No child with dyslexia left behind
Transcription
No child with dyslexia left behind
Report Card June 2015 www.arsba.org The Journal of the Arkansas School Boards Association No child with dyslexia left behind “For us, this is the single most important intervention I have ever seen in not only my school district but any school in my 40 years as an educator. It has positively affected more kids in a short amount of time than anything we have ever done.” – Dale Query, Flippin superintendent Interventionist Mary Humphrey and student Caden Brown work together using the Susan Barton method. A TRUSTED ADVISOR TO ARKANSAS SCHOOLS Standing from left: Jason Holsclaw, Michael McBryde, Lindsey Ollar, Bo Bittle, Jack Truemper, Kevin Faught and Mark McBryde Seated: Dennis Hunt (Executive Vice President and Director of Public Finance) For more than seven decades, Stephens has been the leader in financing Arkansas education projects. Since 1990, we have consistently led the state in providing financial advisory services to local school districts, helping raise more than $6.5 billion for education-related facilities. Our clients know we put them first, and deliver honest, forthright opinions, insights, and advice. As Arkansans, we know that the best way to ensure a strong future for our state is investing in public education today. At Stephens, we appreciate how Arkansas teachers and administrators strive every day to prepare our children for the future, and we thank them for their continued confidence in us. Little Rock 800-643-9691 Fayetteville 800-205-8613 LIT TLE ROCK, AR • ATL ANTA, GA • BATON ROUGE, L A CHARLOT TE, NC • DALL AS, T X • FAYET TEVILLE, AR JACKSON, MS • NASHVILLE, TN STEPHENS INC. • MEMBER NYSE, SIPC @Stephens_Inc STEPHENSPUBLICFINANCE.COM ASBA News and notes McKown is now ASBA president Brenda McKown, a member of the Beebe School Board and formerly ASBA’s president-elect, is now ASBA’s president after the resignaMcKown tion of former ASBA President Jerry Don Woods from the Dardanelle School Board. Under ASBA’s by-laws, Woods can no longer serve as ASBA’s president because he is not a local school board member. Woods resigned from the Dardanelle board to give family members who wanted to teach in that district a chance to be Woods hired without potential conflicts with anti-nepotism laws. ASBA’s president normally serves one year, but Woods led ASBA for twoand-a-half years. As president-elect in 2012-13, he acted as president for most of the term after the president, the late Maxine Nelson, became ill. He then served a full term as president in 201314 and had served half of his current term in 2014-15. Woods wrote in his resignation letter to ASBA, “Although I feel a huge disappointment personally because I am abandoning you in the middle of the year, my decision has been made easier by the fact that Brenda is such a strong leader and is so well equipped and ready to step in and take over the role of President of this association. She truly is a special person and will be a wonderful leader. I am so proud of her, and excited for each of you individually and as a board as she assumes the presidency. I am also equally confident that Tony (Prothro) is the right person to lead as Executive Director and, with the support of an incredible staff, will continue to lead the organization to even greater heights. The future truly is bright for the ASBA.” McKown had high praise for Woods at the annual Joint Leadership Please see ASBA News and Notes, page 5 Report Card June 2015 3 Report Card The Journal of the Arkansas School Boards Association News and Features 8 Boards talked; lawmakers listened During a busy legislative session, school board members let legislators know they were watching – at times sending hundreds of emails. It made a difference. 16 From adequacy to excellence Former Sen. Johnny Key, the state’s new education commissioner, says it’s time for Arkansas public education to set higher goals. Report Card sat down with him in his office to ask about his plans. 20 Cover / No child left behind - really In Flippin, educators have gone to war against dyslexia – and dyslexia is losing. Students are receiving the help they need to overcome their challenges and reach their potential. Superintendent Dale Query says it’s “the single most important intervention I have ever seen” in his four decades in education. And now, because of state laws passed in the past two legislative sessions, other districts will be following Flippin’s lead. 20 Interventionist Anita Stoner works with student Hunter Callentine. The Flippin School District has made dyslexia intervention a top priority. Students are advancing in their reading levels, and discipline problems are decreasing. Students are even graduating out of speech therapy and special ed classes. 24 Executive Session with Westside’s Alan Oldman Departments 3 5 5 6 ASBA News and Notes ASBA Calendar Advertisers Index Letter from the Executive Director 4 June 2015 Report Card 15 28 30 31 Jay Bequette’s Column Marketplace Commercial Affiliates President’s Column ASBA News and notes Conference of the ASBA and Arkansas Educational Administrators Association. “Jerry Don’s been such a great leader for the association,” she said. “It’s always been all about the kids, and how he can move the association forward. He will be missed. He came in and filled the shoes for two-and-a-half years, but I look forward to leading the association.” Summer training available in Biloxi oceanside resort School board members will have the chance to train with their fellow board members from Mississippi and Louisiana in a beautiful oceanside resort at the Southern Region Leadership Conference July 19-21 at the Beau Rivage Resort & Casino in Biloxi, Mississippi. When the National School Boards Association disbanded its own Southern Region conferences, the leaders of Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi decided to host their own event. ASBA’s Dr. Anne Butcher, director of board development, said having a combined event enables board members to learn from each other and to pool their resources to attract speakers. Several Arkansas speakers will be presenting. On July 19, ASBA’s Dr. ASBA calendar June 18-19 ASBA Summer Leadership Institute Embassy Suites, Hot Springs June 23, 25 July 9, 23, 28 Administrative Directives Workshops ASBA Office, Little Rock July 19-21 Southern Region Conference Biloxi, Mississippi Oct. 23 New Board Member Institute DoubleTree Hotel, Little Rock Tony Prothro will present a seminar on school governance. Also during the conference, Lake Hamilton representatives will present a seminar on arming school staff, while representatives from El Dorado will speak about the El Dorado Promise scholarship program and representatives from the Warren School District will speak about conversion charter schools. The annual Southern Region Leadership Conferences will give school board members a chance to improve their skills in a resort atmosphere. The Beau Rivage features entertainment, a casino, spa, golf and shopping. Next year’s event will be in New Orleans. The 2017 event will be in Hot Springs. School board members can register for the conference at ASBA’s website, www.arsba.org. ASBA News and Notes continued on page 7 Advertisers Index Beardsley Public Finance�������� Back Cover Stephens Inc.���������������������������������� 2 TIPS/TAPS�������������������������������������� 3 Crossland Construction����������������������� 5 Musco Lighting�������������������������������� .7 Crafton Tull������������������������������������ 9 KLC Video Security�������������������������� 10 Van Horn Construction��������������������� 11 Educational Benefits, Inc.