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If your child works with a private occupational therapist, you already know what OT looks like at home. You've seen your child work on handwriting, regulation, sensory processing, or self-care skills in a familiar environment, with a therapist who knows them well. But that same OT can also do something most parents don't realize: directly support your child's experience at school.
This post explains how, with a particular focus on one of the most practical things a private OT can help you do: co-create a strong 504 plan with your child's school.
What does "supporting school" actually mean?
Private OTs don't work inside schools. They aren't on your child's IEP team and they don't attend school meetings by default. But the work they do has direct bearing on what happens during the school day, and a skilled OT will think beyond the therapy session when setting goals and writing reports.
Here's what that looks like in practice:
- Your child struggles with written output. The private OT is working on fine motor strength and pencil grip. That same OT can document how those challenges specifically affect classroom tasks, and recommend accommodations like extended time, keyboarding access, or reduced written load.
- Your child has sensory processing differences. The OT is building a sensory diet. That same OT can explain to the school which sensory inputs are most activating, what a regulation break should look like, and where in the school day those breaks matter most.
- Your child has difficulty with transitions. The OT is working on executive function and emotional regulation. That same OT can describe how that difficulty plays out in a school setting and what environmental supports help.
In each case, the private OT's clinical knowledge is directly applicable to the school environment. The question is whether that knowledge ever makes it to the school team. That's where the 504 process comes in.
What is a 504 plan and why does OT matter?
A 504 plan is a legally binding document that outlines accommodations a school must provide to ensure a student with a disability has equal access to education. It does not change the curriculum. It changes how the student accesses it.
Common OT-related accommodations in a 504 plan include:
- Extended time on written assignments and tests
- Permission to use a keyboard or speech-to-text for written work
- Scheduled sensory or movement breaks
- Flexible seating options (standing desk, wobble stool, floor seating)
- Access to a quiet space or reduced-stimulation testing environment
- Fidget tools at the desk
- Modified PE participation based on motor needs
- Extra time for transitions between classes
These aren't accommodations a school will automatically offer. Most parents have to request them, and the requests are stronger when they're backed by clinical documentation that explains the specific functional impact of a child's needs.
That documentation comes from the private OT.
How a private OT helps you co-create a 504
"Co-creating" a 504 plan with your child's school isn't a formal process. It's a practical one. It means coming to the 504 meeting with specific, documented information rather than general concerns, and having a clinical voice behind the accommodations you're requesting.
Here's how a private OT supports each step:
1. Write a school support letter
Before your 504 meeting, ask your child's OT to write a letter for the school. A good school support letter does three things: it describes the child's diagnosis or presenting challenges in clinical terms, it explains how those challenges specifically affect participation in a school setting, and it recommends concrete accommodations tied to those functional impacts.
This is different from a therapy progress report. A progress report describes what your child is working on in sessions. A school support letter translates that into school-relevant language: not "working on pencil grasp" but "significant fine motor delays that limit written output and make handwriting tasks effortful and slow, impacting the student's ability to complete written classwork and timed assessments."
That specificity matters. A 504 team is more likely to approve accommodations that are tied to documented functional impacts than ones that feel like general preferences.
2. Recommend accommodations that match the therapy goals
Private OT goals and 504 accommodations should be aligned. If your child's OT is working on sensory regulation, the 504 should include movement breaks. If they're working on fine motor skills, the 504 should include keyboarding access. If they're working on executive function and task initiation, the 504 should include extended time and visual supports.
When you walk into the 504 meeting, you can say: "Our OT has recommended the following accommodations based on her evaluation, and these are the goals she's working on in sessions." That connection between clinical treatment and school support is hard for a school team to argue with.
3. Consult with the school directly
In some cases, your child's private OT can go further and consult with the school directly. This might mean a brief phone call with the school OT or the 504 coordinator, or a written recommendation addressed to the school team. Not all private OTs offer this, but it's worth asking. Coral Care therapists regularly write school-facing documentation and can discuss clinical findings with school teams when that's helpful to the family.
