Your child with cerebral palsy has legal rights to educational services, therapies, and support that many schools would rather you did not know about. That is not cynicism. It is the reality of an underfunded system that relies on parental ignorance to keep costs down. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) is the federal law that protects your child. Understanding it is the single most empowering thing you can do as their advocate.

What IDEA Guarantees Your Child

IDEA establishes two core rights for children with disabilities, including cerebral palsy:

  • Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE): Your child is entitled to an education designed to meet their unique needs, provided at no cost to your family, from birth through age 21.
  • Least Restrictive Environment (LRE): Your child should be educated alongside non-disabled peers to the maximum extent appropriate. Removal from the general education setting requires justification.

These are not suggestions. They are federal mandates, enforceable through administrative complaints, mediation, and due process hearings.

Part C: Early Intervention (Birth to 3)

Under Part C, every state must provide early intervention services to infants and toddlers with disabilities. For children with CP, this typically includes PT, OT, speech therapy, developmental specialists, family training, and assistive technology. Services are delivered in the child’s natural environment (home or daycare) and governed by an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP).

Your child automatically qualifies. A diagnosed condition like cerebral palsy provides automatic eligibility for Part C services in most states. You do not need to prove a separate developmental delay.

Part B: School-Age Services (3 to 21)

When your child turns 3, they transition from Part C to Part B, which provides special education and related services through the public school district. Services are governed by an Individualized Education Program (IEP).

Related services your child may be entitled to:

  • Physical therapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Speech-language therapy
  • Assistive technology devices and services
  • Adapted physical education
  • School nursing services
  • Transportation to and from school
  • Orientation and mobility services
  • Behavioral support services
Is Your Child Getting Everything They Are Entitled To?

If CP resulted from a birth injury, compensation can fund services beyond what the school provides.

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Your Rights as a Parent Under IDEA

RightWhat It Means
EvaluationYou can request a comprehensive evaluation at any time. The school must respond within a set timeframe (varies by state).
ParticipationYou are a full member of the IEP team. Meetings cannot be held without you (unless you waive attendance in writing).
ConsentNothing goes into the IEP without your written consent. You can accept some services and decline others.
Records accessYou have the right to review all educational records and request corrections.
Prior written noticeThe school must notify you in writing before any change to your child’s identification, evaluation, placement, or services.
Independent evaluationIf you disagree with the school’s evaluation, you can request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) at public expense.
Dispute resolutionYou can file a state complaint, request mediation (free), or request a due process hearing if disputes cannot be resolved informally.

The Part C to Part B Transition

The transition at age 3 is one of the most vulnerable moments for children with CP. Early intervention services end, and school district services begin, but the two systems often do not communicate well. Services can drop dramatically if the transition is not carefully managed.

1
Begin planning at least 6 months before your child turns 3. Ask your EI service coordinator to initiate the transition process.
2
The EI team must notify the school district at least 90 days before your child’s third birthday.
3
A transition conference is held with both the EI team and the school district to discuss your child’s needs and plan the evaluation for Part B eligibility.
4
The school district evaluates your child and determines eligibility for special education services. If eligible, an IEP is developed before your child turns 3.
5
Request that the IEP begin on your child’s third birthday to avoid any gap in services.
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When the System Pushes Back

Common issues families face include schools offering fewer therapy minutes than the child needs, refusing to include assistive technology in the IEP, placing the child in a more restrictive setting than necessary, and failing to implement the IEP as written. When this happens:

  • Put everything in writing. Verbal requests can be denied or forgotten. Written requests create a paper trail.
  • Cite specific needs, not general frustrations. “My child needs 60 minutes per week of PT to maintain range of motion and prevent contractures” is stronger than “My child needs more therapy.”
  • Bring data. Therapy progress reports, physician letters, and functional assessments support your requests with evidence.
  • Know your escalation options. State complaint, mediation, due process hearing. Most disputes resolve once the school knows you understand your rights.
  • Consider an advocate or attorney. Special education advocates and attorneys specialize in IDEA disputes. Some offer free or sliding-scale services through legal aid organizations.
You are your child’s most powerful advocate. Schools respond to parents who know the law, document everything, and are willing to escalate. You do not need a law degree. You need to understand your rights, ask for them clearly, and follow up in writing. IDEA exists because children with disabilities were excluded from education for decades. Your child’s right to FAPE is not a favor. It is the law.
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