Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Out of poverty Build students’ skills, experience

Guest writer

- TRISH FLANAGAN Trish Flanagan helped start the Future School of Fort Smith in 2016. She founded the Think Future Foundation in 2018 to promote a public education system where all students have equitable access to real-world learning.

If I had five minutes with Gov. Asa Hutchinson, I would explain how we lift Arkansas out of poverty in two generation­s.

In Arkansas, we invest over $150,000 in each public school student from kindergart­en to 12th grade. As a nation, we spend more to educate our kids than most countries. And though we spend $300 billion a year on work-force developmen­t, the majority of employers across the country report “a lack of preparatio­n with dire consequenc­es, including economic under-performanc­e, social unrest, and individual despair” among employees.

We need to work together to change from our “business as usual” thinking. We need every student in Arkansas to graduate prepared and motivated with three tangible tools: a resume of profession­al experience, a profession­al network, and a tuition-free college experience.

We invest heavily with money and time in public education for Arkansas’ students, yet we are missing an opportunit­y. We spend over half our state budget on education and our kids are required to spend 30 hours in “instructio­n time” at school each week. In 12th grade, students only need two classes to complete graduation requiremen­ts, leaving hours of time to develop career options and skills. Yet many of our high school graduates have no plan or experience to prepare them for a career based on their skills and interests.

Tens of thousands of Arkansas jobs are empty, and we are ranked one of the lowest states for work-force developmen­t, according to the U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics. We talk about work-force developmen­t in every corner of Arkansas and spend millions in programs for adults. But what are we doing to ensure that every single Arkansan is prepared and motivated to find employment they are passionate about and allows them to feed their families?

Our current attempts to make high school more relevant and graduate more skilled workers are only serving a small percentage of Arkansans. More programs are popping up to equip small groups of students with technical skills. This is a great start, but we need to get out of the college-or-career mindset and graduate our kids with a 21st century toolbox that incorporat­es all of the above. We need to do this at the structural level of our high schools to ensure that access to real skill developmen­t and experience is prioritize­d in school budgets, profession­al developmen­t and school schedules. We need to develop our work force earlier, when our students have time and are required to be in school. If we wait until they are adults, juggling the needs of family and finance, it is often too late.

Interest-based internship­s need to be embedded in our core curriculum and required to graduate from high school. They must be aligned with student interest, or motivation to seek, maintain and continuous­ly improve in careers will fall short. High school schedules need to be structured around real-world learning opportunit­ies, advising and college coursework. Campuses should mirror a 21st century learning environmen­t where kids collaborat­e with each other and their teachers while building a profession­al network in their community.

Additional­ly, every high school student in Arkansas needs to have a trusted adviser who knows them well, meets with them daily and supports their career and future education plans. We spend millions on initiative­s that will not successful­ly reach students in our current school structure. Most require a guidance counselor, who has other priorities such as schedules and testing, to support a caseload of sometimes 300-500 students. To solve this challenge, we need our teachers to be recruited, trained, compensate­d and supported as advisers to a small, family-like group of students.

Finally, our high school students should graduate with college experience at no cost. More 11th- and 12thgrade students should be accessing college coursework and graduating with associate’s degrees with tuition covered via existing public funding.

When we make high school more relevant and interestin­g for students in the 21st century, we will develop our work force. We will rise out of poverty when every high school student in Arkansas graduates with a resume of interest-based profession­al experience, a profession­al network and college experience. We must take advantage of the opportunit­y in front of us.

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