Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Student assignment­s a beat-the-clock rush

Schools whittle on summer-glitch backlog

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

Little Rock School District employees are working through the weekend to clear a backlog of online student registrant­s in order to assign several thousand students to schools and classrooms for the coming school year, which starts Monday.

As that student online registrati­on informatio­n is uploaded into the district’s online systems, the families will be notified of their children’s school assignment­s, Frederick Fields, the district’s senior director of student registrati­on, said Friday night.

If families don’t receive weekend calls, students should go to their attendance zone schools Monday or to the schools assigned to them in district letters sent last February — if those are different schools from their attendance zone schools, Fields said.

The 2018-19 school year starts Monday for most of Arkansas’ traditiona­l public school districts, including the four districts in Pulaski County and some of the independen­tly run public charter schools that did not choose to open earlier in the summer.

In the Little Rock district, the state’s largest system with about 24,000 students in pre-kindergart­en-through-12th grades, all schools will welcome students and parents Monday, Fields said. All schools will be able to provide parents with access to computers to complete the mandatory online registrati­on process if they have not done that before Monday.

Parents of students who are new, or are returning

to the district and have not completed the online checkin process, can do so by clicking on the “Registrati­on” icon — a picture of a schoolhous­e and a magnifying glass — on the district’s website: lrsd. org. Once a parent is on the district’s Student Registrati­on page, the link to the actual registrati­on portal is at the top of the column on the right.

After the online process is complete, a parent will receive a message that the registrati­on is “pending,” which is an indication that the child’s informatio­n will be uploaded and become a part of the student’s permanent record at the school.

Parents can access the Gateway Online Registrati­on portal by cellphone or by computer.

The district has used social media and automated phone calls to alert parents about the mandatory online registrati­on and about the backlog in processing some of the informatio­n, Pamela Smith, the district’s director of communicat­ions, said Friday.

As of Friday, the district had processed and assigned to schools 17,479 students through the Gateway system, Fields said, which is several thousand students short of the district’s anticipate­d total enrollment for the coming year.

At issue is the district’s use for the first time of the Gateway system in conjunctio­n with the state-required electronic student records management system commonly referred to as eSchool.

Fields said the eSchool system was updated this summer and that conversion to the updated system took longer than anticipate­d. And the newly updated eSchool system did not initially include a means that allowed the Gateway Online Registrati­on to function properly, Fields said.

The Gateway student registrati­on system was down from the spring until late July. As a result, student informatio­n couldn’t be loaded into either the Gateway or the eSchool systems, he said. That created major backlogs, he said.

“Anyone who came into the Little Rock School District’s student registrati­on office and registered during that spring-to-July window — their paperwork could not be loaded into Gateway or eSchool,” he said.

A fix was ultimately found that allowed the systems to connect.

The systems are now working but the Gateway system can process only a certain number of student files per hour, he said. Informatio­n must be processed by the Gateway system before it is pushed into the eSchool system to assign a student to a school. That is not an immediate process, Fields said.

Once the student informatio­n is in the eSchool system, master schedules for the different schools can be created and student assignment­s to specific schools, classrooms and courses can be made.

The Gateway Online Registrati­on has been adopted by the Pulaski County Special and North Little Rock school districts as well as the Little Rock district, all of which are following the lead of the Conway School District that adopted it earlier.

“It’s a very good tool, an excellent tool,” Fields said about Gateway. “It makes it easy for parents who can do the registrati­on at their homes on their smartphone­s.”

The problem for the districts was marrying the Gateway and updated eSchool systems, he said. And for the Little Rock district, the problems have been compounded by the size of the school system. Districts with smaller enrollment­s were able to more easily do the registrati­on manually. The Little Rock district attempted to do that as a backup, as well, Fields said, but was dealing with an extensive number of student files.

“It’s crucial that the public know that the Little Rock district was not the only district affected,” he said.

Arkansas Education Commission­er Johnny Key, who acts as the school board in the state-controlled Little Rock district, said Saturday that he and his staff were aware of the electronic systems issues, and he confirmed that several districts are affected in addition to the Little Rock system.

The Arkansas Public School Computer Network team of the Education Department has been working closely with district staff members, the Arkansas Department of Informatio­n Systems, and the software vendors to resolve the problems, Key said.

“EDchool is the statewide student records management system, and it is mandated as a part of the Arkansas Public School Computer Network,” he said. “When changes are made to the core systems of eSchool, there can be ripple effects to the connecting systems” such as the online student registrati­on system.

School districts may, but are not required, to select third-party registrati­on software, he also said.

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