IEP & 504 Advocate Services
When your child needs more from their school, you should not face the meeting alone. A licensed special education teacher reviews the plan, prepares your strategy, and sits beside you at the IEP or 504 table, focused on your child.
IEP & 504 Advocate Services
IEP & 504 Support From a Licensed Career Educator
When your child needs more from their school, the meeting can feel like you against the room. I help you walk in prepared and walk out with a plan that actually works, guided by someone who has spent a career on the same side of the table as you.
Licensed Special Education Teacher
Formally trained and certified in the exact system your child’s plan lives in.
Taught in NYC & Wake County (WCPSS) Schools
Real classroom experience inside two of the country’s major public school systems.
Former Behavior Support Teacher
Hands-on expertise with FBAs, BIPs, and the students who need the most support.
You know your child better than anyone in that room. The special education process moves fast and speaks its own language. My job is to slow it down, make it make sense, and keep the focus on what your child truly needs to succeed. Consultations are always free.
Why Families Choose Resource Room for Advocacy
Advocacy here is about preparation, clarity, and knowing when to partner with a school and when to push. The goal is always the same: the right plan for your child.
Experienced From the Inside
I have spent more than a decade in real classrooms and now lead programs built for students who learn differently. I have sat where the teachers sit, and I know how strong plans actually get written.
Firm but Fair
I build real partnerships with your child’s school, and most of the time that is what gets results. But when your child’s needs are on the line, I am not afraid to push. Fair when we can be, firm when we need to be, always focused on your child.
Built to Empower You
I never want you to need me forever. As we work together, I hand you the language, the questions, and the confidence to lead the next meeting yourself.
Rooted in Your Community
As a local learning center serving families across the Triangle, I know the schools in this area and the people in the room. You get an advocate who is present, invested, and here for the long run.
How I Can Help
Whether you are just starting to wonder if your child qualifies for support, or you have a meeting on the calendar that feels like it matters, there is a clear next step.
Free Consultation
Tell me what is going on with your child. I will listen, give you an honest read on where things stand, and recommend the smartest next move. No pressure, no obligation.
Records & Plan Review
I read the full picture: the current IEP or 504 Plan, evaluations, and progress reports. Then I give you a clear summary of what is working, what is missing, and exactly what to ask for.
Meeting Strategy & Prep
We map your goals, organize your concerns, and build the case before you ever sit down at the table. You walk in calm, clear, and ready for whatever comes up.
Placement & Environment Review
Is your child in the right setting, and is it actually working? I look at the current placement, accommodations, and goals to make sure they fit your child and are being carried out the way they should be, day to day.
Meeting Attendance & Support
I am right beside you at your IEP, 504, eligibility, or intervention meeting, in person or virtually. I ask the right questions, take detailed notes, and keep the team focused on your child.
Prefer to Lead the Meetings Yourself? Parent Coaching
Some parents want to build the skills to advocate on their own, for this child and for every year that follows. In focused coaching sessions I teach you how the process works, what your rights are, and how to walk into any meeting prepared and confident. Available any time, on its own or alongside the steps above.
Who Is in Your Corner
Hi, I’m Joe Cuccurullo, co-founder of Resource Room Learning Center.
I have built my entire career around one belief: every child can learn when the right supports are in place. I started as a classroom teacher, and in 2015 my wife Sam and I founded Resource Room to do education the way we always believed it should be done, one student at a time. Today our family of programs reaches well beyond tutoring.
Through Pathways Academy and our ABA support work, we serve neurodiverse students every single day. That means I am not learning the special education world from a textbook. I live in it. I am a licensed special education teacher who has taught in both the New York City and Wake County (WCPSS) public school systems, and I served as a Behavior Support Teacher working directly with the students who needed the most help. Advocacy is simply me bringing that experience to your side of the table.
In your corner: a licensed special education teacher and former Behavior Support Teacher, with classroom experience in the NYC and Wake County (WCPSS) public schools, and co-founder of an award-winning learning center.
How It Works
Every family starts in a different place, so every plan we build together is different.
We begin with a conversation. You share the story, I listen closely, and together we figure out the smartest next step. From there I dig into the records so we both understand exactly what your child has, what they need, and where the gaps are. Then we prepare, building a clear plan and the language to back it up, so you are never caught off guard at the table. Finally, I stand with you in the meeting and help you carry the plan forward long after everyone goes home.
1. Talk
A free consultation where you share what is happening and we map the smartest next move together.
2. Review
I dig into the IEP, 504, and evaluations so we both know exactly what your child has and needs.
3. Prepare
We build a clear plan and the right language before you ever walk into the room.
