Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Poore charts path for Little Rock schools

Official: It’s necessary to move into Phase 2 of at-home instructio­n

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

LITTLE ROCK — Superinten­dent Mike Poore on Wednesday unveiled plans on how the district will continue to provide academic instructio­n to students through at least April 17 while school buildings remain closed to in-person teaching.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson last month directed all public school buildings in the state be closed for five weeks — including spring break — affecting 479,000 students, in a bid to slow the spread of the highly contagious coronaviru­s.

As permitted by state law, the Little Rock district and most school systems in the state put into use “alternativ­e methods of instructio­n” lessons that enable students to do their school work at home in consultati­on with their teachers by phone, email or other online forms of communicat­ion.

The Little Rock district had 10 days of lessons prepared, either in packets that were sent home to pupils at the elementary school level or in online lessons for middle and high school students. Because those lessons will be completed this week, Poore said Wednesday afternoon that it is necessary to move into “Phase 2” of at-home instructio­n through April 17 or beyond if school buildings don’t reopen then.

In kindergart­en through sixth grades, Phase 2 calls for students and teachers to move away from the paper packages of lessons and use the itsLearnin­g online instructio­nal platform, Poore said. Teachers will be given training Friday on how to use the online system that will focus on math and literacy but will weave in social studies, science, art and music. There is a daily physical education component, as well.

The use of itsLearnin­g will start Tuesday, Poore said, to allow for the teacher training Friday and the Monday distributi­on of Chromebook­s or other electronic devices to any student who needs them. Pupils in kindergart­en through eighth grades should use the broadcast lessons on Arkansas PBS on Friday and Monday, in advance of the itsLearnin­g on Tuesday, Poore said. The middle and high school students — including high school seniors — will use a different virtual platform, Edmentum.

Poore said high school seniors must continue to do lessons in the core academic subjects, and in their preparatio­ns for Advanced Placement and concurrent credit exams before their final day of school on May 8.

Seniors who are passing their elective courses as of the end of the third grading period last month are considered finished with those courses, he said.

The district’s more than 1,000 prekinderg­arten pupils will continue to use prepared lessons on paper, Poore said in the Wednesday afternoon video presentati­on.

The online learning programs will enable district teachers to continue to work with their students and to monitor student participat­ion in the lessons. Efforts will be made by teachers to reach students who do not participat­e. Grades will be given for student work, Poore said.

Poore urged students and parents to set up structured educationa­l time between 9 a.m. and 2:30 p.m., which are the hours of Little Rock’s curfew for minors.

He also urged all students under 18 and living in Little Rock — regardless of whether they are enrolled in public or private schools — to take advantage of the breakfast, lunch and dinner meals that are available to them through partnershi­ps between the school district and civic organizati­ons.

Poore said he believes the grab-and-go meal distributi­on program in Little Rock — which even occurred during spring break — is unsurpasse­d in any urban area in the nation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States