Nevada Guides
United States-Wide Guides
These apply to all families of children with disabilities in United States:
For All Families
These guides work no matter where you live:
Articles for Nevada
How to Fight a CCSD IEP Denial Without a Lawyer
Step-by-step process for challenging Clark County School District IEP denials using Nevada law — no attorney required. NRS 388.467 puts the burden on …
Twice Exceptional Nevada: Getting an IEP When Your Child Is Both Gifted and Disabled
Twice exceptional Nevada: how 2e students fall through the cracks in CCSD and Washoe County, what NRS 388.520 requires, and how to get an IEP that ser…
Best Transition Resource for Parents of Teens with Significant Support Needs
Why transition planning is hardest for families of teens with autism, I/DD, and complex medical needs — and what a comprehensive resource must cover.
How to Prepare for the SSI Age-18 Redetermination Without a Benefits Planner
Step-by-step preparation for the SSI age-18 redetermination: documentation strategy, the 10-day appeal window, and what to do if you can't afford a pr…
Dyslexia Advocacy Toolkit vs. Hiring a Special Education Advocate: Which Gets Better IEP Results?
Comparing a dyslexia self-advocacy toolkit to hiring a professional special education advocate — costs, outcomes, and when each makes sense for your c…
How to Force Structured Literacy Into an IEP When Your School Still Uses Balanced Literacy
Your child has dyslexia and the school's reading program is Balanced Literacy. Here's how to audit the program, document the failure, and force Struct…
How to Write IEP Goals for Reading: What Good Goals Look Like for Dyslexia
Most IEP reading goals are vague and unenforceable. Here's what a strong, science-of-reading-aligned reading goal looks like — and what to reject.
How to Transfer an IEP to a Nevada School: Rights, Timelines, and What to Watch For
Moving to Nevada with an IEP? CCSD and other Nevada districts must honor your child's existing program immediately. Here's what the law says and where…
Nevada Special Education Advocacy Toolkit vs Hiring an Attorney: Which Do You Actually Need?
Comparing self-advocacy with a Nevada-specific toolkit against hiring a special education attorney at $300-700/hr. Here's when each option makes sense…
Best Way to Prepare for an IEP Eligibility Meeting Using Evaluation Data
How to use your child's evaluation scores — WISC-V, Woodcock-Johnson, BASC-3 — to prepare specific, data-backed arguments for the eligibility meeting …