����������������� 12 East-Harding Construction����������������� 13 Baldwin & Shell Construction������������� 14 Sport Court����������������������������������� 15 GCA Education Services�������������������� 16 Hight-Jackson Associates������������������ 17 SubteachUSA��������������������������������� 19 Arkansas A+ Schools������������������������ 21 ADEM Federal Surplus Property����������� 23 Wittenberg, Delony and Davidson�������� 25 All-Clean������������������������������������� 27 Report Card June 2015 5 Report Card The Journal of the Arkansas School Boards Association Vol. 8, Number 2 Letter from the Executive Director by Dr. Tony Prothro A thank-you for all our advocates The following is an excerpt from an email that I sent to advocacy liaisons (as appointed by each school board from your school districts) at the conclusion of the 2015 legislative session. I believe the message is important enough to share with the entire membership. “I wanted to take a moment to offer a special thank you to our advocacy liaison network. Each of you were chosen by your local school boards to spearhead advocacy efforts on behalf of your school districts. The time you spent calling, texting and emailing legislators was extremely influential and very obvious as our state elected officials voted on policy in the 2015 legislative session. “We devoted much time over the last year in conferences, and especially regional meetings, distributing information in the area of effective advocacy. We were uncertain if the time allocated would be productive in relation to the upcoming 2015 legislative session. We are happy to report that you have exceeded all expectations. “We acknowledge that many of you not only updated your fellow board members on a constant basis regarding the bills being filed, but also placed ‘legislative update’ as an item on your monthly board meetings and detailed the happenings of the legislative session. What a response from elected-servant leader board members from across our state! “On multiple occasions, ASBA legislative team members were also informed 6 June 2015 Report Card by legislators who stated board members had been very effective in conveying the needs of school districts. This effort resulted in the adoption of good policy for local governance and the defeat of other initiatives that would have had a negative effect on the students in our public school education system. Never before have we seen such a concerted and widespread advocacy on behalf of public school boards and the students they serve during a legislative session. I can tell you personally that testifying in front of the education committee is much easier and effective when it is prefaced by board member contacts with committee members. “I know the task of advocacy liaison has taken much time and effort over the past three months. Your labors are recognized and greatly appreciated. I hope your local school boards, school districts and communities also recognize and express heartfelt gratitude for your gallant efforts.” Although this letter was sent to advocacy liaisons, there were many other board members who took the challenge and contacted legislators. At times entire boards were involved in the communication process. We thank those boards who were active. Also as a board member, don’t forget to give a special thank you to your advocacy liaison for the extra time they spent on behalf of the children of your district. It is just another example of board service that should be highlighted and celebrated. June 2015 P.O. Box 165460 / Little Rock, AR 72216 Telephone: 501-372-1415 / 800-482-1212 Fax: 501-375-2454 E-mail: [email protected] / www.arsba.org Board of Directors President: Brenda McKown, Beebe Vice President: Sandra Porter, Bryant Sec.-Treasurer: Debbie Ugbade, Hot Springs Past President: Clint Hull, Batesville Region 1: Bob Warren, Elkins Region 2: Neal Pendergrass, Mountain Home Region 3: Alan Oldman, Westside (Craighead) Region 4: Jamie Hammond, Van Buren Region 5: Allan George, Russellville Region 6: Keith Baker, Riverview Region 7: Open Region 8: Randy Goodnight, Greenbrier Region 9: Rita Cress, Stuttgart Region 10: Deborah Smith, Malvern Region 11:Jeff Lisenbey, Sheridan Region 12: Rosa Bowman, Ashdown Region 13: Mike Waters, Magnolia Region 14: Katie Daniel, McGehee Staff Executive Director: Dr. Tony Prothro Communications Director: Jennifer George Executive Assistant: Michelle Burgess Board Development Director: Dr. Anne Butcher Advocacy Director: Boyce Watkins Staff Attorney: Kristen Garner Policy Director: Lucas Harder Special Projects - Advocacy: Mickey McFatridge Finance: Deborah Newell Administrative Assistant: Angela Ellis Bookkeeper: Kathy Ivy Risk Management Program & Workers’ Comp. Program: Shannon Moore, Director Krista Glover Amanda Blair Dwayne McAnally Ashley Samuels Jennifer Shook Misty Thompson Melody Tipton Tiffany Malone Nick Crowe LaVerne Witherspoon General Counsel: Jay Bequette TO CONTACT THE MAGAZINE Please contact Steve Brawner, Editor 501.794.2012 [email protected] Report Card is published quarterly by the Arkansas School Boards Association. Copyright 2015 by the Arkansas School Boards Association and Steve Brawner Communications. All rights reserved. ASBA News and notes ASBA-AAEA meeting features reports on session, Key speech Attendees of Team Leadership Conference XX heard a report about this year’s legislative session, listened to a speech from the state’s new education commissioner, and learned about the state’s broadband access efforts. The annual event, held May 12, brings together ASBA and the Arkansas Association of Educational Administrators. Dr. Tony Prothro, ASBA’s executive director, and AAEA Executive Director Dr. Richard Abernathy provided an overview of the recent legislative session. Johnny Key, the state’s new education commissioner, told attendees that he accepted the job because “we’re at a crucial state in education in Arkansas.” He said he wants the Department of Education to be a “department of assistance” instead of a “department of compliance.” Asked by Steve Anderson, superintendent of the Lake Hamilton School District, about inconsistencies between the state’s school report card and other rankings, Key said the department is studying how to improve the rankings. He said he had requested and been given a spreadsheet comparing the various school rankings and found that some rank well based on one set of criteria and rank less well based on another set. Key recently appointed Baker Kurrus as superintendent of the Little Rock School District, which is now under state control. Kurrus, an attorney and businessman, served 12 years on the school board but is not an educator. Key said some had expressed concern that he would replace superintendents with businesspeople elsewhere, but Little Rock is a unique challenge. “What I’ll tell you, to give you maybe some bit of comfort, is that that was a very specific instance, a very specific strategy to solve a very specific problem,” Key said. He later added, “(Kurrus) admits that he is not there as a long-term administrator. He is there to right the ship, get us back in order there.” Mike Hernandez, deputy director of the Arkansas Department of Education, and Don McDaniel with the Department of Information Systems said the state is working in partnership with 21 vendors to upgrade the Arkansas Public School Computer Network. The plan is for the state to provide broadband access to a district hub, and then school districts would be responsible for a metropolitan area network out to the schools. Hernandez said DIS is working with districts that still have contracts with providers to resolve those issues on a case by case basis. Cathi Swan, state coordinator of K-12 distance learning, said that the state’s Virtual Arkansas program now is reaching 30,000 students, allowing them to attend class in inclement weather and during field trips. Robyn Keene, AAEA financial consultant, told attendees that legislators raised the minimum teacher’s salary for the first time since 2008-09. Under Act 1087, the minimum starting salary increases from $29,244 to $30,122 in 2015-16, while the minimum starting salary for teachers with masters’s degrees increases from $33,630 to $34,640. In 2016-17, the minimum starting teacher salary increases from $30,122 to $31,000, while the minimum starting salary for teachers with master’s degrees increases from $34,640 to $35,650. Salary step increments are being retained. The raises came after a Bureau of Legislative Research study compared the state to those surrounding it. Arkansas’ minimum teacher salaries in 201213 of $29,244 were behind Oklahoma, Mississippi and Tennessee but ahead of Texas, Louisiana and Missouri. Arkansas’ average salaries of $46,631 were behind Louisiana, Tennessee, Texas and Missouri but ahead of Oklahoma and Mississippi. ILLUMINATING GENERATIONS You’re not just buying lights. You’re buying a system designed to keep light on the excitement of the game and out of your neighbors’ yard. That means players and residents will benefit from the lights for generations to come. To learn more visit: www.musco.com/generations Local area representative: Jeremy Lemons 800/825-6030 (toll free) 501/249-8056 (mobile) [email protected] For Your Budget For The Environment ©2015 Musco Sports Lighting, LLC · ADAR15-2 Report Card June 2015 7 Legislative session STUDENT-FOCUSED LEADERSHIP. Dr. Tony Prothro, ASBA’s executive director, testifies about a bill before the Senate Education Committee. Prothro led a legislative team that kept busy throughout the legislative session. In addition to Prothro, team members were Boyce Watkins, advocacy director; Lucas Harder, policy director; Kristen Garner, staff attorney; Jennifer George, communications director, and Dr. Anne Butcher, director of board development. The team members were supported by school board members who actively contacted legislators about school issues. Boards talked; lawmakers listened During a busy session, legislators sometimes heard from hundreds of board members. It mattered. By Steve Brawner Editor Numbers DO make a difference. That point was reinforced during the 2015 regular session of the 90th General Assembly when many local school board members actively engaged in the legislative process. By communicating directly with their local legislators about specific issues, board members helped shape the outcome of legislation that was important to their own school district and public education in Arkansas. The magnitude and impact of that involvement became obvious to ASBA staff members who were at the Capitol daily during the session. “When you talk to a legislator and they look at you and say, ‘This one’s not going anywhere. I got 300 emails from board members on this,’ you know that you’re being effective whenever that happens,” said Boyce Watkins, ASBA’s advocacy director. 