Little Rock District Audits Special Education to Better Serve Students
Last updated:
If you’ve ever wondered whether school districts really examine how well they’re serving children who learn differently, this story offers hope.
That instinct you have—that your child deserves more than just a label and a folder full of accommodations—is exactly what drives meaningful change when systems decide to take an honest look at themselves.
TL;DR
Little Rock School Board approved a $60,000 special education audit with Urban Collaborative
The firm beat out 16 competitors, reflecting strong interest in education improvement consulting
Students receiving special education services increased from 12% (2017) to 18% (2025)
State funding hasn't kept pace with rising costs, leaving districts to cover the gap
The audit will focus on both compliance and improving actual student outcomes
The Little Rock School Board approved a $60,000 contract with Urban Collaborative to conduct a comprehensive audit of the district’s special education programs. The New Jersey-based firm beat out 16 other organizations competing for the work, signaling strong interest in helping districts improve how they serve students with learning differences.
The audit will examine programs, policies, and practices across the entire special education department, focusing on three key areas: legal compliance, fund allocation, and most importantly, improving academic and social outcomes for students.
The proportion of students receiving special education services in Little Rock has grown from 12% in 2017 to 18% today. That’s not necessarily bad news—it may reflect better identification of children who need support. But it does mean the district is serving more students with increasingly complex needs while state funding has declined.
What makes this audit promising is its focus on outcomes rather than just compliance. Too often, special education becomes about checking boxes rather than building skills. When a district asks “are students actually improving?” rather than just “are we following the rules?” it signals a genuine commitment to serving children, not just documenting their limitations.
Author Quote"
The audit is designed to provide a clear picture of how special education currently functions and to identify strengths, risks, and areas for improvement, according to district leadership.
"
Not applicable - no significant bias identified in source coverage
The audit findings will eventually become public, and that transparency matters. When districts examine their special education programs honestly, they often discover gaps between what’s required and what’s actually working. For parents, this kind of self-examination creates opportunities to advocate for evidence-based approaches that build capabilities rather than simply accommodate challenges.
If your child receives special education services anywhere, pay attention to how your district evaluates program effectiveness. Are they measuring growth and skill development? Or just service delivery?
Key Takeaways:
1
District invests $60,000 in comprehensive special education review
2
Student population needing services grew from 12% to 18% since 2017
3
Audit focuses on outcomes and skill development, not just compliance
Little Rock’s willingness to invest in an external review—and their selection of a firm specializing in special education—suggests genuine interest in improvement. The district has acknowledged that special education is “understaffed and overextended,” which is refreshingly honest.
For families with children who learn differently, this audit represents what advocacy can look like at the system level: asking hard questions, examining practices with fresh eyes, and committing to outcomes that actually help children develop confidence and capabilities. That’s exactly the kind of approach that turns struggling learners into successful ones.
Author Quote"
Special education has long been an area of concern in the district. The department is understaffed and overextended, officials acknowledged during the board meeting.
"
Every child deserves a school system willing to examine whether its approaches actually work. The limiting belief that some children simply cannot improve—and therefore don’t deserve rigorous program evaluation—keeps too many students stuck in services designed for compliance rather than growth. If you want to understand your child’s unique learning profile and create a personalized plan that builds real skills, Learning Success offers a free trial of our All Access Program. You’ll receive a comprehensive assessment and a 12-week Action Plan tailored to your child within 48 hours. Even if you decide the program isn’t for you, the Action Plan is yours to keep.
Is Your Child Struggling in School?
Get Your FREE Personalized Learning Roadmap
Comprehensive assessment + instant access to research-backed strategies