
Student Progress Report Template
Free student progress report template for teachers and special educators. Structured format for academic, behavioral, and IEP goal progress reporting.
What is a Student Progress Report?
A student progress report is a documented summary of a student's performance over a defined period of time. Progress reports communicate how a student is performing academically, behaviorally, and socially — and for students with IEPs, whether they are making adequate progress toward their annual goals. See progress monitoring documentation for ongoing progress tracking strategies.
For special education students, federal law under IDEA requires that parents receive progress reports on IEP goals at least as often as parents of general education students receive report cards. Many districts report IEP goal progress quarterly.
Progress reports differ from report cards in that they provide narrative detail and data-driven analysis rather than just letter grades. They tell the story behind the numbers.
Template
Student Information
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Student Name | |
| Grade | |
| School | |
| Teacher/Case Manager | |
| Reporting Period | e.g., Quarter 2: November 1 – January 31 |
| Report Date | |
| Student ID |
Academic Progress
Subject Area: Reading/Language Arts
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| Current Performance Level | e.g., Reading level Q (grade-level expectation: S) |
| Grade/Score | |
| Trend | Improving / Stable / Declining |
Summary: Example: Student has moved from reading level O to Q during this reporting period, representing a gain of two levels. Decoding accuracy has improved from 89% to 94% on grade-level text. Comprehension remains an area of focus — the student accurately answers literal questions but continues to struggle with inferencing, scoring 55% on inferential comprehension probes (target: 75%).
Key data points:
- Running record: Level Q, 94% accuracy, satisfactory fluency
- Comprehension quiz average: 72% (up from 65% last quarter)
- Words read correctly per minute: 98 (up from 84)
Subject Area: Mathematics
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| Current Performance Level | |
| Grade/Score | |
| Trend | Improving / Stable / Declining |
Summary:
Key data points:
Subject Area: Writing
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| Current Performance Level | |
| Grade/Score | |
| Trend | Improving / Stable / Declining |
Summary:
Key data points:
Additional Subject Areas
| Subject | Grade/Score | Trend | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Science | |||
| Social Studies | |||
| Other |
IEP Goal Progress (if applicable)
Goal 1: [Restate the IEP goal]
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| Goal Area | e.g., Reading Comprehension |
| Annual Goal | By June 2026, when given a grade-level passage, the student will answer inferential comprehension questions with 80% accuracy across 3 consecutive data points. |
| Baseline | 40% accuracy |
| Current Performance | 55% accuracy |
| Progress Rating | See below |
Progress Rating:
- Mastered — Goal has been met
- On Track — Sufficient progress to meet goal by annual review
- Progressing — Making progress but may not meet goal without adjustments
- Limited Progress — Minimal progress; plan revision recommended
- No Progress — No measurable progress; immediate plan revision needed
- Regression — Performance has declined from baseline
Data summary:
Example: Over the past quarter, the student was assessed on inferential comprehension using curriculum-based measures on three occasions. Scores were 48%, 55%, and 58%. The upward trend is encouraging, but at the current rate of growth, the student is unlikely to reach the 80% target by the annual review date. The IEP team should consider increasing the frequency of targeted comprehension instruction.
Interventions in place:
- Small-group comprehension instruction 4x/week, 20 minutes
- Graphic organizers for identifying main idea and supporting details
- Think-aloud strategy modeling during read-alouds
Recommendations:
Goal 2: [Restate the IEP goal]
| Indicator | Details |
|---|---|
| Goal Area | |
| Annual Goal | |
| Baseline | |
| Current Performance | |
| Progress Rating |
Data summary:
Interventions in place:
Recommendations:
Behavioral and Social-Emotional Progress
| Area | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Follows classroom expectations | Consistently / Usually / Sometimes / Rarely | |
| Works independently | ||
| Participates in class | ||
| Interacts appropriately with peers | ||
| Manages frustration | ||
| Completes and submits work | ||
| Attendance and punctuality | _Days absent: __ Days tardy: __ _ |
Narrative summary:
Example: Student has shown improvement in peer interactions this quarter. She is initiating conversations with classmates during unstructured time and was observed collaborating effectively during a science group project. Work completion remains inconsistent — homework is submitted approximately 60% of the time. When assignments are completed, quality is generally strong. The check-in/check-out system implemented in November has been helpful; the student reports enjoying her morning check-in with Ms. Rodriguez.
Accommodations and Modifications in Use
| Accommodation/Modification | Effectiveness | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Extended time on tests (1.5x) | Effective — student uses full time and scores improve | |
| Preferential seating | Effective | |
| Graphic organizers | Partially effective — student uses them with prompting | |
| Reduced homework load | Effective — completion rate improved from 40% to 60% |
Strengths and Positive Developments
Example:
- Student received a "Citizenship Award" from the PE teacher for helping a new student learn the rules of a game.
- Student independently used a dictionary to check spelling during a writing assignment for the first time.
- Student's attendance improved from 85% to 96% this quarter.
Areas of Concern
- Inferential comprehension remains significantly below grade level.
- Homework completion, while improved, still falls below expectations.
- Student becomes visibly frustrated when asked to revise written work.
Recommendations and Next Steps
- Continue current reading intervention; increase frequency from 4x to 5x per week.
- Introduce a homework planning checklist to support assignment tracking.
- Schedule parent conference to discuss comprehension concerns and potential assessment updates.
- Review IEP Goal 1 at next team meeting to determine if goal adjustment is needed.
Parent/Guardian Communication
| Date | Method | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| e.g., email, phone, conference | Brief summary of what was communicated |
When to Use This Template
Student progress reports are used for:
- Quarterly IEP progress reporting — Required under IDEA at minimum the same frequency as general education report cards
- Report card supplements — When grades alone do not tell the full story
- RTI/MTSS progress monitoring — Documenting student response to tiered interventions
- Parent communication — Providing families with detailed, data-driven updates
- Team decision-making — Informing decisions about service changes, goal revisions, or eligibility
Tips for Writing Meaningful Progress Reports
- Use data, not impressions — "Student scored 72% on comprehension assessments, up from 65%" is far more useful than "Student is doing better in reading."
- Be honest about limited progress — Parents need accurate information to make informed decisions. Sugarcoating stalls intervention.
- Connect data to the goal — Always reference the IEP goal and baseline when reporting progress. Show the trajectory.
- Include what you are doing about it — If a student is not on track, state what instructional adjustments are being made or recommended.
- Highlight growth — Even when a student is below grade level, document the gains they have made. Growth matters.
- Write for the parent audience — Avoid jargon. A parent should understand every word of this report without needing a translator.
Automate Progress Reporting
Compiling data from multiple sources, writing individualized narratives, and tracking progress across dozens of students is one of the most time-consuming tasks in education. NotuDocs helps you organize student data, draft progress narratives, and generate reports efficiently — so progress reporting days do not consume your entire weekend.


