Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Seek excellence

Do more for Arkansas’ students

- BEN KUTYLO Ben Kutylo is executive director at ForwARd Arkansas, a nonprofit whose mission is to accelerate the innovative and equitable transforma­tion of education in Arkansas.

Every Arkansas student deserves an excellent education. A report presented to Arkansas’ House and Senate Education Committees earlier this month recommends that we should do more to provide our students with the opportunit­ies they deserve, particular­ly high-need students and those from economical­ly disadvanta­ged background­s.

The report, developed by researcher­s at Augenblick, Palaich & Associates

( APA), makes several recommenda­tions to aid the state in providing an equitable education to all students, as is constituti­onally required. As APA recommends, we should re-examine the ways in which we distribute state dollars to schools in order to both fully fund their needs and free up other sources of funding for their intended purposes. There are a handful of areas, however, in which we should go further to specifical­ly provide highneed students with an excellent and equitable education.

One area on which we should focus attention is the use of “Enhanced Student Achievemen­t” funding, which is intended to help schools close the achievemen­t gap between more affluent students and their less advantaged peers. These funds should be utilized to a higher degree on proven means of closing the gap, such as pre-K, beforeand after-school programmin­g, and tutoring.

Similarly, the APA report suggests developing a task force to further investigat­e and address the out-ofschool factors that inhibit performanc­e for high-need students. The state should take up this suggestion with an immediate focus on the biggest out-of-school factor inhibiting performanc­e: access to affordable, reliable broadband. While strides have been made, the covid-19 pandemic and the shift to remote learning has exacerbate­d this issue and increased the urgency to close the digital divide for Arkansas students.

APA also recommends we reconsider current resource levels in certain areas, including student-to-teacher ratios for students in kindergart­en through third grade. Indeed, research suggests that class-size reductions can have significan­tly positive long-term effects on student achievemen­t when introduced in the earliest grades and for students from less advantaged background­s. Though finding more high-quality teachers to fill smaller classrooms may be a difficult (and costly) endeavor, especially in today’s world, there is perhaps no strategy more important to all Arkansas students.

Together, we can and must do better to provide all students with the access and support they need to succeed. Achieving the vision we all have for our children’s future and moving from discussion­s of educationa­l adequacy to educationa­l excellence means investing in strategies like these as well as in more innovative school and instructio­nal models. If we do, our hope is that Arkansas’ schools can be well-positioned to emerge from the covid-19 pandemic stronger than ever.

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