Overview
This original Guide to Autism brief summarizes the main practical value of Autism Speaks's resource, "IEP Guide." It is not a copy of the source article. It is a new, plain-language article designed to help the Guide to Autism team decide how this topic could become useful site content.
Article brief
School support content should help families and educators turn needs into concrete accommodations. Autism can affect transitions, communication, sensory regulation, executive functioning, social expectations, assignment completion, attendance, and emotional safety at school. A strong guide should help teams move from vague concern to practical supports. A Guide to Autism article based on this source should explain how to prepare for school meetings, document strengths and needs, discuss accommodations, and connect home observations with classroom supports. It should also include educator-friendly strategies that are realistic inside busy classrooms. Useful tools include IEP meeting notes, accommodation checklists, teacher one-page profiles, sensory support plans, transition plans, and questions for school teams.
How this becomes site content
Good for school support roadmap and downloads.
Action takeaways
Create a plain-language page for Parents, educators. Label the evidence lens clearly: Institutional toolkit. Connect this topic to action tools, downloads, and professional questions. Avoid cure-based, fear-based, or shame-based wording. Include autistic perspectives when the topic affects identity, dignity, or lived experience.
Citation
Primary source: Autism Speaks, "IEP Guide." URL: https://www.autismspeaks.org/tool-kit/iep-guide
Educational summary written for Autism Lifeline. Verify clinical claims against the primary source before public use.