
IEP Goals for Dyslexia: SMART Examples for Decoding, Fluency, and Writing
A practical guide to writing measurable IEP goals for dyslexia, with sample SMART goals across decoding, fluency, comprehension, spelling, and writing.
Strong IEP goals for dyslexia are the difference between a plan that drifts and a plan that drives real reading progress. An IEP goal is a measurable, time-bound statement of what a student will learn over the next year. For students with dyslexia, generic "read better" goals do not cut it - the team needs goals tied to the specific reading processes dyslexia affects: decoding, fluency, comprehension, spelling, and written output. The federal IDEA statute requires that goals be measurable and aligned to present levels, and the International Dyslexia Association recommends structured literacy targets at the heart of the plan.
What Makes a Strong IEP Goal for Dyslexia?
Every IEP goal should pass the SMART test: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. A SMART dyslexia goal names the skill, the condition (passage type, prompt, support), the criterion (accuracy, rate, or rubric score), the method of measurement, and the timeline.
Strong goals also reflect current present levels. A child reading at 40 words correct per minute does not need a 150 wcpm goal in one year - they need a stretch target tied to grade-level norms. Build from baseline data, not wishful thinking.
Sample IEP Goals for Dyslexia by Skill Area
The five sample-goal areas below cover the core reading and writing skills dyslexia typically affects. A student may have goals in two or three of these areas, not all five.
Decoding goals
Decoding goals target phonics patterns the student has not yet mastered. They should specify the pattern (CVCe, vowel teams, multisyllabic words) and the measurement tool.
Sample: Given a list of 20 unfamiliar multisyllabic words containing closed, open, and vowel-team syllables, Student will accurately decode 18 of 20 (90%) across 3 consecutive weekly probes by the end of the IEP year, measured by curriculum-based decoding assessments.
Reading fluency goals
Fluency goals pair accuracy with rate, never rate alone. Speeding through misread words is not progress.
Sample: Given an unpracticed grade-level passage, Student will read aloud at 95 words correct per minute with at least 95% accuracy by the end of Q3, measured by biweekly oral reading fluency probes.
Reading comprehension goals
Comprehension goals should clarify whether the student is reading the passage independently or accessing it via text-to-speech, since both are valid pathways.
Sample: After listening to or reading a grade-level informational passage, Student will answer 8 of 10 literal and inferential comprehension questions correctly across 4 of 5 trials by the annual review.
Spelling/encoding goals
Encoding goals mirror decoding goals but in reverse - they target the same patterns the student is learning to read.
Sample: Given a dictated list of 15 words containing recently taught vowel-team and r-controlled patterns, Student will spell 13 of 15 correctly across 3 consecutive weekly assessments by the end of the IEP year.
Writing goals (with assistive tech)
Writing goals for dyslexia should separate ideas from transcription. When dictation or word prediction is the accommodation, say so in the goal.
Sample: Using speech-to-text and word prediction, Student will compose a 5-paragraph informational response that scores 3 or higher on each rubric dimension (focus, organisation, evidence, conventions) on 3 of 4 writing tasks by the annual review.
Common Mistakes to Avoid in Dyslexia IEP Goals
The most common goal-writing mistakes are vagueness ("will improve reading"), unmeasurable criteria ("with teacher support"), and grade-level targets disconnected from baseline. Watch for accommodation creep too - listing every support inside the goal can mask whether the student is acquiring the skill or just performing with heavy scaffolding. Pair related classroom accommodations for dyslexia in the accommodations section, not inside the goal itself.
How Assistive Technology Fits Into IEP Goals
Under IDEA, the team must consider assistive technology for every student. AT appears in two places: as an accommodation that removes a barrier on grade-level content, and as a goal condition when the student is learning the tool itself. A fluency goal might read "without text-to-speech" while a comprehension goal reads "using text-to-speech." Both can be valid in the same IEP because they target different skills.
How Mote Tools Support Common Dyslexia IEP Goals
Mote maps to the most common dyslexia goal areas without replacing structured literacy instruction:
- If the goal is grade-level comprehension, Read Aloud with Human-Like Voice and PDF Read Aloud remove the decoding barrier so the student can access the same texts as peers while decoding instruction continues in parallel.
- If the goal is written expression, Speech to Text lets the student capture ideas without spelling and handwriting load, and Text Prediction supports encoding for students working toward independent writing.
- If the goal is vocabulary or content access, the Dictionary surfaces definitions in context, and Image Text Read Aloud handles worksheets and screenshots that would otherwise be inaccessible.
- If the goal involves multi-step directions, Read Aloud can re-read prompts on demand so the student can self-regulate without flagging an adult each time.
For the full picture of how Mote supports literacy plans, see our complete guide to dyslexia in the classroom.
The bottom line: strong IEP goals for dyslexia are specific, baseline-aware, and tied to structured literacy. Write three to six SMART goals across the skill areas that matter for this student, pair them with the right accommodations and AT, and review progress on a schedule - not just at the annual.










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