KPA Instructional Support Section Guide 2026
Master the KPA Instructional Support section. Learn paraeducator vs. teacher roles, IDEA basics, IEP support, behavior management, and confidentiality rules.

What the Instructional Support Section Tests
The Instructional Support section of the Kentucky Paraeducator Assessment (KPA) is unlike any other section on the exam. While the Reading and Mathematics sections test academic content knowledge, Instructional Support tests your understanding of the paraeducator role itself — the legal boundaries, ethical responsibilities, and day-to-day practices that define working as a classroom aide under the supervision of a licensed teacher.
Candidates are assessed on four core domains: how paraeducators collaborate with and report to licensed teachers, how to support students with disabilities under federal law, how to assist with behavior management using approved strategies, and how to maintain confidentiality and professional ethics in a school setting.
According to the KPA Complete Guide, the Instructional Support section carries significant weight because it reflects what separates a knowledgeable, effective paraeducator from someone who simply assists. Employers and the Kentucky Department of Education want evidence that paraeducators understand both their authority and their limits.
Why This Section Exists
The ESSA (Every Student Succeeds Act) and its predecessor No Child Left Behind established requirements for paraeducator qualifications in Title I schools. Kentucky, like all states, requires paraeducators who provide instructional support to demonstrate subject knowledge and an understanding of their defined role. The KPA was developed to meet this federal mandate.
The Instructional Support section exists because federal law — particularly the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) — places strict requirements on how students with disabilities are supported. Paraeducators are often the frontline support for these students, making it critical that they understand legal protections, IEP obligations, least restrictive environment principles, and proper escalation procedures. For a broader overview of what to expect on exam day, see the KPA Practice Guide.
Understand the clear boundary between what a paraeducator may do independently and what must be directed, planned, or decided by the licensed teacher. Paraeducators implement — teachers plan and evaluate. You will never modify an IEP, determine grades, or design lesson objectives independently. This distinction is heavily tested on the KPA.
Know the basics of IDEA: the six principles, what an IEP is and your role in implementing it, the concept of least restrictive environment (LRE), and the 13 disability categories covered under federal law. Paraeducators must follow IEP accommodations and modifications exactly as written and report concerns to the supervising teacher.
Paraeducators assist with behavior management but do not design behavior intervention plans (BIPs). Know the difference between positive behavioral supports (PBS), reinforcement strategies, and when to refer a behavior incident to the licensed teacher or administrator. De-escalation techniques and consistent routine enforcement are key exam topics.
FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) protects student records. Paraeducators must never share student information — academic records, disability status, behavior incidents — with unauthorized parties including other parents, community members, or even other staff who have no need to know. Professional conduct in and out of school is tested.
IDEA Basics Every Paraeducator Must Know
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act is the federal law that governs special education in the United States. For the KPA Instructional Support section, you do not need to memorize the full text of IDEA — but you do need a working knowledge of the concepts that directly affect your day-to-day job as a paraeducator.
The Six Principles of IDEA
- Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE): Every student with a qualifying disability is entitled to a free, appropriate public education tailored to their individual needs.
- Appropriate Evaluation: Students must be evaluated fairly and completely before being identified as having a disability. Paraeducators may contribute observational data but do not conduct evaluations.
- Individualized Education Program (IEP): Each eligible student has a legally binding IEP developed by a team. As a paraeducator, your job is to implement the IEP — not modify it. If a strategy isn't working, report it to the supervising teacher.
- Least Restrictive Environment (LRE): Students with disabilities must be educated alongside non-disabled peers to the maximum extent appropriate. Paraeducators should support inclusion, not substitute for it.
- Parent and Student Participation: Families have a right to be involved in all decisions about their child's education. Never discuss a student's disability status, IEP goals, or progress with parents outside of an authorized setting — always direct parent questions to the teacher.
- Procedural Safeguards: Students and families have legal rights to challenge decisions made about special education services. Paraeducators should never make promises about services or placements.
The 13 IDEA Disability Categories
Paraeducators working in special education settings should be familiar with all 13 IDEA eligibility categories: Autism, Deaf-Blindness, Deafness, Emotional Disturbance, Hearing Impairment, Intellectual Disability, Multiple Disabilities, Orthopedic Impairment, Other Health Impairment, Specific Learning Disability, Speech or Language Impairment, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Visual Impairment (including Blindness).
You will not be asked to diagnose students. However, understanding that each category comes with different types of accommodations and support needs will help you answer scenario-based questions on the KPA correctly. For reading-specific accommodation strategies, also review the KPA Reading Section Guide.
IEP Support: What Paraeducators Do (and Don't Do)
Your role in the IEP process is implementation and documentation, not design. Specifically, paraeducators:
- Deliver accommodations and modifications as written in the IEP (extended time, preferential seating, read-aloud, etc.)
- Collect data on student progress toward IEP goals as directed by the teacher
- Report observations about student behavior, engagement, or difficulties to the supervising teacher
- Follow behavior intervention plans (BIPs) precisely — never improvise consequences
- Do NOT attend IEP meetings as the decision-making special education representative (you may attend as a support or observer, but the licensed teacher or special education coordinator holds that role)

Common KPA Exam Traps: Escalate vs. Handle Independently
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About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.