Early Elementary (PreK–2nd Grade)

What Should Written Expression IEP Goals Look Like for Preschool Students with Dyslexia?

Generic goals copied from the internet aren't just lazy — they violate IDEA. Here's what individualized, legally defensible written expression goals should look like at the Early Elementary (PreK–2nd Grade) level, and how to tell if your child's school is cutting corners.

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.

Mary, Special Education Advocate
Expert Reviewedby Mary

"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

Expert Reviewed by Mary Powell, Special Education Advocate
Last reviewed: April 2026

How Dyslexia Affects Written Expression at the Early Elementary (PreK–2nd Grade) Level

At this stage, children are building the foundational skills they'll use for the rest of their education. IEP goals should focus on concrete, observable behaviors using hands-on materials, visual supports, and structured routines. It's normal for young learners to need more adult support — the key is systematically fading that support as skills develop.

The Specific Barrier

Dyslexia affects writing through spelling difficulties, slow handwriting, limited phonological awareness for sound-symbol correspondence, and reduced automaticity that makes the physical act of writing consume most cognitive resources — leaving little for content and organization.

Building on Your Child's Strengths

Students with dyslexia often have rich vocabularies and sophisticated ideas that exceed what they can produce on paper. Assistive technology (speech-to-text, spell-check, word prediction) and alternative assessments (oral reports, multimedia projects) can reveal true ability.

What Goals Should Actually Address

Using assistive technology to produce written work that reflects verbal ability, applying learned spelling patterns to high-frequency words, and demonstrating content knowledge through alternative response formats when appropriate.

⚡ 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.

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Red Flags: Your Child's Written Expression 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.

Goals that say 'will improve' without a specific, measurable target

💬 What to say in the meeting:

"Ask: 'Improve from what baseline to what target? How will you measure this? What does progress look like in data?' Every goal needs a starting point and an endpoint."

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No baseline data — if they can't tell you where your child is NOW, the goal is meaningless

💬 What to say in the meeting:

"Say: 'Before we set a target, I need to see the current performance data. What assessment was used to determine the present level for this goal?'"

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Using the same goals as last year with no change in supports despite lack of progress

💬 What to say in the meeting:

"Ask: 'If this goal wasn't met last year, what specific instructional changes are being made this year? Repeating the same approach and expecting a different result isn't a plan.'"

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Goals that are too easy or already mastered — often a sign the school wants to show 'progress' without doing the work

💬 What to say in the meeting:

"Say: 'This goal seems below my child's current level. Can you show me the data that supports this as an appropriate target? I'd like to see goals that promote actual growth.'"

Want this checked automatically? We compare goal difficulty against grade-level standards and your child's evaluation data to spot sandbagging.

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Advocate Tip for Early Elementary (PreK–2nd Grade) Parents

Don't let the school tell you 'they'll grow out of it.' Early intervention is the single most effective predictor of long-term success. If your child is struggling now, push for intensive, evidence-based support — not a 'wait and see' approach.

What Written Expression 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 Preschool 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

    Write first and last name legibly with correct letter formation

    What a school might write: "The student will write first and last name legibly with correct letter formation with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."

    What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is write first and documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"

  • Example Pattern 2

    Draw a picture and dictate or write at least one sentence that describes it

    What a school might write: "The student will draw a picture and dictate or write at least one sentence that describes it with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."

    What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is draw a picture documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"

  • Example Pattern 3

    Copy a simple sentence from a model with correct spacing between words

    What a school might write: "The student will copy a simple sentence from a model with correct spacing between words with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."

    What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is copy a simple documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"

  • Example Pattern 4

    Write at least three complete sentences on a single topic with a capital letter and period

    What a school might write: "The student will write at least three complete sentences on a single topic with a capital letter and period with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."

    What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is write at least documented in the present levels? How was 80% chosen as the target?"

  • Example Pattern 5

    Generate a list of words related to a given topic using a word bank or picture support

    What a school might write: "The student will generate a list of words related to a given topic using a word bank or picture support with 80% accuracy in 4/5 trials."

    What your advocate should ask: "What's the baseline? Where is generate a list 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

    Use inventive/phonetic spelling to write unfamiliar words that are decodable by an adult reader

  • Pattern 7

    Write a simple personal narrative describing one event with a beginning and end

  • Pattern 8

    Respond to a 'wh' question in writing with a complete sentence

  • Pattern 9

    Add descriptive words (colors, sizes, feelings) to expand a simple sentence

  • Pattern 10

    Trace and independently form all uppercase and lowercase letters with appropriate sizing on lined paper

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.

