Moving to Mainstream
Moving Your Child from Special Education to Mainstream School
Moving a child from special education into a mainstream school works best as a gradual, team-planned transition: build an up-to-date profile of skills and needs, prepare the receiving school with reasonable accommodations and a phased start, and keep therapy running alongside so progress holds. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
Moving towards mainstream school isn't a single leap — it's a planned, supported journey where your child carries their strengths forward and the school grows ready to receive them.
In short
Moving your child from special education into a mainstream school works best as a gradual, team-planned transition rather than a sudden switch. You build a clear picture of your child's current skills and support needs, prepare the receiving school with the right accommodations and a phased start, and keep therapy running alongside so progress holds. Under India's RPwD Act 2016, inclusive education is your child's right — schools are expected to make reasonable adjustments to include them.How to plan the move, step by step
- Start with a current profile of skills and needs. Before any move, you want an honest, up-to-date picture: communication, social skills, attention, self-care, academic readiness and what specific support helps your child learn. This becomes the foundation of the plan.
- Choose the right school and meet them early. Look for a school willing to include your child, not just admit them. Meet the principal, the class teacher and any special educator. Share your child's profile and what works — strengths first.
- Agree reasonable accommodations in writing. These might include a shadow/special educator support, seating, extra time, visual schedules, sensory breaks, modified homework or exam accommodations. Clarity now prevents confusion later.
- Phase the transition. Many children settle best with a gradual start — shorter days, familiar peers, a key adult to anchor to — building up to a full timetable over weeks.
- Keep therapy alongside the move. Speech, occupational or behavioural therapy continuing through the transition helps your child generalise skills into the new, busier environment and steadies any wobble.
- Review and stay in touch. Set a regular check-in with the teacher to spot what's working and adjust. Transition is a process, not an event.
The goal is a school that bends to include your child — not a child who must mask their needs to fit in.
A few things to keep in mind
Readiness is about fit between child and setting, not a fixed academic bar. A child can thrive in mainstream with the right support long before they manage independently. Equally, if the receiving school cannot yet provide what your child needs, a phased or partial inclusion may serve better than a full move that overwhelms. Let your child's daily comfort, learning and confidence guide the pace.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or online form. Our clinicians can build the current skills-and-needs profile that anchors your AbilityScore®-based transition plan, recommend the accommodations a mainstream school should offer, and keep [therapy support](/) running so your child's progress holds through the move. We're glad to walk this journey alongside your family.Trusted sources
Government of India Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016 (inclusive education provisions, via rehabcouncil.nic.in); American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on school transitions and inclusion (healthychildren.org); ASHA guidance on supporting communication in school settings.Next step — Wondering if your child is ready for mainstream and how to prepare the school? [Talk to a Pinnacle team member about a transition plan](/).
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch how your child copes with the new setting day to day — comfort, willingness to attend, learning engagement and confidence. Signs the pace is too fast include rising distress, withdrawal, regression in skills or refusal to go; these mean adjust the plan, not abandon it.
Try this at home
Before the move, visit the new school together a few times at quiet hours so the building, classroom and a key adult become familiar — predictability lowers anxiety on day one.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is my child legally allowed to join a mainstream school?
Yes. Under India's Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016, inclusive education is a right, and mainstream schools are expected to make reasonable adjustments to include children with additional needs. The practical question is fit and support, not permission.
Should I stop therapy once my child moves to mainstream?
No — keeping speech, occupational or behavioural therapy running through and after the transition helps your child carry their skills into a busier new environment and steadies any wobble. Therapy and school work best together during a move.
What if the new school says it can't support my child?
A phased or partial inclusion may serve better than a full move that overwhelms. Meet the school early, share your child's profile and the specific accommodations needed, and let your child's daily comfort and learning guide the pace.