糖心动漫vlog

Special Education

Teachers Are Using AI to Help Write IEPs. Advocates Have Concerns

By Evie Blad 鈥 October 29, 2025 9 min read
Female student retrieving an IEP document from a giant laptop equipped with artificial intelligence.
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A growing number of special education teachers say they use artificial intelligence platforms to draft all or part of students鈥 individualized education programs, even as many districts lack policies about how the rapidly evolving technology can be used.

Educators have long reported struggles to keep up with the paperwork associated with IEPs. Now, they say AI platforms can help them write the federally mandated, personalized documents that detail goals for students with disabilities more quickly and with greater detail, allowing them to commit more time to instruction.

But using the technology to create IEPs opens up a host of practical, ethical, and legal questions generally left unanswered by a dearth of official guidance.

鈥淭eachers, and especially special education teachers, are overwhelmed by paperwork, and it鈥檚 crowding out time for instruction and collaboration,鈥 said Olivia Coleman, an assistant professor of exceptional student education at the University of Central Florida and a co-principal investigator at the Center for Innovation, Design, and Digital Learning. 鈥淢any report that they just don鈥檛 feel prepared to independently write IEPs after completing their teacher-preparation programs.

鈥淥bviously, AI is extremely appealing as it as it can save time and reduce that cognitive load,鈥 she said.

Coleman, who previously worked as a special education teacher, is optimistic that the technology could help teachers create stronger IEPs, but only if it鈥檚 used responsibly鈥攕erving as a 鈥渨riting partner鈥 and not an autopilot to generate the important documents.

Among the biggest landmines she and others have identified: Large-language models like ChatGPT are trained using literature that doesn鈥檛 adequately or accurately reflect the experiences of people with disabilities, creating the threat of bias in their outputs; 糖心动漫vlog violate student privacy laws if they input data like test results into unsecured platforms; and AI apps sometimes fabricate studies or misrepresent their findings.

Use of AI to write IEPs is growing, often without guidance

Fifty-seven percent of special education teachers who responded to a recent survey said they used AI to help them with IEPs or plans to accommodate students鈥 disabilities under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 during the 2024-25 school year, up from 39% in 2023-24.

The survey of 1,018 parents and 806 teachers, including 275 special education teachers, was conducted by the Center for Democracy and Technology, a nonprofit organization that researches technology and civil rights, between June and August.

The survey found that 15% of respondents used AI to write IEPs or 504 plans in full, up from 8% the previous year. Thirty-one percent said they use AI to identify trends in student progress for goal setting, 30% said they use it to summarize IEPs and 504 plans, and 28% said they use AI to help choose accommodations.

As in other parts of education, the use of AI in special education comes as districts struggle to draft policies and create professional development to train teachers in appropriate use of the technology. Meanwhile, platforms continue to rapidly evolve, making the task even more difficult鈥攁nd more urgent鈥攁s the ground shifts under administrators鈥 feet.

Just two states鈥擮hio and Tennessee鈥攈ave adopted requirements for districts to create AI policies, according to an Education Week tracker. Thirty-three states have guidance on AI in schools, according to AI in Education, an organization that provides resources for 糖心动漫vlog. That guidance largely focuses on student use of AI rather than teacher use and varies widely.

While many states address concerns about student data privacy, Georgia has one of the only mentions of IEPs specifically. The state鈥檚 guidance says 糖心动漫vlog shouldn鈥檛 use AI for 鈥渉igh stakes鈥 purposes, like IEPs.

鈥淪treamlining administrative processes at the detriment of the human element can lead to mistrust and challenges associated with AI鈥檚 ethical use in the classroom setting,鈥 says the document, issued January 2025. 鈥淔or example, a teacher may find using AI to write IEP goals as a benefit to save time, but the parent/guardian of a student with a disability might view the use of AI as disconnected from the individual needs of his or her child.鈥

Across disciplines, just 22% of the 806 6th through 12th grade teachers who responded to the CDT survey said they鈥檇 received any training or guidance on the risks of AI, like inaccuracy or bias in outputs.

Teachers trade tips on how to use AI for IEPs

There鈥檚 limited data on how teachers use AI for IEPs. Reports of usage range from individuals using consumer platforms, like ChatGPT or Claude, on their own to entire districts vetting and purchasing AI platforms to aid in writing the documents.

On online message boards, . Some 糖心动漫vlog have created IEP tools on ChatGPT that explain requirements for the document and help draft each component. For example, a user-created bot trained on guidance from New York鈥檚 state education department , adding follow-up prompts to further develop a narrative.

On a more formal level, ed-tech companies like Magic School AI and Playground IEP have developed specialized platforms to help write IEPs, coordinate meetings, track data, and adapt lessons to fit students goals and accommodations. Those programs can be vetted and adopted districtwide.

鈥淒istrict-approved tools are going to be safer because, when the districts enter into those agreements, they are doing their due diligence to make sure their students鈥 information is being safeguarded,鈥 Coleman said.

