Quick Answer
IEP progress monitoring is how the school tracks whether your child is meeting their annual goals. Under IDEA, the school must report progress at least as often as general education report cards — typically quarterly. You should receive written data showing whether your child is on track, and if they are not, the IEP team must reconvene to adjust the plan.
IEP progress monitoring is how the school measures whether your child is meeting their annual goals. Under IDEA, the school must report progress to parents at least as often as general education report cards — typically quarterly. If your child is not on track, the IEP team must reconvene to adjust the plan.
The answer is progress monitoring. It is the mechanism that turns IEP goals from promises on paper into measurable outcomes. And if you are not paying attention to it, you are flying blind.
What Is Progress Monitoring?
Progress monitoring is the systematic, ongoing collection of data to determine whether a student is making adequate progress toward their IEP goals. Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), every IEP must include a description of how the child's progress toward annual goals will be measured and when periodic reports on that progress will be provided to parents (34 CFR 300.320(a)(3)).
This is not optional. It is not a suggestion. It is a legal requirement.
Progress monitoring serves three critical purposes:
- Accountability: It proves whether the school's services are producing results.
- Decision-making: It provides the data the IEP team needs to adjust goals, services, or strategies.
- Communication: It gives you — the parent — concrete information about your child's growth.
What Progress Reports Should Include
Under IDEA, you must receive progress reports at least as often as parents of nondisabled children receive report cards — typically quarterly (34 CFR 300.320(a)(3)(ii)). But frequency is only half the equation. The content matters just as much.
A meaningful progress report should include:
- The specific goal being measured — not a general subject area, but the exact goal from the IEP.
- The baseline — where the child started when the goal was written.
- Current performance — where the child is right now, with actual numbers or data points.
- The measurement method — how the data was collected (assessment, observation, work samples, etc.).
- Whether the child is on track — a clear statement about whether the child is expected to meet the goal by the end of the IEP year.
Here is the difference between a useless progress report and a useful one:
| Vague (Not Helpful) | Specific (Helpful) |
|---|---|
| "Making satisfactory progress toward reading goal." | "Baseline: 32 WPM. Current: 48 WPM. Target: 60 WPM by June. On track." |
| "Needs improvement in math computation." | "Achieved 65% accuracy on two-digit addition (5 of 8 trials). Goal requires 80%. Not on track — team recommends additional practice sessions." |
| "Behavior has improved." | "Baseline: 12 office referrals in Q1. Current: 4 referrals in Q3. Using self-regulation strategies independently 70% of observed opportunities." |
How Schools Measure Progress
The IEP should specify the measurement method for each goal. Different methods are appropriate for different types of goals. Here are the most common approaches:
Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM)
Short, standardized assessments given at regular intervals — weekly or biweekly — to track growth over time. CBMs are the gold standard for academic goals because they produce data points that can be graphed and analyzed for trends. Common examples include oral reading fluency probes, math computation probes, and written expression samples.
Work Samples and Portfolios
Collections of student work that demonstrate skill development over time. This method is useful for goals related to writing quality, problem-solving, or projects. The key is that samples must be collected systematically and evaluated against the goal's criteria — not just gathered randomly.
Direct Observation
Structured observation of the student in the natural setting, with specific behaviors counted or timed. Used for behavior goals, social skills goals, and self-regulation goals. The observation should use a defined protocol — not just "the teacher noticed."
Standardized Assessments
Formal tests administered at specific intervals (e.g., DIBELS, AIMSweb, district benchmark assessments). These provide norm-referenced data that can compare your child's growth to expected rates of progress.
Rubrics and Checklists
Scoring guides that define performance levels for specific skills. Useful for goals that involve qualitative improvement, such as writing organization or social interaction quality. The rubric criteria should be defined in the IEP so both you and the school know what each level looks like.
How to Read a Progress Report
When you receive a progress report, do not just glance at it and file it away. Read it with these questions in mind:
- Does each goal have a clear data point? You should see numbers, percentages, or specific performance descriptions — not just narrative summaries.
- Is my child on track? Compare the current performance to both the baseline and the annual target. If your child started at 30%, is now at 45%, and needs to reach 80% by June — and it is already March — that trajectory may not be sufficient.
- Is the measurement method what the IEP specifies? If the IEP says "curriculum-based assessment" but the progress report is based on "teacher observation," there is a disconnect.
- Are all goals addressed? Every annual goal should have a progress entry. If a goal is missing from the report, ask why.
- What does "not on track" actually mean? If the report indicates insufficient progress, what is the school proposing to do about it? Lack of progress should trigger action, not just reporting.
