Jenny Parnell
Coordinator
810 West Markham
Little Rock, AR 72201
501-447-2073
Email
Dr. Maurecia Robinson
Educational Data Specialist
447-1186
Email
Pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 6-15-208, the Little Rock School District (LRSD) is required to provide the following notice to the public and parents or caregiver of students enrolled in District schools:
For the 2020-2021 school year, all Little Rock School District schools are fully accredited by the Arkansas Department of Education.
Arkansas Teaching and Learning Assessment System (ATLAS)
ACT WorkKeys
PSAT for Grade 10
The ADE Data Center is a collection of data systems, data tools and informational reports for educators, policy makers, teachers, parents, school districts, and anyone interested in official data from the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE). This site is maintained by the ADE Office of Information Technology and most data is provided by Arkansas public school districts.
Sources: Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
The New Requirements of the Arkansas Civics Exam
Dynamic Learning Maps (DLM)
Dynamic Learning Maps (DLM) assessments are designed for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities for whom general state assessments are not appropriate, even with accommodations. DLM assessments offer these students a way to show what they know and can do in mathematics, English language arts, and science.
ELPA21
The English Language Proficiency Assessment for the 21st Century (ELPA21) is a group of states committed to supporting educators, member states, and the public as they adopt and implement the English Language Proficiency (ELP) Standards and college- and career-ready standards. ELPA21’s assessment system will provide information to inform instruction so that all English language learners (ELLs) leave high school prepared for college and career success.
Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
ELPA21 Parent Guide (English)
ELPA21 Parent Guide (Spanish)
The Alt ELPA is a new alternate assessment of English language proficiency designed specifically for English Learners with the most significant cognitive disabilities who are eligible to participate in Arkansas' alternate assessment (DLM), as determined by a student's IEP team.
Acheivement Gap Task Force Meeting - Agenda with Notes Sept 23, 2016
Resources and Data
Every Students Succeeds Act (ESSA)
Informational Documents pertaining to the Every Student Succeds Act (ESSA)
Quick Videos to learn more about Essa and the ESSA School Index
Source: Division of Elementary and Secondary Education
My School Info allows the public to search and compare public schools and districts from across the State of Arkansas.
The data presented on this website is periodically updated and reflective of information submitted by schools and districts to the Arkansas Department of Education.
As of 2023-2024 school year, LRSD no longer gives the NWEA MAP Growth Assessments.
ATLAS Assessments are used in place of NWEA MAP Growth Assessments.
Measure of Academic Progress - MAP Testing
What is NWEA?
NWEA stands for Northwest Evaluation Association.
What is MAP?
MAP stands for Measures of Academic Progress. These computerized tests are adaptive and offered in Reading, Mathematics and Science. When taking a MAP test, the difficulty of each question is based on how well a student answers all of the previous questions. As the student answers correctly, questions become more difficult. If the student answers incorrectly, the questions become easier.
Why MAP?
Results from MAP tests are typically available to teachers, schools, and districts with 48 hours of when the student completes the test. MAP allows schools to assess students for growth during the school year and to differentiate and adjust instruction for individuals students, groups of students, or entire classes based on results of the assessment. The results can be used by students, parents, teachers, grade levels, subject areas, schools, and the school district for a variety of purposes.
How often will my child be tested?
Students will be tested in Fall, Winter, and Spring.
What are MAP tests used for?
MAP assessments are used to measure each student’s progress or growth in school. Parents may have a chart in their home that marks their child’s height at certain times, such as on his or her birthday. This is a growth chart. It shows how much he or she has grown from one year to the next. MAP assessments do the same sort of thing, except they measure each child’s growth in mathematics, reading, and science. The scale used to measure each child’s progress is called a RIT scale (Rasch unIT), which is an equal-interval scale much like feet and inches on a yardstick. It is used to chart each child’s academic growth from year to year.
How will the school use the test scores?
MAP tests are important to teachers because they keep track of progress and growth in basic skills. The test scores let teachers know where a student’s strengths are OR if help might be needed in any specific areas.
MAP® Growth™—measures areas that are related to your standards; see What Does RIT Mean.
See also: Test Descriptions Summary
MAP® Skills™—identifies gaps and helps students to master specific skills within a hierarchy of foundational skills; see: Quick Start for MAP Skills.
MAP® Reading Fluency™— measures oral reading fluency; see About MAP Reading Fluency .
Resources for Parents: Family Toolkit
Commonly Used Terms
District Average: the average RIT score for all students in the school district in the same grade who were tested at the same time as your child.
Norm Group Average: the average score of students who were in the same grade and tested in the same term as observed in the latest NWEA norming study.
Percentile Range: percentiles are used to compare one student’s performance to that of the norm group. Percentile means the student score as well as, or better than, that percent of students taking the test in his/her grade.
Percentile Rank: this number indicates the percentage of students in the NWEA norm group for this grade that this student’s score equaled or exceeded. The percentile rank is a normative statistic that indicates how well a student performance in comparison to the student in the norm group. A student percentile rank indicates that the student scored as well as, or better than, the percent of student in the norm group. In other words, a student with a percentile rank of 72 scored as well as, or better than, 72 percent of the students in the norm group.
RIT: tests developed by NWEA use a scale called a RIT to measure student achievement and growth. RIT stands for Rasch unIT, which is a measurement scale developed to simplify the interpretation of test scores.
Source: NWEA
Click Here for School, District, and State Report Cards
School, District, and State Report Cards: Located on the Report Card tab on the My School Info website
Act 89 of 2021 suspended school ratings (letter grades) for the 2019-2020 and 2020-2021 school years.
Source: Arkansas Department of Education/Division of Elementary & Secondary Education
2011-2012 | SES Expenditures | $888,553.05 |
2011-2012 | Eligible Students | 6,895 |
2011-2012 | Participating Students | 1,329 |
2010-2011 | SES Expenditures | $809,203.80 |
2010-2011 | Eligible Students | 7,455 |
2010-2011 | Participating Students | 723 |
2009-2010 | SES Expenditures | $1,124,712 |
2009-2010 | Eligible Students | 7,168 |
2009-2010 | Participating Students | 1,345 |
2008-2009 | SES Expenditures | $865,320 |
2008-2009 | Eligible Students | $4,983 |
2008-2009 | Participating Students | $851 |
2007-2008 | SES Expenditures | $1,033,252 |
2007-2008 | Eligible Students | $10,902 |
2007-2008 | Participating Students | $844 |
Triand is a user-friendly way to transfer student transcripts between districts, schools and colleges.
Public schools in Arkansas are required to use the electronic transcript system pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. §6-80-107.