09/08/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/09/2025 13:28
While significant strides have been made in special education, it is still in its early stages of construction. We have laid the foundation (laws, IEPs, specialized classrooms), but without the walls of inclusive practice or a roof of culturally responsive teaching, it remains incomplete.
Teachers want to support every learner, but they often lack the training or time. Parents push for services, but they often face bureaucratic hurdles. Meanwhile, students are left feeling excluded from classrooms that were never fully designed for them.
The entire process leaves everyone frustrated-but there is hope.
To move from this half-built structure to a school system that feels like home for every learner, we simply need to implement strategies grounded in research and reality. This blog outlines seven best practices in special education that can help build classrooms of belonging and growth. You will also see how the special education credential at Alliant prepares future educators to turn these practices into impact.
Program Overview
In special education, the phrase 'best practice' is often used, but what does it actually mean? What does a special education teacher do to implement it effectively?
With the following seven evidence-based practices, special educators can foster tangible student growth and development.
In special education, lessons cannot simply follow a textbook sequence. They must start with a student's IEP goals. As an example, if a student's IEP reading goal focuses on decoding multisyllabic words, a generic fluency lesson will fall short.
Special education teachers use tools such as goal tracking sheets and data binders to document daily IEP progress. This data helps them reflect on and adjust instructional plans as needed.
Similarly, at Alliant, dedicated modules in the special education coursework help future teachers design IEP-based lessons and study data to plan next steps. These skills are foundational for anyone exploring how to become a special education teacher.
Special education classrooms thrive on differentiation, as no two learners absorb information in the same way. For this reason, effective teachers offer multiple pathways:
At Alliant, candidates design differentiated lessons after observing veteran teachers and receive direct feedback on how effectively their plans meet students' diverse needs. These are foundational special education strategies that help future teachers support every learner.
Special education students thrive when their teachers, therapists, administrators, and families work as a unified team. When every adult around a student understands the plan and their role in it, the student can receive consistent, effective support.
Additionally, research shows that involving parents in planning for children with special educational needs (SEN) significantly boosts family satisfaction compared to planning done by educators alone.3
Students at Alliant are trained to lead such collaborations. They may learn how to honor family voices while ensuring that general education teachers are on board with implementing accommodations in their classrooms, an essential component of success in different careers in special education.
Behavior is not simply something to manage. It is a form of communication. PBIS shifts the mindset from punishing behaviors to proactively teaching expectations and self-regulation.
In practice, PBIS can look like:
At Alliant, future special educators may observe PBS in action during fieldwork and learn approaches that build trust, rather than fear, between teachers and students. These behavioral frameworks also influence different types of special education classrooms, each of which may require a unique application of best practices.
Structure is often the safety net students need to take risks in learning. For students with disabilities, especially those with autism, predictable routines can help reduce anxiety, paving the way for growth.
By utilizing the following, educators can help students know what to expect from each day, as well as what is expected of them:
Inclusive classrooms are also designed with trauma-informed practices in mind, recognizing that behavior often reflects unmet needs or past experiences. At Alliant, candidates explore how trauma shapes brain development and relationships, learning to create spaces where students feel physically and emotionally safe.
A special educator with training in Universal Design for Learning (UDL) asks: How can I design this lesson so every student has a way in? In other words, they plan multiple entry points from the start.
Here are a few examples of what that might look like in practice:
The coursework at Alliant embeds UDL frameworks into lesson planning practices, enabling graduates to identify hidden barriers in assignments and redesign them proactively as needed.
Assistive technology is helping to level the playing field for students with disabilities.
But effective assistive tech use is never just about handing a student a device. It requires careful evaluation: Does this tool match the student's IEP goals? Will it build independence or create reliance?
For instance, a student learning to decode may benefit more from guided reading strategies alongside text-to-speech than from replacing reading altogether.
Best practices in special education are not just a "nice-to-have." As mentioned previously, they are fundamental to meeting the legal and ethical obligations every educator holds toward their students.
The CTC-accredited special education teaching credential program offered by Alliant was designed with these legal, ethical, and human needs in mind.
If you are ready to become an educator who leads with empathy, the special education teaching credential at Alliant can help you get started.
Explore The Program
Best practices in special education allow educators to foster independence and growth for students who have been told "no" far too often.
Every student deserves a teacher who sees beyond their challenges to their potential, someone who refuses to let disability define what is possible in their classroom. This work requires an understanding of the lived realities of diverse learners and research-based strategies.
If you have decided to pursue a career in special education, Alliant can help you confidently take on the role and its requirements. Explore the course today and take the next step toward building an educational system that works for every child.
Sources:
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