8 June 2015 Report Card ASBA’s legislative team stayed busy, often watching four different committees at once. Legislators, emboldened by model legislation that had passed in other states, tried to provide public funding for private schools in a variety of ways. Bills affecting schools and school board members would be debated in committee without warning, and when they died, they didn’t always stay dead. Amendments appeared suddenly during committee meetings, forcing ASBA’s team members to scramble to testify effectively. Team members regularly met at night and early in the morning. “It was a constant level of stress and preparedness that we’ve never experienced,” said Dr. Tony Prothro, ASBA’s executive director. A new locally focused approach created a much more involved statewide membership. In the past, ASBA relied on email blasts sent to all school board members. Because no one was made responsible, few contacted their legislators, and when they did, they tended to simply forward ASBA’s talking points, which legislators easily could ignore. Moreover, some school board members grew tired of receiving the communications. For the past two years, ASBA instead has been educating board members at conferences and regional meetings about the issues facing public schools, including the national push to privatize education funding. It asked each school board to appoint a legislative liaison who received most of ASBA’s communications. That meant one person at each district was in charge of encouraging their fellow board members to make contacts, and they did. Meanwhile, ASBA issued calls to action to the entire membership for a few of the most important bills. School board members became much more involved and were calling ASBA to ask questions and to alert team members about a bill’s progress. This was the first session in many years where ASBA could not rely on Ron Harder, retired director of policy and advocacy. Instead, ASBA used more of a team approach. Prothro praised each of the team members – Watkins, for his overall leadership and for keeping team meetings on track; Policy Director Lucas Harder, for his amazing memory; Staff Attorney Kristin Garner, for her background knowledge; Communications Director Jennifer George, for her research and technical abilities; and Dr. Anne Butcher, director of board development, for lending a hand. “It was a well-oiled, smooth machine. ... We were effective and concerted and worked very well together as a team throughout this process, and I can’t say enough about that,” Prothro said. While some other agencies received a cut in funding, public schools received a small raise – but one that, unlike in previous sessions, didn’t even amount to a cost of living adjustment, raising potential adequacy issues. The Public School Fund was funded at $2.12 billion for fiscal year 2016, compared to $2.073 billion the year before. Per student foundation funding increased only $63 to $6,584 in 2015-16, and then increased only $62 in 2016-17 to $6,646. Of the state’s funding categories, only professional development remained flat at $32.40 per student. Funding for English language learners and for alternative learning environments, as well as funding based on a district’s National School Lunch Act beneficiaries, all increased only slightly. The Legislature also increased minimum teacher salaries from $29,244 this year for teachers with bachelor’s degrees and no experience to $30,122 in 2016 and $31,000 in 2017. It was the first time minimum teacher salaries had been raised since 2008-09. Minimum salaries for teachers with master’s degrees also were increased, as were all state-required salary step increments. In other business, Gov. Asa Hutchinson recommended as education commissioner the former Senate Education Committee chair, Johnny Key, who then was hired by the State Board of Education, but only after a change in state law. Previously, the commissioner was required to have a master’s degree and at least 10 years of experience in education, including at least five of administrative experience, all of which disqualified Key. ASBA initially opposed Senate Bill 176 by Sen. Alan Clark, RLonsdale, which deleted those requirements. When Clark proposed a second bill – eventually, Act 525 – which would allow a commissioner to hold that position if a deputy commissioner meets the old requirements, ASBA held its fire. ASBA still has concerns about having a commissioner with no public school experience, but Key brings many good qualities to the table, and the association worked well with him when he was a legislator. “He has the respect of everyone,” Watkins said. “There’s no question about that, and he does have a good background on the funding matrix.” (For more, see story, page 16.) Several bills were filed by lawmakers hoping to use public funds for private schools, which ASBA always opposes. Continued on next page architecture civil engineering planning surveying landscape architecture infrastructure www.craftontull.com It’s what motivates, connects, and inspires us all. Report Card June 2015 9 Legislative session All but one failed. The most high-profile one was House Bill 1733 by Rep. Bruce Cozart, R-Hot Springs, which would have given the education commissioner the authority to create an achievement school district to which it would assign academically distressed schools and school districts. The achievement district would issue binding recommendations concerning academic practices and staffing and could potentially Solutions for: Student transport Digital recording GPS tracking Fleet data management Video surveillance Perimeter security Parking, playgrounds and stadiums Hallways and walkways Electronic access control Video door station Access card entry Access data management 903.792.7262 www.KLCVideoSecurity.com Serving Arkansas schools since 2003 10 June 2015 Report Card BILL SIGNING. Gov. Asa Hutchinson signs Act 377 into law allowing the Arkansas Department of Education to grant waivers to school districts facing consolidation for falling below the 350-student minimum if they are not in fiscal, academic or facilities distress. Pictured directly behind him from left are Rep. Bruce Cozart, R-Hot Springs, who sponsored the bill, and co-sponsors Sen. Alan Clark, R-Lonsdale, and Rep. Charlotte Douglas, R-Alma. At right is Michelle Cadle, a parent from the Weiner School District, which was consolidated with Harrisburg in 2010 after it fell below 350 students despite have a strong academic record and sound finances. have been administered by a private company. ASBA was one of several education-related groups that publicly opposed the bill, which Cozart pulled. House Bill 1593 by Rep. