The Reading Strategies Book 2.0
Jennifer Serravallo
Research-based reading strategies and lessons for every type of reader — a go-to reference for guided reading and intervention.
View on Amazon →Knowing when intervention is enough and when evaluation is needed is one of the most important judgments teachers make. This guide gives you a clear framework for that decision.
Under IDEA 2004, schools may use Response to Intervention (RTI) data — not only IQ discrepancy — as the basis for identifying specific learning disabilities. RTI documentation shows whether a student responded to high-quality intervention. If a student doesn't respond to two rounds of intensive, well-implemented intervention, that non-response is evidence supporting a referral for formal evaluation.
The question is not "Does this student have a disability?" — that's what evaluation determines. The question is "Has this student received intensive, evidence-based intervention and failed to make expected progress?" If the answer is yes after 8-12 weeks of Tier 2 (small group) intervention and then Tier 3 (individual, more intensive) support, a referral is appropriate.
The most common reason referrals are rejected or delayed is insufficient documentation of classroom-level support. Before referring a student for special education evaluation, you should be able to show: what specific skills or behaviors prompted your concern, what interventions you implemented and for how long, what data you collected to monitor response to intervention, and that multiple data points — not a single observation — support the concern. This documentation demonstrates that the student received appropriate general education support before the evaluation request, which is both a legal requirement under IDEA and a practical basis for the evaluation team to understand what they're investigating.
Families must provide written consent before a special education evaluation can begin. Approach it as a conversation: "I've been observing some things I'd like to share with you, and I'd like to discuss whether a more formal evaluation might be helpful for understanding Marcus's learning." Avoid language that implies a diagnosis or predetermined outcome — the evaluation is an information-gathering process. Give families time to ask questions before requesting consent. Some families will be relieved. Some will be resistant. For resistant families, the most effective approach is genuine partnership: "I'm not trying to label Marcus. I'm trying to understand him better so we can support him more effectively."
Once consent is obtained, the school has 60 days (in most states) to complete the evaluation and hold an eligibility meeting. As the classroom teacher, you will be asked to complete rating scales, provide work samples, and participate in the eligibility meeting. Bring your progress monitoring data and observation notes. Your firsthand knowledge of how the student performs in the general education environment is a critical part of the evaluation that no assessment tool can replace. Stay engaged in the process — your input shapes the plan, and the plan serves the student.
Teacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
Jennifer Serravallo
Research-based reading strategies and lessons for every type of reader — a go-to reference for guided reading and intervention.
View on Amazon →Ross W. Greene, PhD
A collaborative, skills-based approach for understanding and supporting easily frustrated, chronically inflexible children.
View on Amazon →Classroom supply
Flexible seating that gives wiggly learners safe movement and better focus during seat work.
View on Amazon →Classroom supply
A quiet fidget set to help students self-regulate without disrupting the room.
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