4. Advocate
I stand with you at the table, then hand you the tools to keep leading on your own.
When Families Reach Out
Not sure if it is time to bring in an advocate? These are some of the most common reasons families call. If any of them sound familiar, a free consultation is a good place to start.
- Your child is struggling and has no plan yetWe can help you request an evaluation and get the process moving.
- The current IEP or 504 is not workingI will review it and pinpoint exactly what needs to change.
- An important meeting is coming upWe prepare together so you walk in organized and confident.
- You feel unheard at the tableI make sure your voice is on the record and your concerns are documented.
- You are weighing a school changeWe compare the real options against your child’s needs.
The IEP Process, in Plain Language
The special education world is full of acronyms and meeting types, and parents are often expected to keep up without a guide. Here is a clear look at the pieces you are most likely to run into, and where having someone in your corner makes the biggest difference.
Initial Evaluation
The starting point. A full evaluation to determine whether your child has a disability and qualifies for special education services. It sets the foundation for everything that follows, so it is worth getting right.
Reevaluation
At least every three years, the team takes a fresh look at whether your child still qualifies and what their needs are now. This is your chance to update the full picture as your child grows and changes.
IEP Annual Meeting
Once a year, the team reviews progress on goals and revises the plan for the year ahead. It is the single most important meeting on the calendar, and preparation makes all the difference.
Addendum Meetings
When something needs to change between annual reviews, an addendum meeting lets the team adjust the IEP without starting over. Useful for adding a service, refining an accommodation, or responding to a new need.
Testing Accommodations
From extended time to small-group settings, these are the supports that let your child show what they actually know on classroom and standardized tests. Getting them documented correctly matters in school and well beyond it.
Service Delivery
The how: how often, how long, where, and by whom your child’s services are provided. Vague service delivery is one of the most common places a strong-sounding plan quietly falls short.
FBA: Functional Behavior Assessment
When behavior gets in the way of learning, an FBA digs into why it is happening, what triggers it, and what the student is getting from it. Good data here is the difference between guessing and actually helping.
BIP: Behavior Intervention Plan
Built from the FBA, a BIP lays out proactive strategies, supports, and how the team will respond, with a focus on teaching new skills rather than just managing behavior. This is work I know firsthand from my years as a Behavior Support Teacher.
Why Prior Written Notice Matters
Prior Written Notice, or PWN, is one of the most powerful and most overlooked parts of the entire process. Any time the school proposes or refuses to change your child’s identification, evaluation, placement, or services, they are required to put it in writing: what they decided, why, what options they considered, and what they ruled out. A well-done PWN creates a clear record, holds everyone accountable to what was actually agreed, and protects your child if a disagreement ever comes up later. I make sure these decisions are documented the right way, every time.
Advocacy Questions, Answered
What exactly does an educational advocate do?
An educational advocate helps you understand the special education process and stands with you while you secure the right supports for your child. That can mean reviewing records, preparing your case, decoding the jargon, and attending IEP or 504 meetings as your knowledgeable partner. The goal is a plan that fits your child, and a parent who feels confident instead of outnumbered.
Are you an attorney?
No. I am an educational advocate, not a lawyer, and I do not provide legal advice or legal representation. If your situation ever calls for an attorney, I will tell you honestly and help you understand when that step makes sense. Most families never get there, and a prepared advocate at the table is often exactly what was missing.
Do you only work with Resource Room students?
Not at all. Advocacy is open to any family, whether or not your child has ever attended one of our programs. Of course, if your child could also benefit from tutoring, test prep, or one of our specialized programs, we are a full learning center and happy to help there too.
What does it cost?
Your initial consultation is always free. Fees for record reviews, meeting preparation, attendance, and coaching are straightforward and depend on the level of support you need. We go over everything during your consultation so there are never any surprises.
What areas do you serve?
I serve Holly Springs, Apex, Cary, and the greater Triangle, with virtual support available more broadly. Many services can be done by video, so distance is rarely a barrier.
How do we get started?
Schedule a free consultation or call (984) 777-1244. We will talk through what is happening, and I will give you an honest read on whether I can help and what the right next step looks like.
Your Child’s Next Meeting Can Go Differently
Whether you need a fresh set of eyes on an IEP, a partner at the table, or help deciding what to do next, let’s start with a conversation. Tell me what is happening, and I will help you find the clearest path forward.
Resource Room Learning Center provides educational advocacy and consulting services. An educational advocate is not an attorney and does not provide legal advice or legal representation. Information on this page is general and is not a substitute for guidance tailored to your child’s specific situation.