Prior Written Notice (PWN) is a legal document the school MUST give you every time they propose or refuse to change anything about your child's special education services. It's your paper trail. It's your proof. And most parents have never heard of it.
Why This Is Your Most Powerful Tool
Here's the thing about IEP meetings — a lot gets said. Promises are made. Plans are discussed. And then you go home and nothing happens. Or worse, something changes and nobody tells you.
Prior Written Notice exists to prevent exactly that. It forces the school to put their decisions in writing — what they're doing, why they're doing it, what data they used, and what other options they considered. It creates an official record that they can't walk back later.
If the school says "we're removing your child's 1:1 aide" — that requires PWN. If you request an evaluation and they say no — that requires PWN. If they want to change your child's placement — PWN. Every single change or refusal triggers this requirement.
Written notice must be given to the parents of a child with a disability a reasonable time before the public agency proposes or refuses to initiate or change the identification, evaluation, or educational placement of the child or the provision of FAPE to the child.
What Must Be Included in PWN
This isn't a casual email from the teacher. Prior Written Notice has seven required components under federal law:
- A description of the action the school is proposing or refusing
- An explanation of WHY the school is proposing or refusing the action
- A description of each evaluation, assessment, record, or report the school used as a basis
- A statement that you have protections under procedural safeguards and how to get a copy
- Sources for you to contact for help understanding your rights
- A description of other options the IEP team considered and why those were rejected
- A description of any other factors relevant to the school's decision
If the document the school gives you doesn't contain all seven of these elements, it's not a valid Prior Written Notice. Push back.
The notice must include: (1) a description of the action; (2) an explanation of why; (3) a description of each evaluation procedure, assessment, record, or report used; (4) a statement of procedural safeguards; (5) sources of assistance; (6) other options considered and why rejected; (7) other relevant factors.
When Must the School Provide PWN?
Any time they propose OR refuse to do any of the following:
- Identify your child as having a disability (or refuse to)
- Evaluate or re-evaluate your child (or refuse to)
- Change your child's educational placement
- Change services, goals, accommodations, or supports in the IEP
- Change your child's eligibility category
- Deny a parent request for services, evaluations, or placement changes
The school makes a change verbally — in a meeting, in a phone call, in a hallway conversation — and never provides written notice. If they changed something and you didn't get a document that looks like PWN with all seven elements, they violated this requirement. It doesn't matter if they told you in person. Verbal notice is not Prior Written Notice.
What to Do If You Never Got PWN
Request it. In writing. Today. Here's a template:
PWN Request Letter
Why Schools Hate PWN (and Why You Should Love It)
Prior Written Notice creates accountability. When a school has to write down WHY they made a decision and WHAT data they used, it gets a lot harder to make bad decisions. It's easy to say "we think he doesn't need the aide anymore" in a meeting. It's a lot harder to write down the data that supports that — especially when there isn't any.
PWN is also your strongest evidence in a due process hearing or state complaint. If you ever need to escalate, having (or documenting the absence of) Prior Written Notice can make or break your case.
Start asking for it at every meeting. After every phone call where something changes. Every time someone says "we've decided" or "we can't do that." Make it automatic: "Can you put that in Prior Written Notice for me?"
That one sentence will change every IEP meeting you walk into.