01 — IDEA
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act sets the highest bar for language access in special education. Here's what it actually requires.
In 60 seconds
IDEA requires NJ school districts to communicate with parents about special education in the parent's native language whenever feasible — and at IEP team meetings, to take whatever action is necessary to ensure parents understand the proceedings, including arranging interpreters.
Native-language consent is not a courtesy. It's the gating standard for any change in identification, evaluation, or placement.
The actual citations
Notice to parents of a proposed change in identification, evaluation, placement, or FAPE provision must be provided in the parent's native language, unless clearly not feasible.
The annual procedural safeguards notice must be written in the parent's native language unless clearly not feasible.
Assessments and other evaluation materials must be administered in the child's native language or other mode of communication, unless clearly not feasible.
The public agency must take whatever action is necessary to ensure that the parent understands the proceedings, including arranging for an interpreter for parents whose native language is not English or who are deaf.
The parent must be fully informed of all information relevant to the activity for which consent is sought, in the parent's native language or other mode of communication.
What compliance looks like
Common mistakes
How we help
Trained interpreters at IEP meetings; human-translated documents with attestation; FERPA-aligned data handling; same-day quotes.