The Problem With Cookie-Cutter IEP Goals
Every year, millions of IEP goals get copy-pasted from goal banks just like this one. The school fills in your child's name, slaps on "80% accuracy in 4 out of 5 trials," and calls it individualized. It's not.
Under IDEA §300.320(a)(2), every goal must be based on your child's present levels of academic achievement and functional performance — their unique strengths, their specific barriers, their actual evaluation data. Not a template.

"I've sat at over 500 IEP tables."
I'm Mary, a Special Education Advocate and the founder of The Advocate Ally. I created this goal bank because I was tired of seeing parents bullied into accepting generic, "cookie-cutter" IEPs.
The goals below aren't just random suggestions—they are the exact same forensically sound goals I fight for in meetings every day. Use them to demand better for your child.
Mary
Founder, The Advocate Ally
How Dyslexia Affects Social Emotional Learning at the Upper Elementary (3rd–5th Grade) Level
Third through fifth grade marks a critical shift: students move from 'learning to read' to 'reading to learn,' and academic demands increase sharply. Students with disabilities often hit a 'wall' during these years as the gap between their abilities and grade-level expectations widens. IEP goals should bridge this gap with explicit instruction in strategies — not just content.
Students with Dyslexia often struggle with Reading Decoding, Spelling, Phonemic Awareness — but they also bring real strengths in Big Picture Thinking, Problem Solving, Spatial Reasoning. A well-written IEP goal doesn't just target the deficit. It leverages the strength to build a bridge.
⚡ But here's the thing: The information above is general. Your child isn't a category — they're an individual with specific evaluation data, specific classroom challenges, and specific strengths that no goal bank can capture. That's why we built a tool that analyzes your child's actual IEP.
Get your child's IEP reviewed freeRed Flags: Your Child's Social Emotional Learning Goals May Be Generic If...
The goal says "80% accuracy in 4 out of 5 trials"
This is the #1 sign of a copy-paste goal. Real criteria should match your child's baseline data, not a boilerplate number.
✕Removing accommodations because the child 'seems to be doing okay' — without data showing mastery without them
💬 What to say in the meeting:
"Say: 'Before removing this accommodation, I need to see data showing my child can perform at the same level without it. Can we do a trial period with data collection before making this permanent?'"
Want this checked automatically? Our audit identifies which accommodations are being removed prematurely and gives you the exact language to push back.
Run a free audit✕Goals focused only on compliance rather than skill building
💬 What to say in the meeting:
"Ask: 'This goal measures whether my child follows directions — but what skill is being taught? I'd like goals that build academic and functional capabilities, not just obedience.'"
Want this checked automatically? We flag compliance-only goals and suggest skill-based alternatives tailored to your child's needs.
Run a free audit✕No progress monitoring data between annual reviews — this means nobody is tracking whether the IEP is working
💬 What to say in the meeting:
"Say: 'I'd like to see the progress monitoring data collected since the last IEP meeting. If there's no data, how do we know if these interventions are working?'"
Want this checked automatically? Our audit checks whether your child's IEP includes a clear data collection plan — and alerts you if it doesn't.
Run a free audit✕The school suggests your child 'only needs a 504' without providing data that specialized instruction is no longer necessary
💬 What to say in the meeting:
"Say: 'I need to see the evaluation data demonstrating my child no longer needs specialized instruction. A 504 removes the right to specially designed instruction — I'm not comfortable with that change without evidence.'"
Want this checked automatically? We analyze whether a 504 downgrade is data-supported or cost-motivated — and tell you what questions to ask.
Run a free auditAdvocate Tip for Upper Elementary (3rd–5th Grade) Parents
This is when many schools start pushing for less support. They may claim your child 'is doing fine' based on passing grades while ignoring that they're only passing because of accommodations they want to remove. Growth must be measured against grade-level standards, not against lowered expectations.
What Social Emotional Learning Goal Patterns Look Like at This Level
These are example patterns to help you understand what the school should be writing — not goals to copy. Your child's goals must be built from their evaluation data.
⚠️ These are not your child's goals. Every child with Dyslexia is different. A goal that's right for one 5th Grade student may be completely wrong for another. Use these to understand the structure of a good goal — then make sure your child's IEP team writes goals tied to their specific present levels.
- Example Pattern 1
Identify and accurately describe the physical signals of at least three emotions in the body (e.g., tight chest = anxiety)
What a school might write: "The student will identify and accurately describe the physical signals of at least three emotions in the body (e.g., tight chest = anxiety) with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."
What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is identify and accurately documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"
- Example Pattern 2
Select and use a coping strategy from a personal menu of at least three strategies without adult prompting
What a school might write: "The student will select and use a coping strategy from a personal menu of at least three strategies without adult prompting with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."
What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is select and use documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"
- Example Pattern 3
Initiate a conversation with a peer during unstructured time using an appropriate opener
What a school might write: "The student will initiate a conversation with a peer during unstructured time using an appropriate opener with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."
What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is initiate a conversation documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"
- Example Pattern 4
Maintain a reciprocal conversation by asking a follow-up question and responding to the peer's answer
What a school might write: "The student will maintain a reciprocal conversation by asking a follow-up question and responding to the peer's answer with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."
What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is maintain a reciprocal documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"
- Example Pattern 5
Identify the size of a problem (small, medium, big) and match the emotional reaction appropriately
What a school might write: "The student will identify the size of a problem (small, medium, big) and match the emotional reaction appropriately with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."
What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is identify the size documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"
5 more goal patterns are available for this combination. But remember — the right number of goals for your child depends on their evaluation, not on how many a goal bank lists.
Show More Goal Patterns
- Pattern 6
Demonstrate perspective-taking by explaining why a character in a story might feel a certain way
- Pattern 7
Use an 'I feel ___ when ___ because ___' statement to express frustration during a real conflict
- Pattern 8
Recognize when a friend is upset and offer an appropriate response (ask if they're okay, give space)
- Pattern 9
Set a personal goal for the week and identify one step to work toward it
- Pattern 10
Accept constructive feedback from a teacher or peer without arguing, shutting down, or leaving the area
The Real Question Isn't "What Goals Should I Copy?"
It's: "Are the goals already in my child's IEP actually individualized — or did the school copy them from a bank just like this one?"
I check every goal in your child's IEP against federal standards. I catch the copy-paste goals, the missing present levels, the goals with no real criteria — all the things a goal bank can't tell you.
Audit Your Child's IEP — FreeAccommodations to Discuss With Your IEP Team
These are commonly considered for students with Dyslexia. Like goals, accommodations must be individualized — not selected from a checklist.
What To Do Right Now
- 1
Pull out your child's current IEP
Find the document the school gave you. Look for the section called 'Measurable Annual Goals.'
- 2
Find the Social Emotional Learning goals
Look for goals that specifically address social emotional learning. Does the goal reference YOUR child's evaluation data?
- 3
Check for baseline data
Every goal must state where your child IS right now. If there's no number or specific skill level, the goal can't be measured.
- 4
Look for red flags
Compare the goals to the red flags listed above. If you see '80% accuracy in 4 out of 5 trials' or goals that sound like they could apply to any student, flag it.
- 5
Upload for a free professional review
Still not sure? Upload the IEP and I'll check every goal against IDEA standards — automatically.
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See Social Emotional Learning Goal Patterns for Other Grade Levels
Goal expectations differ significantly by developmental level.
Social Emotional Learning Goal Patterns for Other Disabilities
Different disabilities create different barriers. Explore what goals should look like for each.