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Accommodations 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.

Audiobooks or text-to-speech software
No penalty for spelling errors on content-based tasks
Extended time on reading assignments
Simplified instructions and visual cues
Orton-Gillingham based reading intervention

What To Do Right Now

  1. 1

    Pull out your child's current IEP

    Find the document the school gave you. Look for the section called 'Measurable Annual Goals.'

  2. 2

    Find the Written Expression goals

    Look for goals that specifically address written expression. Does the goal reference YOUR child's evaluation data?

  3. 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. 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. 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 Written Expression Goal Patterns for Other Grade Levels

Goal expectations differ significantly by developmental level.

Written Expression Goal Patterns for Other Disabilities

Different disabilities create different barriers. Explore what goals should look like for each.

Don't Guess — Know

Are your child's goals actually individualized?

Upload your IEP and I'll check every goal against IDEA requirements — I find copy-paste language, missing baselines, and vague criteria.

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Real Talk

"If a school's goals look like they came from a list, they probably did. That's not an IEP — that's a form letter. Your child deserves better."

— Mary Powell, IEP Advocate

Frequently Asked Questions about Written Expression & Dyslexia

Can a student with Dyslexia be good at Written Expression?
Yes — dyslexia is a specific learning disability that primarily affects reading decoding, spelling, and phonological processing. It does not affect intelligence, reasoning ability, or content knowledge. With appropriate accommodations like text-to-speech technology, audiobooks, and oral testing options, students with dyslexia can and do excel in Written Expression. The key is ensuring the IEP removes the reading barrier so the student can access grade-level content.
What goals should I ask for in Written Expression for Dyslexia?
IEP goals for a student with dyslexia in Written Expression should target the specific skill gap — not just repeat generic reading goals. Effective goals might include 'demonstrating knowledge of Written Expression concepts through oral presentation,' 'using assistive technology to independently access grade-level text,' or 'applying a structured reading strategy to decode Written Expression-specific vocabulary.' Avoid goals that simply say 'will improve reading' — that's not specific enough to be legally compliant.
What if the school says my child doesn't need Written Expression goals?
Under IDEA §300.320, if Dyslexia impacts your child's ability to make progress in the general education curriculum for Written Expression, the school is legally required to provide goals in that area. Ask the school to show you the evaluation data that proves your child is performing at grade level in Written Expression without support. If they can't produce that data, the refusal may not be legally defensible. Request a Prior Written Notice (PWN) documenting their refusal — this creates a paper trail.
What should I do if my child's Written Expression goals haven't changed in two years?
Unchanged goals across multiple IEP cycles is one of the strongest indicators of a non-compliant IEP. Under IDEA, the IEP team must review goals annually and adjust based on progress data. If the same goal appears year after year, ask: 'Why wasn't this goal met? What changes to instruction are being made? Where is the progress monitoring data?' If the school can't answer these questions with data, the IEP may not be providing FAPE (Free Appropriate Public Education).
Can I request new Written Expression goals outside of the annual IEP meeting?
Yes. Parents have the right to request an IEP meeting at any time — you are not limited to the annual review. If you believe your child's Written Expression goals are inappropriate, outdated, or not being implemented, submit a written request for an IEP meeting to the special education director. The school must respond within a reasonable time. Put your request in writing (email is fine) so you have documentation.
Why shouldn't I just copy Written Expression goals from a goal bank for my Preschool student with Dyslexia?
Under IDEA, every IEP goal must be individually crafted based on your child's present levels of performance — not pulled from a template. Goal banks can help you understand what's possible, but copying them verbatim means the school isn't doing its job. If you see generic goals in your child's IEP, that's a compliance red flag our audit can catch.
What Written Expression goals are appropriate for Preschool students with Dyslexia?
At the Early Elementary (PreK–2nd Grade) level, Written Expression goals should align with your child's specific evaluation data — not just their grade level. At this stage, children are building the foundational skills they'll use for the rest of their education. IEP goals should focus on concrete, observable behaviors using hands-on materials, visual supports, and structured routines. The examples on this page show goal patterns for this age range, but your child's team must customize based on baseline data.
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