School
What accommodations can a school provide?
Schools can adjust environment, instruction, communication, sensory needs, assessment and emotional support — without lowering expectations. The strongest plans are individual, written down, shared with every teacher, and reviewed regularly with input from you and your child's therapists.
The right classroom support doesn't single a child out — it quietly removes the barriers between them and their learning.
In short
A school can provide a wide range of accommodations — changes to how a child learns, is taught and is assessed, without lowering what they're expected to achieve. These span the classroom environment, instruction, communication, sensory needs, assessment and emotional support. The best plan is individual, written down, reviewed regularly, and built together by you, the school and any therapists involved.Accommodations a school can offer
Environment & seating- Preferential seating — near the teacher, away from doors, windows or noisy areas
- A calm corner or quiet space for breaks and self-regulation
- Reduced visual clutter; clear, predictable classroom routines
Instruction & learning
- Instructions broken into small steps, given one at a time, and repeated
- Visual supports — schedules, picture cards, written checklists
- Extra processing time before a response is expected
- A buddy or peer support for transitions and group work
Communication
- Use of the child's communication system (gestures, picture exchange, a device) honoured by all staff
- Teachers checking understanding rather than assuming it
Sensory
- Permission for ear defenders, fidget tools or movement breaks
- Advance warning of fire drills, assemblies and changes to routine
Assessment
- Extra time, a scribe or a reader for tests
- A separate, low-distraction room for examinations
- Alternative ways to show learning — oral instead of written, where fair
Emotional & behavioural
- An agreed plan for overwhelm or meltdowns, known to all staff
- A trusted adult the child can go to
How to set it up
Most accommodations work best when written into an individual plan and shared with every teacher who meets your child — not just the class teacher. Ask for a meeting, bring any therapy reports, and agree a date to review what is and isn't working. In India, schools under the RPwD framework are expected to make reasonable adjustments; a clear therapist letter naming specific, practical supports carries real weight.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 online article. Our team can translate your child's profile into a concrete, school-ready list of accommodations and, where helpful, coordinate directly with teachers. Explore how targeted speech therapy and occupational therapy goals map onto classroom supports, and start with a developmental check at [Pinnacle](/).Trusted sources
Guidance here aligns with inclusive-education principles from UNESCO and WHO's nurturing-care framework, AAP/HealthyChildren guidance on supporting children at school, and India's Rehabilitation Council resources on reasonable accommodation. Accommodations should always be individualised and reviewed.Next step — message Pinnacle on WhatsApp at +91 91001 81181 for a developmental check, and we'll help you build a practical, school-ready accommodation list for your child.
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
If agreed accommodations aren't being followed consistently, or your child's distress at school is rising despite them, request a review meeting promptly — the plan may need adjusting or a therapist may need to liaise with the school directly.
Try this at home
Ask the school for one written, shared plan that every teacher sees — accommodations fail most often not because they're refused, but because only one teacher knows about them.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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
Do I need a diagnosis before a school provides accommodations?
Not always. Many practical supports — preferential seating, extra time, visual schedules — can be agreed on the basis of observed need and a therapist's recommendation. A formal assessment can strengthen the case and unlock exam-board accommodations, but you can start the conversation with the school now.
What's the difference between an accommodation and a modification?
An accommodation changes *how* a child learns or shows learning (extra time, a reader, a quiet room) while keeping the same expectations. A modification changes *what* is expected (a reduced or alternative curriculum). Most children need accommodations first; modifications are considered only when genuinely needed.
How do I make sure every teacher follows the plan?
Ask for the accommodations to be written into one shared document held by the school and given to every teacher who meets your child, with a named coordinator and a review date. A short, specific therapist letter listing practical supports makes this much easier.
Can Pinnacle help me talk to my child's school?
Yes. After a developmental check, our clinicians can translate your child's profile into a clear, school-ready list of accommodations and, where helpful, liaise directly with teachers to support implementation.