Parents of children with disabilities often juggle school meetings, therapy appointments, transportation challenges, and medical paperwork all at once. In North Carolina, special education policy is changing in ways that could affect how families plan for the school year. Some updates may give parents more choices, while others raise new questions about services, accountability, and access. Here are five North Carolina special education shifts families should watch closely.
1. Parents May Have More Input on School Nursing Services
For students who need medical support during the school day, nursing services can be the difference between attending class safely and missing learning time. North Carolina has moved toward giving some parents more say in who provides required IEP-related nursing care, which matters for children with seizures, feeding tubes, diabetes, or complex medication schedules.
The new law doesn’t give parents unlimited authority to select any nurse they choose. Instead, it allows a local school district to assign a parent’s preferred nurse if specific conditions are met, including that the nurse already provided care to the child, works through a qualified nursing agency, and the agency agrees to contract with the district under the same terms as other providers. The law took effect beginning with the 2025–26 school year.
A realistic example is a student who already works with a private duty nurse at home and may benefit from that same trusted professional supporting them at school. Families should still expect districts to review credentials, documentation, and service requirements before approving any arrangement.
2. Private School Choice Is Expanding, but Services Can Vary
North Carolina’s school choice conversation continues to grow, especially around Opportunity Scholarships and support for students with disabilities. Some families see private schools as a chance for smaller classes, a calmer environment, or a specialized teaching approach that better fits their child. However, parents should not assume a private school must provide the same special education services a public school would provide under an IEP.
Before switching schools, ask whether the school offers speech therapy, occupational therapy, behavior supports, assistive technology, testing accommodations, and trained special education staff. For North Carolina special education planning, the safest move is to compare services side by side before giving up a public-school placement.
Even as state policies evolve, students who qualify for special education remain protected under the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Schools must continue providing a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) through an individualized education program (IEP), regardless of local staffing or administrative challenges.
3. Literacy Instruction Is Becoming More Structured
Reading policy remains one of the most important issues for children with dyslexia, language-based learning disabilities, and delayed reading development. North Carolina’s continued focus on the science of reading practices means more classrooms are emphasizing phonics, decoding, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension in a structured way. That can help many struggling readers, but families should still ask whether interventions are targeted to the child’s documented needs.
Parents can ask whether their child’s reading intervention uses evidence-based structured literacy practices and how often progress is measured. Requesting copies of progress-monitoring data makes it easier to determine whether interventions are working or whether additional evaluation may be appropriate.
For example, a third grader who guesses words from pictures may need explicit decoding instruction, not just more independent reading time. In North Carolina special education meetings, parents can request progress-monitoring data and ask how often reading growth is being measured.
4. Funding Pressures Remain a Serious Concern
Even strong policies can fall short when schools do not have enough staff, specialists, or classroom support. Advocacy groups have long raised concerns that special education funding limits can leave districts serving more students with disabilities than state formulas fully recognize. For families, that may show up as delayed evaluations, larger caseloads for therapists, or fewer available paraprofessionals. A child may have an excellent IEP on paper but still struggle if services are missed or staff turnover is high. North Carolina special education parents should track service minutes, save communication with the school, and speak up quickly when services are not delivered as written.
5. Health Care Coordination Is Becoming More Important
Many students with disabilities depend on both school-based services and health care supports outside the classroom. Changes in Medicaid programs, provider networks, or managed care coordination can affect therapy schedules, medical documentation, and the services families can access after school. If a child receives speech therapy privately and at school, parents may need to help both teams understand the same goals without assuming they communicate automatically. Keeping updated evaluations, medical orders, and therapy notes in one folder can make IEP meetings more productive. For North Carolina special education families, better coordination can prevent gaps that affect safety, learning, and daily routines.
What Families Should Do Before the Next IEP Meeting
The best preparation starts before a problem becomes urgent. Parents should review the current IEP, highlight services that are unclear, and write down questions about nursing care, reading support, transportation, behavior plans, or therapy minutes. Bring real examples, such as missed services, homework frustration, regression after breaks, or a child avoiding school because support is inconsistent. It is also wise to ask for data instead of relying only on general statements like “your child is doing fine.” When families approach North Carolina special education meetings with records, questions, and a calm but firm tone, they are better positioned to advocate effectively.
Which policy shift do you think will affect North Carolina special education families the most? Share your experience in the comments so other parents can learn from it.
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The post North Carolina Schools: 5 Policy Shifts Affecting Special Needs Families appeared first on Kids Ain't Cheap.