Only as a genuine last resort. The school must schedule the IEP meeting at a time and place you both agree on, and it can only meet without you after documented, repeated attempts to include you. Pressure to meet on their timeline doesn’t change that.
Your Right to Be in the Room
Parent participation isn’t a courtesy — it’s one of the strongest procedural rights in IDEA. The school is required to take steps to ensure you have the opportunity to participate, including notifying you early enough to arrange to attend and scheduling the meeting at a mutually agreed on time and place.
34 C.F.R. § 300.322(a) — The school must take steps to ensure one or both parents are present at each IEP Team meeting or are afforded the opportunity to participate, including notifying parents of the meeting early enough to ensure they will have an opportunity to attend, and scheduling the meeting at a mutually agreed on time and place.
“We Have to Hold It Before the End of the Month”
You may hear this when the school is up against its own annual-review deadline. Here’s the thing: their deadline is their responsibility, not yours. The annual review timeline exists because the school is required to review the IEP at least once a year — but that requirement does not erase your right to a mutually agreed time. If they waited until the last minute to schedule, that is a problem of their making, and the fix is not to cut you out of the meeting.
Offering you one take-it-or-leave-it date — or scheduling the meeting and telling you afterward — is not a “mutually agreed on time.” Neither is telling you the meeting will “proceed with or without you” after a single scheduling email.
If the school is pressuring you to attend on short notice “so we stay compliant,” or hints the meeting will happen without you if you can’t make their date — put your availability in writing immediately. A school that goes ahead anyway, without documenting real attempts to include you, has committed a procedural violation.
When CAN They Meet Without a Parent?
There is exactly one situation: the school may hold the meeting without you only if it cannot convince you to attend — and it must keep detailed records of its attempts, such as phone call logs, copies of correspondence, and records of visits. One email does not meet that bar. A parent who responded with alternative dates has not “declined to attend.”
34 C.F.R. § 300.322(d) — A meeting may be conducted without a parent in attendance only if the school is unable to convince the parents that they should attend. The school must keep a record of its attempts, including detailed records of telephone calls made or attempted, copies of correspondence sent to the parents, and detailed records of visits made to the parent’s home or place of employment.
Can’t Make Any Offered Time? You Have Options
If work, childcare, or distance makes attending hard, the school must consider other ways for you to participate — including video conferences and conference calls. Asking to join by phone or video is participation. So is asking to reschedule.
34 C.F.R. § 300.328 — The parent and the school may agree to use alternative means of meeting participation, such as video conferences and conference calls.
What to Do If They Already Met Without You
Step 1: Request, in writing, the school’s documentation of its attempts to schedule with you — the detailed records § 300.322(d) requires them to keep.
Step 2: Request a copy of anything decided or changed at that meeting, along with the Prior Written Notice for any change (34 C.F.R. § 300.503).
Step 3: Request that the team reconvene with you present. If services were changed at the meeting you missed, say in writing that you did not agree and that you expect stay-put protections while the dispute is resolved.
Step 4: If the school can’t produce real documentation of its attempts, you have grounds for a state complaint.