Related Services

Related services can help a student participate in school and achieve his or her educational goals.

Your child’s IEP may recommend related services in the classroom, where related service providers can work with teachers, paraprofessionals, and other adults to support students; or your child’s IEP may recommend related services in other locations in the school. Your child’s IEP may recommend related services one-on-one or in a small group.

Finding an Independent Provider

Types of Related Services

The following related services may be offered to students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) or Individualized Education Service Program (IESP). Work with your child's IEP team, CPSE, or CSE to determine which, if any, services are appropriate for your child.

Assistive Technology Services

Assistive Technology helps students use their school materials and allows them to communicate.

Counseling

Helps students improve their social, emotional, and coping skills. Goals may address appropriate school behavior and self-control, peer relationships, conflict resolution, and low self-esteem.

Hearing Education Services

Helps students who are deaf or hard of hearing improve their communication skills. Goals may focus on speech-reading (also known as lip-reading), auditory training, and language development

Occupational Therapy

Helps students develop eye and hand control and use information from the senses and attention to improve life skills such as eating, self-care, problem solving, and social skills.

Orientation and Mobility Services

Helps students with visual impairments improve their ability to be aware of and move safely in their environments.

Physical Therapy

Gives students independence in classrooms, the gym, the playground, bathrooms, hallways and staircases. Therapists will help students develop physical skills, such as:

  • Gross motor control (large-muscle movement control);
  • Ambulation (moving from place to place);
  • Balance; and
  • Coordination.

School Nurse Services

Helps students who have health-related needs stay safe and participate in school.

Sign Language Interpreter

Assigns a classroom sign language interpreter who provides access to academic and social interaction between teachers, staff and students.

Speech/Language Therapy

Helps students develop listening and speaking skills. Goals may address:

  • Auditory processing (understanding and using the sounds of language)
  • Phonological skills (organizing speech sounds)
  • Comprehension (understanding language)
  • Articulation (forming clear sounds in speech)
  • Social language skills

Vision Education Services

Helps students who are blind or have visual impairments to use braille.

Assigning Providers

We find providers for students in a specific order (or “cascade”) to ensure that they are delivered in a timely manner. The way we provide them depends on what level of school your child is in:

Students in Preschool

  1. Our first step is to reach out to our contracted agencies for a provider.
  2. If there is no contract agency provider, we find an independent provider for your child.

Students in Public School Grades K-12

  1. Our first choice is a DOE therapist already assigned to your child’s school.
  2. If there is no DOE therapist available, we look to our contracted agencies for a provider.
  3. If there is no contract agency provider, we will give you a voucher, so you can find an independent provider.
    1. These vouchers are called RSAs (Related Service Agreements).
    2. SETSS vouchers are called P4s.
  4. Your school can help you identify an independent provider, or you can use our search tool to look for one yourself:

Find Out More

Students in Non-Public School Grades K-12

  1. Our first step is to reach out to our contracted agencies for a provider.
  2. If there is no contract agency provider, we will give you a voucher, so you can find an independent provider. Related Services vouchers are called RSAs (Related Service Agreements). SETSS vouchers are called P4s.
  3. Your CSE can help you identify an independent provider, or you can use our search tool to look for one yourself:

Find a K-12 Independent Provider

There are two ways for you to find an independent provider for your child--and both are available from our Finding an Independent Provider page:

  1. Review our independent provider lists.
  2. Use the search tool.

If you still can’t find a provider, contact your school or CSE, and they can help:

Related Services Transportation

You may be reimbursed for the cost of transporting your child to related services under the following circumstances:

Students in Preschool

When the services are provided at a site to which transportation is required, and we could not arrange for the services to be provided at home, the preschool or child care location.

Students in Grades K-12

When the services are provided at a site to which transportation is required, and we could not arrange for the services to be provided at school or home (and the student is not able to travel to and from the location of service using his/her DOE-issued three-trip MetroCard.)

Financial Hardship

If you cannot pay for transport, we will issue a MetroCard or make other arrangements.

Reimbursement

For related services transportation, students may be eligible to receive reimbursement for transportation paid for by their family, foster care agency, or shelter staff in instances that DOE busing was not available.

Submission of a Transportation Reimbursement Form  does not guarantee reimbursement. The DOE reviews each submission and makes the final determination on reimbursement.

Review Transportation Reimbursement for Students Eligible for Curb-to-School Transportation before completing the web form above.