Parents鈥 concerns about the quality of IEPs are longstanding

The CDT survey included responses from 336 parents of a child with an IEP or 504 plan, and 64% said it is a 鈥済ood idea鈥 for teachers to use AI with 鈥渄eveloping or informing鈥 creation of the special education plans.

That finding may surprise some 糖心动漫vlog because special education plans involve sensitive, private student data, and parents have long complained that, too often, they amount to check-the-box, boilerplate documents that don鈥檛 provide meaningful objectives to help their children to grow.

鈥淭hose are valid concerns,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淏ut they鈥檝e been concerns long before AI.鈥

The software many teachers have long used to write IEPs offers drop-down menus of pre-written goals they can easily drop into the documents with the click of a mouse.

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Students engage in an AI robotics lesson in Funda Perez鈥 4th grade computer applications class at Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. School No. 6 in Passaic, N.J., on Oct. 14, 2025.
Students engage in an AI robotics lesson in Funda Perez鈥 4th grade computer applications class at Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. School No. 6 in Passaic, N.J., on Oct. 14, 2025.
Erica S. Lee for Education Week

Coleman is currently reviewing the quality of 1,100 anonymized IEPs written before the advent of consumer AI platforms, and she can often identify when a cluster of plans were written by the same teacher because they use repetitive language and objectives, she said.

Coleman and Danielle A. Waterfield, a doctoral student at the University of Virginia, published and the quality of resulting documents in February in the Journal of Special Education Technology. Their theory: that AI could help carry some of the cognitive load for stressed teachers, freeing up time and mental capacity to teach more effectively.

They found that when experienced special 糖心动漫vlog compared IEP goals written by teachers to goals written with the help of ChatGPT, reviewing factors like whether goals could be adapted and used by teachers in various classes, there was no statistical difference in their ratings.

In a similar 2024 study by researchers at the University of North Carolina, goals written by teachers who鈥檇 been advised how to use ChatGPT than those written by a control group of teachers who did not receive training.

Teachers see promise in using AI to write better IEPs

Teachers told researchers that creating individualized goals that are measurable, achievable, and timebound is one of the most challenging parts of writing IEPs.

That鈥檚 why they see promise that AI may serve as a tool, not a replacement for their personal judgement. The technology can help them by synthesizing notes in a student鈥檚 file, analyzing data, and suggesting ways to measure progress.

In follow-up interviews, teachers also indicated a need for more training on how to use AI responsibly and effectively.

Organizations like the Center for Innovation, Design, and Digital Learning when 糖心动漫vlog can speak with professors and wrestle with practical and ethical questions.

Coleman and Waterfield have also developed a that is currently under review for publication. It includes a decision tree . Among its recommendations:

  • Plans should be reviewed and revised to ensure they are personalized and accurately reflect student data.
  • Educators should use a checklist, included in the framework, to check for bias in their drafts.
  • Educators should disclose the use of AI to parents, students, and other members of the IEP team, indicate which content is AI-generated, and document edits to show how they arrived at the final document.
  • Educators should document and track the effectiveness of the prompts they use to create learning goals.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want the loss of individualization,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淎I can help you produce a draft, but it should not be your final draft.鈥

Special education teacher workload concerns drive rising interest in AI tools

Special education teachers鈥 concerns about heavy workloads and inadequate support contribute to high turnover, said Elizabeth Bettini, an associate professor of special education at Boston University who studies special education teachers鈥 working conditions and morale.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not surprising鈥 that those teachers are turning to AI, Bettini said. 鈥淪pecial education teachers are overwhelmed. They have pretty extensive paperwork obligations, and there鈥檚 no time in the day set aside for that.鈥

Bettini has found special education teachers work about 10 hours a week outside of the school day, largely on paperwork and case management. And, though IEPs are a significant part of their work, many schools don鈥檛 set aside any time to create them, said Bettini, who has not conducted research on AI.

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A teacher putting her arms around her students, more students than she can manage herself. A shortage of Special Education teachers.
Nicole Xu for Education Week

Some AI experts have advocated for using the technology for more than drafting IEPs. In a 2024 鈥渉ackathon鈥 hosted by the the Stanford University Accelerator for Learning, developers proposed AI tools to simplify the complex language in IEPs for families, translate the documents into other languages, and record and transcribe IEP meetings. General education teachers could also use AI to tailor lessons and activities to incorporate a student鈥檚 goals and accommodations, developers said at the event, which was

But there is no silver bullet to solve teacher burnout, Bettini said. Administrators concerned about the burden of paperwork should also carve out protected time in the school day for teachers to complete it, provide adequate professional development to support the work, and have classified employees, like office managers, handle tasks like scheduling IEP meetings, contacting parents, and making copies, she said.

Administrators who aren鈥檛 comfortable with AI may be tempted to ignore its use, Coleman said, but doing so bypasses an important opportunity to create guardrails for teachers to avoid ethical, legal, and accuracy pitfalls, she said.

鈥淚EPs are supposed to be the cornerstone of a free, appropriate public education for students with disabilities,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淪o if they have issues or are not high quality, what鈥檚 happening with actual implementation? What鈥檚 happening with actual implementation if the document you are using is poor, in and of itself?鈥

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