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Accommodations and Modifications Don’t Have to Be Complicated

Supporting students with IEPs should not require hours of extra prep, constant one-to-one support, or converting every printable into a digital file. Within Ignited Literacy, small, fast adjustments can honour IEPs, maintain assessment evidence, and keep whole-class instruction moving. This guide explains common disability and disorder profiles, what they look like in the classroom, where Ignited Literacy lessons typically need support, which “big” accommodations are time-consuming, and exactly how to implement quick, sustainable alternatives. It also addresses the misconception that all printable pages need to be turned into digital versions.

Reading Disabilities (Dyslexia, Fluency, Comprehension)

What it is: Difficulties with decoding, word recognition, fluency, and comprehension.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types where support helps:

High-prep approaches that are hard to sustain:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? No. Highlight or record instead of rewriting the page.

Writing Disabilities (Dysgraphia, Organisation, Spelling)

What it is: Difficulties with handwriting, spelling, and organising ideas.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types:

High-prep approaches:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? Only if typing is the accommodation. Otherwise, keep print and allow highlighting or audio support.

Oral Language Disorders (Receptive and Expressive)

What it is: Challenges understanding or producing spoken language.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types:

High-prep approaches:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? No. The issue is language output, not the format. Use recordings or reduced oral tasks instead.

Auditory Processing Disorder

What it is: Students hear normally but struggle to process and remember spoken directions.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types:

High-prep approaches:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? No. Breaking steps down on the board is faster than digitising tasks.

Visual Processing Disorder

What it is: Students struggle to interpret what they see, losing place or skipping words.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types:

High-prep approaches:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? Usually not. Highlighting and paper strips are faster solutions.

ADHD (Attention, Focus, Organisation)

What it is: Students struggle with attention, impulse control, and managing multi-step work.

What this looks like in class:

Ignited Literacy lesson types:

High-prep approaches:

Quick, sustainable alternatives (with how-to):

Do I need a digital version? No. Circling tasks on the paper sheet is quicker and just as effective.

The Misconception: “Every Printable Must Be Digital”

One of the most common myths in accommodations is that teachers must convert every page into a digital format. This is unnecessary and time-draining.

Digital is necessary when:

Paper is faster and acceptable when:

Selective conversion strategy: Only digitise high-use templates like Writing Choice Menus or Reading Response pages. Keep one-off activities on paper and modify expectations quickly with highlighters, sticky notes, or audio submissions.

Final Thoughts

Accommodations and modifications are about access, not complexity. Highlight instead of rewrite. Record instead of scribe. Reduce steps instead of redesign. Keep printables on paper unless digital access is essential. With these routines, you meet IEP requirements, preserve assessment evidence, and protect your capacity to teach the whole class well.

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