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville, would have provided 65 percent of adequacy funding to private schools for each student transfer. It failed. House Bill 1745 by Rep. James Sorvillo, R-Little Rock, would have created an income tax credit of $4,400 for private school tuition payments for taxpayers with school age dependents that had varying degrees of disabilities. It also did not pass. One voucher bill did pass: Act 1178 by Rep. Doug House, RNorth Little Rock, created the Succeed Scholarship Program to award private school scholarships to K-12 students who have an individualized education program under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Its purpose is to help students with severe disabilities attend schools more skills-based than academic-based. As is usually the case, legislators attempted to move school elections to November to coincide with general elections, and this time, they succeeded in making it optional. Act 1281 by Sen. Jane English, R-North Little Rock, states, “The annual school election shall be held in each school district of the state on the third Tuesday in September or the first Tuesday following the first Monday in November of each year.” ASBA has always opposed moving elections because school issues would be lost in a more partisan, politicized environment. However, because local school boards will decide on the dates, ASBA didn’t oppose this bill. It seems likely that few, if any, districts will move their elections to November. One question: What about those districts under state takeover, where the commissioner of education will decide when a new board will be elected? ASBA opposed other bills that specifically would have moved school elections to November. One, House Bill 1422 by Rep. Nate Bell, R-Mena, fell one vote short of advancing out of committee because county clerks were opposed and because time didn’t allow needed changes to the code. Among the most high-profile education bills was Act 187 by Rep. Bill Gossage, R-Ozark, Hutchinson’s signature proposal requiring public high schools to offer at least one course in computer science either in a traditional or online setting. Act 27 by Gossage and Sen. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View, established the Computer Science and Technology in Public School Task Force to recommend standards and frameworks for computer science education. ASBA supported the bill. ASBA also supported Act 377 by Cozart and Clark, which authorizes school districts that have fallen below 350 students and are facing consolidation to annually request an Arkansas Department of Education waiver. Waivers can be granted only if the district is not in academic, fiscal or facilities distress and does not have probationary status cites from ADE. The act requires the State Board of Education to grant or reject the petition within 45 days. ASBA was part of a coalition that successfully opposed a bill that would have allocated to highways, roads and streets the gross general revenues from various sales and severance taxes when the total collected in a given year is more than $2.2 billion. Supporters of House Bill 1346 by Rep. Dan Douglas, R-Bentonville, were seeking a new revenue source because they said highways are underfunded by current mechanisms. ASBA opposed the bill because the transfer would have reduced funding for other state needs, including programs that benefit children and families. The bill did pass the House Committee on Public Transportation, but then Douglas pulled it when Hutchinson said it would not fit into his balanced budget. Hutchinson later appointed a task force to consider highway funding. On issue after issue, the Legislature followed Hutchinson’s lead. Prothro said the governor was pragmatic, conciliatory and politically astute. “It was amazing the amount of authority that he had in this session when it came to individual pieces that the word would come down and bills would either get run through committees and be on his desk, or they would be killed,” Prothro said. While the Common Core State Standards have become a political hot potato in other states, they did not attract that much attention this session – in large part because Hutchinson diffused the controversy by appointing the Governor’s Council on Common Core Review to study the issue. The group, composed of 16 members including Dardanelle School Board member Sherry Hicks, will consider different perspectives on the Common Core. The Legislature did pass Act 1074 by Rep. Mark Lowery, R-Maumelle, and Irvin that prohibits the state from entering into more than a one-year contract with the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers. PARCC is a consortium of nine states plus the District of Columbia in which students are assessed against the standards and against each other. The bill originally would have ended Arkansas’ participation in PARCC permanently, but when that version failed to get a second in the Senate Education Committee, Sen. Jim Hendren, R-Sulphur Springs, amended it so that Arkansas’ participation would be limited to one year at a time. ASBA is hopeful the Common Core review panel will issue positive recommendations. While ASBA supports Arkansas’ full participation in Common Core, it’s also open to changes – as long as those changes are based on students’ needs and not shifting political winds. The session was marked by what Gov. Hutchinson said were “foundational” changes to the state’s workforce education efforts. Among those was Act 892 by English, which creates the Office of Skills Development within the Department of Career Education to award workforce training grants to public and private organizations. It also establishes a Career Education and Workforce Development Board composed of representatives from various industrial sectors that will create a comprehensive program for career education and workforce development. Act 891 by English creates a fund within the state Department of Continued on next page Warm. Safe. Dry. With over 45 years of construction management/general contractor experience, Van Horn offers unmatched quality services to provide you with a facility as thoughtful and intelligent as the educators and students your district serves while keeping them Warm, Safe, and Dry. www.vanhornconstruction.com General Contractor | Construction Management | Design Build | Pre-Construction Services | Value Engineering | Facility Maintenance Report Card June 2015 11 Legislative session Higher Education to provide grants of up to $100,000 to develop programs to boost workforce training. ASBA opposed the session’s most controversial bill, House Bill 1228, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act by Rep. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville, and Sen. Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs, which would have prohibited state actions that burden a person’s right to exercise of religion, unless the burden is essential to furthering a compelling governmental interest. The bill ignited a firestorm of protests from those who believed it would have allowed discrimination toward gays and lesbians. ASBA opposed it because school districts are held to a high anti-discrimination standard by federal law, and the bill would have created a conflict between state and federal requirements. A compromise bill was passed late in the session that mirrored the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act. ASBA’s package passes ASBA submitted a package of five noncontroversial bills, all of which passed. Act 836 by Rep. Ron McNair, R-Alpena, and Sen. Bobby Pierce, D-Sheridan, authorizes school boards to adopt policies permitting members who are unable to be physically present at a board meeting to attend the meeting and vote remotely. Act 568 by Pierce allows training of school board members regarding audit reports to be presented by a program representative from higher education, the Department of Education or ASBA. The law was needed because few trainers were available under the old requirements. Act 379 by Rep. James Ratliff, D-Imboden, and Pierce requires certification to be delivered to the county clerk when an elected school board member takes the oath of office and requires the clerk to provide the date by which the candidate shall take the oath after the election. The law was needed because some school board members never get around to taking the oath. Now, if they don’t, the office is declared open. Act 835 by Cozart allows school boards to make personnel policy changes without the benefits that secure your world are our only focus. accident We'll help you do the math vision dental hospital care & more YOUR BENEFITS AGENCY, INC dba LET’S TALK BENEFITS EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS 12 June 2015 Report Card a staff vote in order to comply with new state and federal law and regulations, provided that the board does so within 90 days after the change or June 30, whichever is later. The law was needed to prevent conflicts between district policies and state and federal requirements caused by the timing of the requirements’ creation. Act 843 by Ratliff sets specific circumstances that create a vacancy on a school board and prescribes procedures for determining and filling the vacancy. Bills pass with ASBA’s support Other acts that passed this session with ASBA’s support included: – Act 23 by Speaker Jeremy Gillam, R-Judsonia, and English, which exempted state institutions that are immune from tort liability, such as schools, from having to obtain liability coverage when acquiring a license for a child care