Maybe a doctor just said a word you weren't ready to hear. Maybe school has been hard for a long time and you've finally learned why. Maybe you're sitting with a stack of paperwork and no idea which question to ask first.
Wherever you are on this road — at the very beginning, or years in and worn down — you're in the right place. You don't need the legal terms today. You just need a first step. Let's find yours.
There's no wrong door. Pick the one that sounds most like your week.
The fear is real, and so is the fog. Start with what a diagnosis can mean for school — in plain language, no jargon — and the very first thing you're allowed to ask the district for.
Start with the basics →You can see your child struggling and you can't be in the room to fix it. There's a process for asking the school to formally evaluate — and you don't have to have a diagnosis to start it.
Learn how to ask for an evaluation →Having an IEP and having a good one are two different things. Learn how to read what you've got, spot vague or unmeasurable goals, and prepare for the next meeting feeling steady instead of outnumbered.
Make sense of your plan →Starting in high school is not too late, and you are not behind as a parent. There are still real rights and real deadlines on your side. Let's get something in writing and get moving.
See what you can put in writing →If you're reading this scared, or guilty that you didn't know sooner, or angry that it's this hard — that's not a sign you're doing it wrong. It's a sign you care, and that you've been handed a system that was never built to be easy for families.
You don't have to become a lawyer overnight. You just have to take the next step, and then the one after that. We'll keep the map.
No matter which door you came through, this is roughly the order things go.
Not in legal language — just plainly. What's hard for your child, what you've noticed, what worries you. This becomes the heart of everything you'll ask for later. Your own words are enough.
You don't need all of it. You need a few key ideas — what an evaluation is, what an IEP is, what the school is required to do. Our Knowledge Library explains each one in everyday language, with the law cited so you can trust it.
A short, dated letter asking the school to evaluate your child starts the clock on their legal obligations. You don't have to draft it from a blank page — the app helps you write it.
When the meeting comes, you'll know what's being said, what to listen for, and what to ask. That's the part of the journey where SENTINEL·IEP turns from a guide into a tool that works beside you.
One honest note: SENTINEL·IEP gives you knowledge, structure, and tools — it is not a law firm and not a substitute for advice about your specific child. For that, a licensed special education attorney or your state's Parent Training and Information Center is the right call, and we'll always point you there when it matters.