What to Do When Progress Stalls
Lack of progress is not something to accept passively. If your child is not making meaningful progress toward IEP goals, the IEP is not working — and the IEP team has a responsibility to figure out why and make changes.
Under the Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District Supreme Court decision (2017), the IEP must be "reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriate in light of the child's circumstances." If the data shows the child is not progressing, the IEP is arguably failing that standard.
Steps to take when progress stalls:
- Request an IEP meeting. You have the right to request a meeting at any time — you do not have to wait for the annual review. Put the request in writing.
- Bring the data. Show the team the progress reports and your own tracking. Point to the specific goals where progress is insufficient.
- Ask why. Is the instructional method not working? Is the service frequency not enough? Is the goal itself poorly written? Does the child need a new evaluation to identify needs that were missed?
- Propose changes. Come prepared with specific requests: more service hours, different instructional approaches, additional supports, or revised goals with appropriate benchmarks.
- Request an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE) if you believe the school's evaluation missed something or the school cannot explain the lack of progress.
- Document everything. Your meeting request, the data you presented, what the team decided, and any Prior Written Notice the school provides about proposed or refused changes.
Questions to Ask the IEP Team About Progress
Use these questions at IEP meetings, progress conferences, or in written communication:
- "Can you show me the raw data for each goal — not just the summary, but the actual data collection records?"
- "How often is data being collected for this goal? Weekly? Monthly? Only at report card time?"
- "My child's progress seems flat over the last two quarters. What changes are you considering?"
- "The progress report says 'improving' — improving from what to what? What are the specific numbers?"
- "This goal says measurement is by 'teacher observation.' Can we add a more objective measure so we can track actual data points?"
- "If my child is not on track to meet this goal by the annual review, at what point will the team consider revising the IEP?"
- "What would the data need to show for the team to agree that more services or a different approach is needed?"
- "Can I see a graph of my child's progress over time? I want to see the trend, not just one data point."
Tracking Progress at Home
The school's progress reports are important, but they are not the only data that matters. Your observations at home provide critical context that the school cannot see.
Here is how to build your own progress record:
Academic tracking
- Keep homework samples organized by date. Look for patterns — is the work getting harder? Is accuracy improving?
- If your child has reading goals, do periodic reading sessions at home and note fluency and comprehension.
- Track how long homework takes. If math homework that used to take 90 minutes now takes 45, that is data.
Behavior and social tracking
- Keep a simple log: date, what happened, how your child responded. Look for trends over weeks and months.
- Note your child's mood after school — are they coming home stressed, dysregulated, or shut down? That is information about how the school day is going.
- Track meltdowns, shutdowns, or refusals. Note what happened before (trigger), what happened during, and how long recovery took.
Communication and motor tracking
- For speech/language goals, note new words, sentence complexity, or communication attempts you observe at home.
- For motor goals, observe changes in handwriting, coordination, or daily living skills.
- Video clips (with timestamps) can be powerful evidence of progress or lack thereof.
Your Progress Monitoring Checklist
At the IEP meeting (when goals are written)
- Confirm each goal has a measurable target with a clear number or criterion.
- Confirm each goal specifies a measurement method (not just "teacher observation" for everything).
- Confirm the baseline is documented — you need a starting point to measure growth.
- Confirm the reporting schedule — how often and in what format you will receive updates.
- Ask: "What will the team do if progress is not sufficient after the first reporting period?"
Each time you receive a progress report
- Check that every goal is addressed — no goals should be missing.
- Look for actual data, not just narrative statements.
- Compare current performance to the baseline and target.
- Calculate whether the rate of progress is sufficient to meet the annual goal.
- If any goal shows insufficient progress, send a written request for an IEP meeting.
At the annual review
- Review all four quarters of progress data for each goal.
- Identify goals that were met, goals that were not met, and goals where progress was minimal.
- For goals not met: ask what will change in the new IEP — same approach with higher targets is not enough if the old approach was not working.
- For goals met easily: ask whether the goal was ambitious enough and whether the child needs higher expectations.
- Bring your own home tracking data to compare with the school's data.
Sources
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) — U.S. Department of Education
- 34 CFR 300.320 — Definition of Individualized Education Program — Code of Federal Regulations
- Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District (2017) — U.S. Supreme Court
- Center for Parent Information and Resources (CPIR) — Progress Monitoring Resources
Virginia — State-Specific Guidance
✓ Virginia follows the federal IDEA framework
The guidance in this article is accurate for Virginia parents. Below is how Virginia implements the relevant federal requirements.
