Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - INFANTS AND TODDLERS WITH DISABILITIES › § 1432
Defines key words and explains who gets early help and what that help must include. An "at-risk infant or toddler" is a child under 3 years old who would likely face a big developmental delay without services. A "council" is the State’s interagency coordinating group. "Developmental delay" means whatever the State defines it to mean. "Early intervention services" are developmental supports given under public supervision, usually free (unless a State has a family fee system), that follow the child’s individualized family service plan, meet State rules, are given in natural places like home or community when possible, and include 14 kinds of help (such as family training and counseling, special instruction, speech and hearing help, therapy, medical checks for diagnosis, screenings, health and vision services, assistive technology, and needed transportation). These services must be delivered by qualified staff (12 types, like special educators, therapists, nurses, doctors, vision and mobility specialists). An "infant or toddler with a disability" is a child under 3 who needs early help because testing shows delays in one or more of five areas (cognitive, physical, communication, social/emotional, adaptive) or has a diagnosed condition likely to cause delay. A State may also include at-risk children and some children eligible for other preschool services who previously got these services until they enter kindergarten or elementary school; programs for those children must teach school-readiness skills (pre-literacy, language, numeracy) and give parents written notice of their rights and choices.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1432
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73