facility. – Act 286 by Rep. Charlotte Douglas, R-Alma, and Hester, which authorizes school superintendents to add hours to regular school days to make up for days canceled due to weather or other circumstances. – Act 345 by Cozart, which reduced from four to two the hours of annual training required of superintendents and others with school budget responsibilities. The act also authorizes the Department of Education to require additional training for administrators with accounting responsibilities in districts with financial problems. – Act 44 by Sen. Blake Johnson, R-Corning, and Lowery, which reduces the number of teacher development days from 10 to a minimum of six. – Act 143 by Sen. Eddie Joe Williams, R-Cabot, which allows school superintendents to delay a school’s start time until 10 a.m. or release the school for the day as early as 1 p.m. up to five times a year due to emergency inclement weather. – Act 1240 by Rep. Reginald Murdock, D-Marianna, which allows school districts to petition the State Board of Education for all or some of the waivers granted to an openenrollment public charter school that draws students from the school district. – Act 247 by Clark, which allows for additional compensation for teachers in grades 7-12 who elect to teach more than the maximum number of students permitted by the standards of accreditation. Successful opposition Bills that failed, were withdrawn or died that ASBA opposed included: – House Bill 1054 by Rep. Nate Bell, R-Mena, which would have required governing bodies to record all executive sessions and appoint a custodian to hold the recording for one year and provide it to authorities in the event of an investigation. It authorized legal counsel to be present at executive sessions. – House Bill 1984 by Bell, which would have made the unlawful calling of an executive session a Class A misdemeanor and made the offender ineligible to hold an elective office or be publicly employed by any department of the state, for life. The bill passed the House but was later withdrawn. – House Bill 1050 by Rep. Kim Hendren, R-Gravette, which would have set school board member terms at three years instead of the current three to five. – House Bill 1052 by Rep. Hendren, which would have prohibited school districts from joining an organization that doesn’t hold all meetings open to the public and doesn’t allow for public comment before adopting policy changes. The bill was not aimed at ASBA but would have affected it. – House Bill 1243 by Lowery, which would have permitted private school students to participate in public school interscholastic activities in the same manner as home school students are allowed, provided the student’s private school does not offer the same activity. – House Bill 1827 by Lowery, which would have established parents’ right to direct the education, health care and moral or religious training their minor... Farmington SchoolofDistrict children. It also required a parent’s written consent for the state to make a biometric scan, test blood, or make a picture or voice recording. – House Bill 1958 by Rep. Charles Armstrong, D-Little Rock, which would have reduced National School Lunch Act state funding by 2 percent and set aside those funds to support the Positive Youth Development Grant Program. – Senate Bill 870 by Sen. Hendren, which would have prohibited school districts from joining or using district funds to pay membership dues to Arkansas extracurricular activity organizations that are not governed by a board appointed by the governor. ASBA opposed the bill because it would have forced the AAA to completely change its bylaws and governance structure or cease to exist. – Senate Bill 958 by Sen. Jake Files, R-Fort Smith, and Rep. Andy Davis, R-Little Rock, another bill aimed at the AAA that would have prohibited public schools from participating in an organization that governs athletics if the organization distinguishes between public and private schools when classifying schools for conference play in certain sports competitions. for K-12 public school purposes from using targeted advertising based on certain personal student information obtained during the use of the service. – Senate Bill 76 by Hester and Rep. Jim Dotson, R-Bentonville, which would have allowed a public school class to exceed maximum size one semester per year if it began the semester in compliance and doesn’t exceed the maximum by more than 10 percent. – Senate Bill 365 by Sen. Gary Stubblefield, R-Branch, which would have exempted from the Freedom of Information Act the emergency and security plans of public schools. ASBA neutral on these acts Noteworthy acts that passed where ASBA was neutral included: – Act 560 by Clark, which extends inBetter luck next time? definitely the state’s school choice law, thatto ASBA supported that did passed in 2013, with minor changes. A Bills Place Learn & Create. not pass included: – Act 739 by Sen. Hendren, which – House Bill 1913 by Rep. Charlotte lets the state Division of Public School Douglas, which would have required Academic Facilities and Transportathe Commission for Arkansas Public tion provide facilities funding to charter CLIENT Schools and Transportation to annuschools.FOCUSED CONSTRUCTION www.eastharding.com ally determine which schools qualify as – Act 160 by Rep. Hendren, which high-growth schools. requires public elementary schools to – House Bill 1961 by Rep. Greg Led- teach cursive writing beginning in the ing, D-Fayetteville, which would have 2015-16 school year. Continued on next page prohibited online services used primarily EAST-HARDING Farmington School District ... A Place to Learn & Create. EAST-HARDING CLIENT FOCUSED CONSTRUCTION www.eastharding.com Report Card June 2015 13 Legislative session – Act 372 by Lowery and English, which lowers the minimum attendance requirements for a new school district to 2,500 students from 4,000. It also removes the provision allowing the creation of a new district via detachment of territory from an existing district. – Act 833 by Rep. Bill Gossage, R-Ozark, which allows approved public school personnel to administer diabetes medication. – Act 941 by Rep. Dan Douglas, which allows school districts to sell advertisements on school buses. – Act 141 by Sen. Cecile Bledsoe, R-Rogers, which increases from six weeks to seven weeks the maximum vacation time for schools that operate on 12-month calendars. – Act 394 by Sen. Terry Rice, RWaldron, and Rep. Marcus Richmond, R-Harvey, which allows school districts to donate real property to incorporated towns, in addition to other entities to which they are currently authorized to donate. – Act 1260 by Elliott, which creates an alternate diploma and implements a statewide re-engagement system for students 16 years or older with less than 50 percent of graduation credits for the appropriate grade level. – Act 1105 by Sen. Jimmy Hickey, RTexarkana, and Rep. Charlotte Douglas, which removes the grade point average requirement for students to qualify for the lottery-funded Arkansas Academic Challenge Scholarship Program, reduces the freshman award from $2,000 to $1,000, and increases the sophomore award from $2,000 to $3,000. The award changes were made to save costs by reducing the amount spent for students who remain in school for only one year while rewarding students who successfully are furthering their education. – Act 1268 by Elliott, which clarifies a law passed in 2013 requiring schools to screen students in grades K-2 for dyslexia and to intervene when necessary. (For more, see cover story, page 20.) Building our children’s future by building better schools. baldwinshell.com 14 June 2015 Report Card Rogers • Little Rock • Jonesboro 479-845-1111 501-374-8677 870-910-5400 Are schools liable when arming staff? Generally no, unless district is found to be deliberately indifferent in its policies Mass school shootings have stunned the nation and frightened parents, and Arkansas has not been immune. In 1998, two students at the Westside Middle School near Jonesboro killed four students and a teacher. Protecting children from harm must be schools’ first concern, but they, like any other entity, must also consider the legal ramifications of their actions. Could schools be liable when a mass shooting occurs on their campus? Could they be liable if they try to prevent a mass shooting by arming staff members, and then somebody makes a mistake? The answer to both questions is, no in most cases. Historically, the courts have been reluctant to impose an affirmative duty on a property owner to protect a resident or patron from the criminal activity of a third person. Likewise, the United States Supreme Court has ruled that a state does not have a