Present Levels of Academic and Functional Performance (PLAAFP) is to me the most important and essential section of the IEP. The PLAAFP is the heart of an IEP, everything can be connected back to it. Make sure to include strengths as well as areas of need.
A strong PLAAFP makes all areas of the IEP easier to write.
When you write the PLAAFP it needs to have enough detail about a student to pass the stranger test. Meaning, if someone read the PLAAFP they would know the student and be able to provide services. Focusing on strengths is important for creating ambitious goals and developing accommodations later, plus we all do better when operating from an area of strength.
The IRIS Center clarifies what should be included in the PLAAFP as, “describes the student’s needs in an academic and/or functional skill area:
- States the impact of the student’s disability on her involvement in the general education curriculum
- Documents the student’s current levels of performance, which will serve as baseline data to measure her subsequent progress
- Informs the annual goals and the appropriate special education services and supports required to meet those goals” (IRIS Center, 2021).
Want to read more?
- Effective IEP Meetings Part 1: Effect of Disability
- Effective IEP Meetings Part 3: Goals
- Effective IEP Meetings Part 4: Services
- Effective IEP Meetings Part 5: Accommodations and Modifications
- Tips for Rocking an IEP Meeting