TTS for Dyslexia Accommodation (IEP/504 Templates & Roll-Out Guide)
Schools across the U.S. are increasingly turning to text to speech (TTS) as a proven accommodation for students with dyslexia. By converting written text into spoken language, TTS technology empowers students to access curriculum materials on equal footing with their peers. But for many educators, the challenge isn’t whether to adopt TTS—it’s how to integrate it effectively into IEPs, 504 plans, and district-wide practices.
This guide provides an overview of the TTS for dyslexia accommodation, sample IEP/504 language, and a step-by-step framework for rolling out TTS at the district level.
Why Text to Speech Matters for Dyslexia Accommodation
Dyslexia affects up to 20% of the population, making it one of the most common learning differences in K–12 classrooms. Students with dyslexia often struggle with decoding written words, which makes reading assignments disproportionately time-consuming and discouraging. Without support, they spend excessive time on reading tasks, which lowers confidence and widens achievement gaps.
Text to speech accommodations ensure:
- Equal access to curriculum: Students can listen to textbooks, articles, and assignments.
- Improved comprehension: By removing decoding barriers, students focus on understanding.
- Time efficiency: Assignments and tests take less time, reducing fatigue.
- Compliance: Schools fulfill their legal duty under IDEA and Section 504.
Districts that implement TTS for dyslexia effectively not only comply with federal law—they empower students to thrive.
Ready-to-Use IEP/504 Clauses for Text to Speech
Strong IEP and 504 accommodations must be specific, measurable, and enforceable. Below are templates districts can adapt:
IEP Goal Example
“By the end of the school year, given access to text to speech software across all instructional settings, the student will independently use the tool to access grade-level texts. The student will demonstrate comprehension of assigned passages with 80% accuracy as measured by teacher-created assessments, three times per quarter.”
IEP Accommodation Clause
“Provide the student with access to district-approved text to speech technology (e.g., web, iOS, Chromebook apps) for all classroom materials, digital curriculum, and testing platforms. Teachers will ensure materials are provided in TTS-compatible formats within 24 hours of assignment. Student will be allowed to use headphones for confidentiality during testing.”
504 Plan Language
“Due to dyslexia, the student will receive access to text to speech software on all classroom and assessment devices. Assignments and assessments requiring reading will be made accessible in compatible formats. Staff will not penalize or restrict the student’s use of TTS. Technical support will be provided by the district assistive technology team within one business day if access issues occur.”
These clauses remove ambiguity, ensure accountability, and support compliance.
Parent Consent Form Language
Parental support is critical for a smooth rollout. Here’s sample language districts can include in consent forms:
“I understand that my child has been approved to use text to speech technology as an accommodation for dyslexia under their IEP/504 plan. This includes access to digital textbooks, classroom assignments, and assessments in compatible formats. I consent to the school providing my child with TTS-enabled devices and software. I also consent to the district sharing necessary information with the software provider to enable use, consistent with FERPA and district privacy policies.”
This protects both compliance and transparency.
Teacher Training Plan for TTS Rollout
Teachers also must know how to implement dyslexia text to speech accommodations consistently. A district-wide training plan should include:
- Introduction to TTS
- Why TTS is essential for dyslexia accommodations.
- Overview of approved district tools.
- Hands-On Practice
- Logging into the software on different devices.
- Demonstrating playback, speed adjustments, and highlighting.
- Classroom Integration
- Assigning TTS-compatible reading.
- Allowing headphones during tests.
- Reducing stigma by normalizing TTS use.
- Compliance Expectations
- Ensuring all materials are accessible.
- Documenting usage in progress monitoring.
Providing ongoing support and refresher sessions prevents uneven adoption.
Progress-Monitoring Rubric
Accommodations must be tracked for accountability. Here’s a sample rubric:
- Usage: Student consistently uses TTS during reading tasks.
- Data Source: Teacher logs, student self-reports
- Frequency: Weekly
- Comprehension: Student achieves 80% comprehension when using TTS.
- Data Source: Quizzes, comprehension checks
- Frequency: Quarterly
- Independence: Student initiates use of TTS without prompting.
- Data Source: Teacher observation
- Frequency: Monthly
- Access: Materials are provided in TTS-compatible formats.
- Data Source: Teacher compliance checks
- Frequency: Ongoing
This structure keeps staff accountable and ensures student progress is measurable.
District Roll-Out Checklist
To ensure consistency across schools, districts should follow a clear rollout process:
- Adopt written district policy recognizing TTS as an accommodation for dyslexia.
- Select approved TTS solutions compatible with LMS, Chromebooks, iOS, and Android.
- Provide training for teachers, aides, and testing coordinators.
- Supply parent consent forms and informational guides.
- Create quick-reference sheets for teachers.
- Establish a helpdesk or AT support team for troubleshooting.
- Monitor implementation quarterly through compliance audits.
When followed, this checklist ensures accommodations are systematic, not optional.
How Speechify Supports District Implementation
Speechify specializes in text to speech solutions designed for education. Speechify supports dyslexia accommodations with:
- 1,000+ natural, human-like voices to keep students engaged
- 60+ languages across various accents and regional dialects
- Cross-platform compatibility (web, iOS, Android, Chromebook)
- Text-highlighting to make following along with the text easier
- Customizable reading speeds up to 4x
- Dyslexia-friendly font options for the Speechify Chrome Extension
- OCR technology to transform even physical documents and readings into speech
- AI Summaries for quick and simple breakdowns of documents
- AI Chat which allows users to ask questions about their readings
- AI Quizzes which allow students to reinforce what they’re learning
- And more customizable features to make reading more inclusive
Speechify empowers districts to roll out TTS quickly, ensuring students with dyslexia receive consistent, compliant support.
Building Equity with Dyslexia Text to Speech Accommodations
For students with dyslexia, text to speech accommodations are a a lifeline. When properly documented in IEPs and 504 plans, supported by parent consent, reinforced with teacher training, and monitored with clear rubrics, TTS unlocks independence and academic success.
With structured templates and district-wide rollout, schools can go beyond compliance to deliver true educational equity. And with partners like Speechify, districts can confidently provide TTS that scales, complies, and empowers.