Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State updates computer education

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

The Arkansas Board of Education has hit “refresh” on computer-science education for elementary and secondary schools by adopting a revised set of standards and courses for the coming 2021-22 school year and beyond.

The latest revisions include a new emphasis on “storytelli­ng” and on sequencing high school courses by sub-areas of computer science, Anthony Owen, the state’s director of computer science, told the Education Board last week.

The latest revisions to the computer-science standards and courses are being made at a time when Gov. Asa Hutchinson — who has made computer instructio­n in schools a top priority for his administra­tion — says he will back legislatio­n early next year to make computer science a graduation requiremen­t for all public school students.

Draft legislatio­n calls for that requiremen­t to begin with students who will enter the ninth grade in 2022.

Arkansas high schools already are required to offer computer-science courses as the result of a law passed in 2015.

Owen said last week that the updates are the result of thousands of hours of work by nearly 50 educators, industry representa­tives and state agency employees who wanted to ensure that the standards are of high quality, relevant to students and will meet the needs of industry well into the future.

Industry representa­tives called for ramping up student skills in talking about computer science, Owen said.

“What we were hearing repetitive­ly from industry was that our students are coming out of our high schools and our two- and four-year institutio­ns very technical,” Owen said. “But they don’t know how to talk to nontechnic­al people about it. They can’t relay that informatio­n.

“So we have built in a storytelli­ng strand across all the content areas that we are very proud of,” he said. “We think it will assist our students in learning how to communicat­e informatio­n — that technical informatio­n — to nontechnic­al

audiences in a more appropriat­e fashion.”

Additional­ly, the revisions at the high school level include the organizati­on of “three-year pathways” or sequences of courses that students can take in a particular facet or area of computer science, including computer engineerin­g, cybersecur­ity, data science and game developmen­t.

Still other courses are in the areas of mobile applicatio­n developmen­t, networking, programmin­g, and robotics. And there are updated opportunit­ies for independen­t study and internship­s envisioned by the revised standards.

Work is also underway to develop a pathway of courses for artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning, Owen said.

At the elementary and middle school grades, computer science instructio­n is largely embedded or integrated into core academic courses and not taught in isolation.

The computer science and computing standards adopted by the Education Board for kindergart­en-through-fourth grades and for fifth-througheig­hth

grades are meant to provide an introducti­on to computer science and to support classroom-learning activities, according to informatio­n provided to the Education Board.

The exception to the embedding requiremen­t is the teaching of coding in grades seven or eight.

The coding standards are designed to be taught in one or the other of those two grades during a stand-alone block of time over the course of four weeks. Schools and districts are to select the program or approach for teaching those standards that works best for their students.

The state computer-science standards are subject to a complete revision every four years with adjustment­s every two years to keep up with advances in the rapidly evolving field, Owen said.

Now that the standards and courses have been updated, the Education Department’s office of computer science and others will work to identify resources and curriculum options for the schools as well as provide for teacher training.

State Education Board member Steve Sutton of Marion commended Owen for his passion. He also asked what the cost to districts will be for the new standards and what the source of that money would be.

The proposed legislatio­n to require students to have a computer-science credit to graduate from high school also would require that every public school employ at least one state-certified computer-science teacher by the beginning of the 2023-24 school year.

That would increase the number of such teachers from 500 to 750.

Education Secretary Johnny Key said more details on draft education legislatio­n will be forthcomin­g in January but that the implementa­tion dates for computer-science changes will provide enough time for funding decisions to be made.

“There will not be a requiremen­t for a teacher until there is a funding stream for that requiremen­t,” Key said, adding that the governor has already made money available to incentiviz­e teachers

to get training in computer science.

“When it becomes a requiremen­t, it becomes the state’s responsibi­lity,” Key said, “so you will see budget adjustment­s to make that happen.”

The number of public school students taking computer courses is 10,450 this year, up from 9,800 last year and 1,104 the year the Computer Science for Arkansas students initiative began in 2014-15, Owen said.

This is the first year in which Black students enrolled in computer-science instructio­n are not underrepre­sented in the courses as compared with their overall enrollment in school, Owen said.

A gender gap, however, persists among students taking computer science with male students more likely to take the courses than their female classmates. Owen said the push for computer-science instructio­n in the elementary grades is intended to help narrow that gap.

Arkansas high schools already are required to offer computer-science courses as the result of a law passed in 2015.

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