Verified Mar 2026
Progress Monitoring in Virginia
Virginia requires that the IEP include a description of how the child's progress toward meeting the annual goals will be measured and when periodic reports on the progress the child is making toward meeting the annual goals will be provided (8VAC20-81-110.G.8). Progress reports must be issued at least as frequently as report cards are provided to nondisabled students, which in most Virginia school divisions is quarterly or by the marking period. These reports must inform parents of their child's progress toward each annual IEP goal and the extent to which that progress is sufficient to enable the child to achieve the goals by the end of the annual IEP period. The IEP team determines the specific measurement methods for each goal, which may include curriculum-based measures, standardized assessments, teacher observations, work samples, or other data collection methods. If a child is not making expected progress toward annual goals, the IEP team must meet to review and revise the IEP as appropriate; any revisions require parental consent under Virginia's heightened consent standard (8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d; 34 CFR 300.324(b)(1)). Virginia's regulations also require that the IEP be accessible to each regular education teacher, special education teacher, related service provider, and other service provider responsible for its implementation (8VAC20-81-110.B.3.a).
Key Requirements
- •The IEP must describe how progress toward each annual goal will be measured (8VAC20-81-110.G.8; 34 CFR 300.320(a)(3)).
- •Progress reports must be provided to parents at least as frequently as report cards are issued to nondisabled students (8VAC20-81-110.G.8).
- •Progress reports must inform parents of the child's progress toward each annual goal and whether that progress is sufficient to meet the goal by year's end.
- •If the child is not making expected progress, the IEP team must convene to review and revise the IEP; revisions require parental consent (8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d; 34 CFR 300.324(b)(1)).
- •The IEP must be accessible to all personnel responsible for its implementation (8VAC20-81-110.B.3.a).
Timelines
- ◴Progress reports issued at least as frequently as report cards for nondisabled students, typically quarterly (8VAC20-81-110.G.8).
- ◴IEP reviewed at least annually, but may be reviewed more frequently if progress is insufficient; revisions require parental consent (8VAC20-81-110.B.5; 8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d).
- ◴Parents may request an IEP meeting at any time to discuss progress concerns.
Goals in Virginia
Virginia IEP goals must be measurable annual goals designed to meet the child's needs resulting from the disability to enable involvement and progress in the general education curriculum, and to meet each of the child's other educational needs resulting from the disability (8VAC20-81-110.G.2; 34 CFR 300.320(a)(2)). For students who take alternate assessments aligned to alternate achievement standards (VAAP), the IEP must also include benchmarks or short-term objectives (8VAC20-81-110.G.3). Goals must be written in objective, measurable terms and flow logically from the present levels of academic achievement and functional performance. The IEP must describe how progress toward each goal will be measured and when periodic reports will be provided to parents (8VAC20-81-110.G.8). Virginia requires that progress reports on goals be provided to parents at least as frequently as report cards are issued to nondisabled peers, which is typically quarterly. Virginia requires parental consent before revising an IEP (8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d), which means any material change to annual goals requires consent—an obligation that exceeds the federal baseline. The IEP team should consider the child's strengths, parent concerns, evaluation results, and academic and functional needs when developing goals. Each goal should specify the condition, the behavior, and the criteria for meeting the goal.
Key Requirements
- •All IEP goals must be measurable annual goals that address the child's needs resulting from the disability and enable progress in the general education curriculum (8VAC20-81-110.G.2; 34 CFR 300.320(a)(2)).
- •For students taking the Virginia Alternate Assessment Program (VAAP), the IEP must include benchmarks or short-term objectives in addition to annual goals (8VAC20-81-110.G.3).
- •The IEP must describe how each goal will be measured and when periodic progress reports will be provided to parents (8VAC20-81-110.G.8; 34 CFR 300.320(a)(3)).
- •Progress reports on IEP goals must be provided at least as frequently as report cards are issued to nondisabled students (8VAC20-81-110.G.8; 34 CFR 300.320(a)(3)).
- •Goals must be based on present levels of academic achievement and functional performance and address all areas of identified need (8VAC20-81-110.G.1-G.2).
- •Virginia requires parental consent before revising an IEP; material changes to goals require consent (8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d).
Timelines
- ◴Annual goals are set for a one-year period and reviewed at least annually at the IEP meeting (8VAC20-81-110.B.5; 34 CFR 300.324(b)).
- ◴Progress reports on goals must be issued at least as frequently as report cards for nondisabled students (8VAC20-81-110.G.8).
- ◴Goals must be revised at the annual review or more frequently if the student is not making expected progress; revisions require parental consent (8VAC20-81-170.E.1.d; 34 CFR 300.324(b)(1)).