due process duty to protect citizens, and it specifically said such about schools in a 1995 ruling. However, courts have recognized two exceptions: a special relationship, and a state-created danger. The special relationship exception exists when the state has so restrained an individual through institutionalization or incarceration that he or she is unable to protect himself or herself. In these cases, the state must assume some responsibility for that individual’s safety and well-being. Although litigants often have claimed that schools hold a special relationship with students (typically by asserting state compulsory attendance laws and the in loco parentis role the school maintains), courts have declined to impose this exception in the public school setting. In 2012, the Fifth Circuit Court reaffirmed decades of precedent in holding that public schools do not take students into custody and keep them there against their will in the same way that a state takes into its custody by Jay Bequette ASBA General Counsel prisoners, involuntarily committed mental health patients and foster children. The second exception is the state-created danger rule, when a state places an individual in danger that the individual otherwise would not have faced, and then so fails to protect that individual that it would “shock the conscience,” as the Seventh Circuit ruled in 2007. Otherwise, a political subdivision such as a local school district may only be found liable when it commits an act for which it is actually responsible. So no, generally a school district is not liable in a school shooting. When it comes to arming school personnel, districts should be relatively safe from liability as well. If something bad happened – a faculty member accidentally shot a student while responding to an attack, for example – plaintiffs likely would argue that the school failed to properly train or supervise its armed personnel. But the bar would be high. A plaintiff must allege more than that the entity is responsible for the training; proof of culpability and causation must be demonstrated. The plaintiff must show the state actor consciously adopted the policy with deliberate indifference to the plaintiff’s constitutional rights, which requires the governmental entity disregarding a known or obvious consequence of its actions. It is more than mere negligence. Only where the need for more or different training is obvious can the state actor be reasonably said to have been deliberately indifferent. Furthermore, a plaintiff must establish a pattern and practice of failing to train. Proof that an isolated employee was not properly trained is insufficient to establish liability, nor is it enough to prove that an injury could have been avoided if an employee had received better training or additional training. Liability will not arise even if the plaintiff shows that the state employee made a mistake unless other evidence of a failure to train or supervise exists. Based on court rulings, districts should not let liability concerns prevent them from arming staff members. However, administrators and school board also have other concerns. They must decide how to protect students based on their own district’s and community’s needs and values. Each school district is different, but the law is consistent. If your staff is trained, you probably won’t be liable. Sport Court The world’s largest court builder. Patti LaFleur www.sportcourt.com (501) 316-2255 [email protected] Report Card June 2015 15 Commissioner Johnny Key JOHNNY KEY, the state’s new education commissioner, speaks after being introduced by Gov. Asa Hutchinson as Hutchinson’s preference to serve as education commissioner. The education commissioner is appointed by the State Board of Education but serves at the pleasure of the governor. From adequacy to excellence The state’s new education commissioner hopes to move the target higher By Steve Brawner Editor The new Arkansas commissioner of education is not a career educator, but he says his life experiences will serve him well as he tries to lead the state from adequacy to excellence. As chairman of the Senate Education Committee, former state Sen. Johnny Key, a Republican, gained a reputation as a conciliator willing to work with all sides and change his own legislation to find common ground – even when he didn’t have to do so. But under Arkansas law, he was barred from becoming commissioner because he didn’t have 10 years of experience in education – didn’t have any, in fact, though he did once own a day care. Legislators changed that law because Key was Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s preferred choice to lead the Arkansas Department of Education. Key will need all of the skills he developed as a legislator – and then some. Because of the state’s takeover of the district, he effectively is a one-person Little Rock School Board – and the school board for several other districts. He also inherits a number of other challenges – among them a changing legisla- Your Solution for Facility Services - Custodial - Maintenance - Grounds Why GCA Education Services? • Reduced Costs - Savings of 15% too 25%% vs. In House Programs • Cleaner and Safer f Buildings with Reduced Administrative Burden • Currently Providing Services to 15 Arkansas School Districts • CCustomized usttomi us omizzed SSolutions olutions TTailored a red ailo e to Your Y District • DDedicated, ediccated, Highly Trained edi Trained Resources Resources Re • Local Expertise Backed by Regional and National Support FFor more iinformation f ti on how h GCA can help h l your district, contact Jim Heatherly: (865) 705-8062 [email protected] @GCAServices & Facebook.com/GCAServicesGroup 16 June 2015 Report Card tive culture as memories of the Lake View case recede. Report Card sat down with Key in his temporary office behind the Capitol to discuss his role and to ask what he means when he says it’s time to move beyond adequacy to excellence. You’ve been in office almost a month. What have you learned so far? “The level of activity, the intensity of activity here is greater than I had even imagined – just the time, the energy that it takes. You’re going all the time. There are many days that we look around, and it’s 4 o’clock and it’s like no one had lunch. It’s just that kind of a pace over here.” What’s the plan with Little Rock right now? (Editor’s note: This question was asked the day before the resignation of the district’s interim superintendent, Dr. Dexter Suggs, and before Key hired Baker Kurrus as superintendent. For comments from Key about Kurrus, see page 7.) “What I’ve told the State Board, and which I believe, is that there’s not a singular plan that you could point to for what’s going on to address the needs in the six academic distress schools. Little Rock needs a more holistic approach to solving issues in those six schools but also in the other schools that face very similar challenges. ... “It would be unreasonable to think that what we need to do to address problems in Little Rock is just at those six schools. Those are the focal points. Those are the priorities, but also looking at what’s going on elsewhere and also looking at the pipeline, you’ve got kids from Baseline, they go to Cloverdale, (and then) they go to McClelland, generally, according to the district folks. All three of those schools have been classified as in academic distress, so you have to get into that pipeline. You have to start correcting those things. But then you look at the feeder patterns at the other schools. It’s like, OK, where do these kids go? ... “I went to a lunch at the invitation of some business people a couple of weeks ago, and they all sat there at the table, and the discussion was, what can we do to help turn education around in Little Rock – not just these schools, but all the schools that are struggling? We visited for about an hour, an hour-and-a-half. “Then I went across town, went to ... (a) community center over near Central High, and had a meeting of another totally different organization – community people, folks who might have been on the different end of the political spectrum, and the conversation was the same. What can we do to help turn Little Rock schools around? “My point to that second group was, look, if you’re having this conversation and asking these questions, and this other group over there is asking these same questions, at some point all these groups that are distrusting of each other need to sit down in the same room and have that conversation together. Ask those same questions in each other’s presence, and there might be some ability to find common ground and develop, (and) I think that those groups are going to start looking for