4. Help you identify what's actually impacting school performance
One of the most useful things a private OT does is help you articulate what's hard for your child, in the specific terms that matter for a 504 determination. Parents often know something is wrong but struggle to describe it in a way that lands in a school meeting. Your OT can help you do that.
Some questions to work through with your OT before a 504 meeting:
- Which of my child's challenges have the most direct impact on their ability to participate in school?
- What does that look like on a typical school day?
- Which accommodations would address those specific challenges?
- What does the research say about these accommodations for children with my child's profile?
You don't need to be a clinician to walk into a 504 meeting prepared. You need a clinician in your corner.
What this looks like in real life
Mia, age 8: sensory processing and classroom participation
Mia's private OT had been working with her for six months on sensory regulation. Mia's teacher reported that she was frequently off-task, struggled during transitions, and seemed overwhelmed by classroom noise. Her grades were fine but she wasn't participating, and her teacher had started describing her as "checked out."
Mia's OT wrote a school support letter explaining that Mia had sensory processing differences that made high-stimulation environments dysregulating. The letter recommended scheduled movement breaks twice a day, preferential seating away from the classroom door and air vent, access to noise-canceling headphones during independent work, and a fidget tool at her desk.
At the 504 meeting, Mia's parents brought the letter and read the specific accommodation recommendations aloud. The school approved all four. Within three weeks, Mia's teacher reported that she was more engaged and completing work she'd previously left unfinished.
David, age 11: fine motor delays and written output
David had been receiving private OT for fine motor and handwriting challenges since second grade. By fifth grade, the volume of written work had increased significantly and he was spending two to three hours on homework that should have taken 45 minutes. He wasn't struggling to understand the material. He was struggling to get it on paper.
His OT wrote a report for his 504 evaluation documenting that David's fine motor processing speed was in the 12th percentile, that handwriting was effortful and slow, and that this significantly impacted his ability to complete written classwork in the time allotted. She recommended extended time on all written tasks, keyboarding access for assignments over one paragraph, and permission to provide oral responses as an alternative to written tests.
The school agreed. David's homework time dropped to under an hour. He stopped describing himself as "bad at school."
Getting started
If your child already works with a Coral Care OT and you're thinking about pursuing a 504 plan, here's what to do:
- Talk to your OT at your next session. Tell them you're considering a 504 and ask whether they think it's appropriate given your child's current challenges. Ask if they can write a school support letter.
- Submit a written request to your school. Email the principal, school counselor, or 504 coordinator. State your child's name, grade, and the challenges you're observing. Say you have outside clinical documentation and would like to schedule an evaluation meeting.
- Bring the OT's letter to the meeting. Don't just describe your child's challenges. Hand the team a document that describes them clinically and ties each challenge to a specific accommodation.
- Follow up. After the meeting, get the 504 in writing and confirm with your child's teacher that they've received it and understand it.
If your child hasn't been evaluated by a private OT yet, an evaluation is a reasonable first step before pursuing a 504. The evaluation gives you clinical documentation of your child's needs, which is one of the most useful things you can have going into that school meeting.
Schedule an evaluation with Coral Care here. We accept most major commercial insurance plans and verify your benefits before the first session.
A note on IEPs
This post focuses on 504 plans, but if your child needs more than accommodations, an IEP may be the right path. An IEP provides specialized instruction and can include school-based OT services as part of the plan. A private OT evaluation can support IEP eligibility the same way it supports a 504 request. Read our full guide to IEPs and our guide to 504 plans if you want to understand which fits your child's situation.
Bottom line
Your child's private OT knows them clinically. They know what's hard, why it's hard, and what helps. Getting that knowledge in front of your child's school team, in a format that schools can act on, is one of the most practical things you can do to make the school day work better for your child.
A 504 plan backed by clinical documentation isn't a long shot. It's a logical next step. And the private OT you're already working with is the right person to help you get there.



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