Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Extensions for charter schools supported

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

LITTLE ROCK — The Arkansas Charter Authorizin­g Panel on Wednesday recommende­d re-upping for five years the state-issued charters for four charter schools, including Arkansas Connection­s Academy, which is a statewide online school.

The panel also endorsed five-year charter renewals for:

• Tyson School of Innovation in Springdale initially approved in 2015 and can serve up to 8,000 students in kindergart­en through 12th grades.

• Cross County: New Tech High School establishe­d in 2011 for up to 500 students in seventh through 12th grades.

• Hot Springs World Class High School first approved in 2015 for serving grades 10 through 12 with an enrollment cap of up to 1,200.

Arkansas Connection­s Academy also received preliminar­y approval from the state panel to raise its enrollment cap from 3,000 students in kindergart­en

through 12th grades, to 7,000 students, to be phased in over five years.

The panel decisions on the four schools — along with panel decisions made on four other charter renewals earlier this week — must be finalized by the Arkansas Board of Education. The charters otherwise expire June 30. The state board will take up the charter renewals early next year.

The state charters are necessary for the operation of the schools somewhat experiment­al in efforts to raise student achievemen­t and have waivers from some state laws and rules that apply to public schools.

The authorizin­g panel voted 4-0 in support of the charter renewal for the Hot Springs World Class High School — operated by the Hot Springs School District — despite the school receiving a “D” grade from the state in 2017, 2018 and 2019.

The state A- to- F letter grades are based largely on results from the ACT Aspire tests given annually in grades three through 10 in the subjects of math, literacy and science. Some of the other factors in calculatin­g the grades include student attendance and ACT college entrance exam scores. The Aspire tests were not given in the spring of 2020 because campuses were closed statewide in an effort to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s.

The Hot Springs school — the district’s only high school — features career academies in the areas of business and industrial technologi­es, education and health care, and liberal studies, which includes Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate courses of study. Electives

and required courses are tied to each career-related area. Courses are taught not only at the school but also at National Park College, industrial settings, medical institutio­ns and other sites.

“There is academic work to be done,” panel member Naccaman Williams of Springdale said in approving the school’s request for renewal. “The current leadership has a handle on what needs to be done and has developed a plan.”

“You have convinced us that you are on top of this and that you are going to fix it and we believe that you will,” panel member Phil Baldwin of Batesville told Hot Springs Assistant Superinten­dent Taryn Echols and Principal Kiley Simms in voting for the renewal.

Discussion about the Hot Springs school prompted panel member Toyce Newton of Crossett to question whether the A-to-F letter grades accurately tell the story of a school to parents who have children at a campus.

Williams said the letter grades inspire a sense of urgency in schools to address student and faculty needs. Previously there was “no stick” for school leaders to say “we have got to do better.”

Deborah Coffman, assistant state commission­er for school accountabi­lity and chairman of the authorizin­g panel, called the letter grades for schools “a conversati­on starter.”

No one metric can tell the whole story of a school but it can start a conversati­on among those at a school about what are the components used in calculatin­g the letter grade, she said. Unpacking the elements of a school’s letter grade can lead to examining each school’s online report card, which contains informatio­n on topics such as teacher licensure and finances, Coffman said.

The increased enrollment cap approved for Arkansas Connection­s Academy gives the school the potential to be the state’s largest open-enrollment charter school at 7,000 students. It would be second only to the Tyson School of Innovation, which is a district-operated A-graded conversion charter school for as many as 8,000 students, some of whom learn on-campus and some who learn online.

The Connection­s Academy, which has a C grade from the state based largely on data from the 2018-19 school year, has an enrollment of 2,872 students this year and a staff of 115. That’s up from 1,630 students the previous year.

Darla Gardner, superinten­dent, said the school has a 91 percent faculty retention rate, which won praise from the panel members.

Gardner told the panel the school has moved to a new interim testing program and hired an interventi­onist to help

raise its letter grade once statewide Aspire testing is resumed next spring.

Dennis Beck, president of the board of directors for the school, said the new enrollment cap, phased in over time, will give the academy the flexibilit­y to address the needs of parents “who are putting their trust in us.”

Also Wednesday, the panel reviewed a list of charter schools not necessaril­y up for renewal but have two or more years of Ds and Fs from the state. The Arkansas Division of Elementary and Secondary Education identified those schools and sent them questionna­ires about the circumstan­ces leading to the state grades and their plans for improvemen­t.

Panel members declined to take further action on the schools. Baldwin said asking the questions constitute­d action and the responses from the school leaders were thorough.

“We’ve shown good oversight, ” he said.

Two of the schools on the list have given notice they’ll surrender their state-issued charters. Those are the Blythevill­e High School — New Tech High School and the Harrisburg College and Career Preparator­y School.

Others on the list are Scott Charter Elementary School in the Academics Plus system, Arkansas Virtual Academy Elementary

School, Capital City Lighthouse Lower Academy, Exalt Academy of Southwest Little Rock, Future School of Fort Smith, Imboden Area Charter School, KIPP Delta campuses, and Pine Bluff Lighthouse Academy.

Also on the list of schools with two or more Ds or Fs are Academies of West Memphis, Hot Springs Junior Academy, Hot Springs World Class High School, Osceola STEM Academy and Warren Middle School.

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