those opportunities to do that.” The question about you taking this job was, he’s never been an educator. Is that a fair concern? “I understand the concern. And I guess a comparison could be made to, if you go to a hospital, and you know you’re going to get care, do you care if the hospital administrator, the CEO of the hospital, was a doctor or a medical professional? We have a lot of highly regarded, respected education professionals here, and this position is the CEO for this agency. My task is directing and bringing all of that expertise to bear on problems and the difficulties, the challenges and the improvements that we want to make in education. So that’s how I see my role. Having had the educators in this traditionally, in this role in the past, I can understand why Continued on next page Report Card June 2015 17 Commissioner Johnny Key there would be some doubts, but I’m very happy with the team that is already in place over here, so helping them to do their job to the best of their ability is the role that I see myself in. ... Working with people that have different opinions, bringing together different points of view, that is experience that I do bring to the job.” Can you work with school boards, or do you need to do that? “Well, the school boards are made up of people who are everyday walks of life people. They’re the people that I worked with when I was over in the Legislature. But again, you have school board folks. You’ve got teachers. You’ve got administrators, and then the administrators, you’ve got varying levels of administrators, and all of them bring some different facet of the educational system. Working within all of those, working to bring all those facets into something that makes sense and it moves the state forward, I think that’s what the governor has asked me to do in leading this agency.” Under the law, you must have a deputy commissioner with the same qualifications as the old commissioner. Will you have to scramble to find someone to fill that position? “You know, a good CEO is always looking for good talent, and knowing that in this case you have to find someone that meets certain statutory requirements, obviously I’ve been looking and talking about folks who may be out there that are open to an opportunity like this. It’s different from the standpoint of the statute. It’s no different from what Dr. (Tom) Kimbrell had to deal with, with different assistant commissioners who went on to get positions at other school districts. So making sure that we’re aware of the talent pool that’s out there, that’s something I think I need to do all the time anyway.” There’s been this Lake View-induced consensus for the past 12 years. Is that still there, or are cracks forming in that consensus? “I think there’s some restlessness out there. ... You know, back in the times 18 June 2015 Report Card when there was a 2 percent across-theboard COLA (cost of living adjustment) for the matrix, at that time, there was concern that that’s not enough in certain areas. This time, the adequacy committee went line by line through there to see what changes need to be made. There were some that were reduced. Some were increased. You know, you have the teacher salary schedule that was bumped up. So whether that restlessness turns into any kind of action, or any kind of move by districts to challenge the funding formula as it is right now, again, that’s something that could happen any time.” Are the days of the automatic COLA over? “It’s entirely up to the General Assembly and to the committees. You have with the exception of maybe two members, you have maybe a handful at most members over there who were around during the post-Lake View III ruling, the 2003-2004 session and then the tweaks that were made after the masters’ reports in ’05 and ’07. So the base of the foundation of knowledge that’s over there is very light, so they’re going to be looking at things through a different lens. You have a lot of new members there that are former school teachers or employees or coaches or board members or whatever, so there’s a little different lens in how they view the notions of adequacy and the funding formula and all through the lenses they bring to it. You can’t predict at this point how that’s going to proceed.” There’s a sense among other interests that K-12 has been showered with money for years, and we just can’t keep ignoring these other issues. Are you watching that? Do you see that? “Oh, yeah, absolutely watching that because you can hear some of the comments by legislators now (saying) things that we were very careful not to say about the availability of funds, because Lake View was clear. We implemented a doomsday clause that said funding for education would be held harmless (even) if we have to cut everything else. They don’t have the experience of going through that, so you have to keep reminding. One of our jobs in the department is to remind legislators that it doesn’t matter – tax cuts, highways, private option, prisons, any of those things are secondary to the constitutional duty to provide an adequate and equitable education, and we just have to repeat that over and over.” There’s a lot of intellectual energy among Republican school reformers. Can you bridge the gap between those legislators and the education establishment? “Yeah, I think I can. I think I’m going to have to. And what you describe is not necessarily a partisan divide. I see Republicans who because of their background coming from a school background, public education background, they’re not open to a lot of the reform ideas. They’re OK up to a point, but they may draw a line with vouchers or some of the things that others who are over there may want to do. And then you have Democrats now who are looking at charter waivers for instance, and saying, hey, let’s make these charter waivers available to the public schools. So the diversity of opinions on that does not follow along hard political party lines. “What I think I’ve been successful in doing is getting folks in a room looking eyeball to eyeball, laying out their ideas, their concerns, their complaints, all the things on the table and seeing what’s out there on the table and then building from that. And it’s not just legislators. You look at the different organizations that are out there, and I think Dr. Prothro in testimony on a couple of different bills, he talked about, ‘It is a philosophical difference.’ Philosophical differences are going to be there, and we can overcome them ... if the groups are willing to talk up front. “You know, you can’t wait ‘till the session for that to happen. That’s the challenge many times is that groups who want to do something wait until the session or very close to the session, and they roll out something that may be a significant departure from the tradition, and if there’s been no discussion, no background of it, then we end up with pretty significant legislative battles. What I have talked to different stakeholders about is, hey can we just get together, starting this summer, so that we don’t end up with some huge disagreement in the session, just talk about the goals? What are the goals for access to charter facilities, or access to school facilities for charters? What are the goals for waivers for public schools that could get some of the same waivers as charter schools? And get kind of a consensus of the groups knowing that at some point in time, there might be some issues that fall out, and you just say, ‘OK, we know we’re going to fight over those. We know we’re going to oppose each other, so we’re going to set those over here. Let’s talk about the things that we might be able to work together on.’” You’ve talked about moving from adequacy to excellence. What do you mean by that? “We in Arkansas since ’03, everything we’ve done, the formula and all that, fulfilling the constitutional mandate, we’ve talked about adequacy. ... Adequacy, I view it as a legal concept that we are under the eyes of the law providing an adequate education, and we do that through the funding formula. ... Excellence in my view is getting those students prepared to move on to that next stage, and doing it in a way that they are productive members of their community, that they have the ability to pursue the next step, whether it be their career or pursuing an education, and it’s not necessarily tied to a dollar amount.” What is standing in the way of excellence? “I think a lot of time it’s leadership. Not saying that the people we have in place aren’t good leaders, but many times ... just the responsibilities of dealing with running school gets in the way of having a vision of promoting and encouraging and finding that excellence in their own district, in