Arkansas IEP Parent Rights & Resources

The federal IDEA law protects your child's right to a free, appropriate public education in Arkansas — and Arkansas has organizations whose entire job is to help parents like you use those rights.

Who can help you in Arkansas (free)

Parent Training & Information Center

Arkansas Parent Training and Information (PTI)

Federally funded to train and support Arkansas parents of children with disabilities — one-on-one help with IEPs, evaluations, and meetings, at no cost.

arkansaspti.org · 800-223-1330

Protection & Advocacy

Disability Rights Arkansas

Arkansas's federally mandated legal advocacy organization for people with disabilities — the place to call when your child's rights may have been violated.

disabilityrightsar.org · 800-482-1174

State Education Agency

Arkansas Division of Elementary & Secondary Education

Oversees special education in Arkansas public schools, publishes state rules and forms, and receives formal state complaints.

dese.ade.arkansas.gov

Your rights under IDEA in Arkansas

  • Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) Arkansas public schools must provide special education and services designed for your child, at no cost to you.
  • Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) — your child has the right to learn alongside non-disabled classmates as much as appropriate.
  • Evaluations — you can request an evaluation at any time, in writing, and the school must respond. You can also request a reevaluation if things change.
  • Procedural safeguards — the school must give you a written notice of your rights, and written notice before it changes (or refuses to change) your child's identification, evaluation, or placement.
  • Parent participation — you are an equal member of the IEP team. Meetings must be scheduled at a mutually agreeable time, and you can bring anyone you choose.

These protections come from federal law and apply in every state. Read the full plain-English guide to your rights →

Key IEP timelines

  • Initial evaluation: under IDEA's default rule, the school has 60 calendar days from your written consent to complete it — unless Arkansas sets its own timeline. Arkansas Parent Training and Information (PTI) can confirm the exact Arkansas timeline for free.
  • After eligibility: the IEP meeting must happen within 30 calendar days of the decision that your child is eligible.
  • Every year: the IEP must be reviewed at least annually — and you can request a meeting sooner at any time.
  • Every 3 years: your child must be reevaluated (unless you and the school agree it isn't needed).

If you disagree with the school in Arkansas

  1. Talk first, in writing. Many disputes resolve at the IEP table — put your concerns and requests in writing so they become part of the record.
  2. Mediation. Free and voluntary — a neutral mediator helps you and the school reach a written agreement.
  3. State complaint. A written complaint to the Arkansas Division of Elementary & Secondary Education about an IDEA violation within the past year — the state must investigate and decide, generally within 60 days.
  4. Due process. A formal legal proceeding before a hearing officer. Before filing, Disability Rights Arkansas can advise you on your options at no cost.

Want to see how your child's IEP stacks up against these rights?

Upload Your IEP — Free →

This page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Timelines reflect federal IDEA defaults; Arkansas may set its own rules for some steps — confirm specifics with the organizations above. Consult a qualified attorney or advocate for advice about your specific situation.