setting
– Understanding Strengths
– Dealing with Peer Pressure
– Dealing with Mistakes
– Self-Reflection (Complete Pack only – not in freebie)
– Working in a Group (Complete Pack only – not in freebie)

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