their own building. And a lot of that is because of the requirements that are put upon them by some regulatory scheme like the federal government has, and we have to do what the federal government tells us with regards to those regulations. So it’s trying to help and encourage those leaders at the district and building level to refocus on finding those programs that they can demonstrate and that they can show the rest of the state (that) we’re doing excellence here, too. And if they’re not, what can they do to make that happen?” ARKANSAS’ SUBSTITUTE TEACHER SOLUTION Currently providing trained substitute teachers to over 60% of Arkansas Public Schools. To find out how we can be your substitute teacher solution call 1-800-641-0140. Report Card June 2015 19 Cover / Flippin’s dyslexia program INTERVENING. Juanell Potter works with student Thomas Gravely at Flippin Elementary School. Potter, who calls her work “by far the greatest job I’ve ever had,” has a special motivation: Her husband and two of her children have dyslexia. Her daughter would tell her “I’m stupid” during nightly homework wars. Now she’s an honors student. No child left behind – really In Flippin, students who have struggled with dyslexia are getting the help they need – and now are achieving By Steve Brawner Editor FLIPPIN – Superintendent Dale Query has spent more than four decades in education, and one thing that has remained constant is smart enough kids struggling in school and often becoming discipline problems. He and his fellow educators in Flippin long have looked for the key to helping those students reach their potential. Now they think they’ve found it. Many of those students have dyslexia, and with the right assistance, they can overcome it. 20 June 2015 Report Card “For us, this is the single most important intervention I have ever seen in not only my school district but any school in my 40 years as an educator,” Query said. “It has positively affected more kids in a short amount of time than anything we have ever done.” Ask the average person what dyslexia is, and they’ll probably say it has something to do with mixing up letters. The International Dyslexia Association describes it as a learning disability affecting reading and other language-based skills. While the causes of dyslexia are not fully known, studies have found differences in a dyslexic person’s brain development and functioning. People with dyslexia tend to struggle with identifying sounds within words and under- standing how letters represent sounds. The association’s website says that as much as 15-20 percent of the population “have some of the symptoms.” “Giving them a spelling test on Friday is the equivalent of giving you 30 ATM codes a week, having you memorize them, take the test on Friday, and giving you a new set on Monday,” Flippin Elementary Principal Tracie Luttrell said. “It doesn’t mean anything to them. They’re just memorizing a sequence of letters.” How do you feel when you can’t master a skill that comes easier to others? Frustrated? Like you want to quit? That’s how these students feel. Amy Gilley, curriculum director, said students know they are falling behind their peers just wanted to express how proud I am of our school. The teachers, principals, and the “ Istaff are wonderful. The Susan Barton system is already making a huge difference in our kids. They have gone from average C students to all A’s. Thank you and everyone that is part of making the school enjoyable this year. It is such a joy to hear that they love school now. I just want to let you know that we appreciate everything you do!! ” - Text from a parent and eventually decide their teachers can’t help them. To make matters worse, Luttrell said teachers tell parents that their kids are intelligent, that they know the answer but just won’t write it on paper. The adults decide that the student is just being lazy. “And so parents push, teachers push, and kids are giving all that they can,” Luttrell said. “So this child in particular, just like a lot of our kids, 10:30, 11 o’clock at night (he’s) doing homework. He’s in tears. Parents are in tears. Everybody’s just trying to get something on the paper, when in reality he was having trouble getting it to the paper.” A break from the past In the past, Luttrell would dismiss parents who came to her saying their child had dyslexia. She had been trained that the condition was a myth. The students would be placed in reading intervention programs, and if that didn’t work, they would be tested for special ed. Then in the fall of 2013, a school employee brought her grandchild to the elementary office and said the child was dyslexic. This time, Luttrell decided to attend a three-hour inservice training in Springdale, and something clicked. “As I sat there,” she said, “I started basically listening to that. I could see students that I’d had in the classroom over the years. ... I could start seeing those kids that are frequent fliers to my office for discipline issues. I have teachers at the end of the year who have given blood, sweat and tears. They’re in tears literally because they have looked everywhere they can, they’ve talked to everybody they know, they’ve tried everything they know to get this kid where they need to be. By all intents and purposes, this kid looks like they should be able to excel. They’re smart. They’re trying. They just, they’re not getting it.” Luttrell, Gilley, and counselor Sherry Rainbolt spent weeks researching the condition, learning about intervention programs and comparing costs. They chose a method designed by dyslexia expert Susan Barton that starts at the basic level of sounds as the building blocks of reading. It’s multi-sensory, so that students make brain connections through seeing, hearing and doing. In a room dedicated to dyslexia, students respond to hand motions by interventionists and drag tiles with letters down a magnetic board as they learn the sounds those letters make, and how those sounds in the right order lead to words. As their skills improve, they progress through 10 levels. Tiles for more advanced students feature groups of letters so their developing brains can make the connection that “o-l-d” always says “old,” including when it’s part of a longer word. Students also are drilled in English grammar rules until they know enough to put a magazine editor to shame. Do you know why “happy” has two “p’s,” and why “truck” ends in “ck” but “milk” needs only a “k”? These students do. Once the district decided to use the Susan Barton method, educators went to work making the program work for Flippin. Query estimates that two-thirds of the staff attended a Saturday training on their own time. Four interventionists – three at the elementary school and the other shared by the middle and high schools – began working with students in the spring semester. During a summer school program last year, 107 students (in a district of 800) voluntarily came to class twice a week for eight weeks for hourlong sessions, with no transportation provided by the district. The results? In that short training period, the students’ reading levels advanced from one to 27 months. One student, a consistent discipline problem, had been in alternative learning Continued on next page Report Card June 2015 21 Cover / Flippin’s dyslexia program classrooms in the fourth and fifth grades and had left the fifth grade reading at a little more than a beginning fourth grade level. After that summer, he started the sixth grade reading at a seventh grade level. Gilley, a former fifth grade teacher, had taught one student who was very bright in verbal conversation and had a big personality, but he had struggled since the first grade and was frustrated. She tried everything with him – twicea-week tutoring sessions, interventions, small groups. When he left for the sixth grade, she said, “I cried because I couldn’t help him. I had done everything possible.” She displays two examples of his work. The first was written at the beginning of his fifth grade year – an assignment where she had asked the class to write something about themselves. The student wrote a single, short paragraph about his “favorit” food being “chocolit” cake. The letters were poorly formed, the words were lightly written on the paper, and the spacing was uneven because of the time it took for his brain to process thoughts. Then she pulls out a writing sample from late in his seventh grade year: a two-page paper about hunting. The spelling and grammar are good, and his handwriting is clear and confident. The paragraphs have topic sentences. The thoughts are communicated clearly. A casual observer would not know the student has been diagnosed with a learning disability. Gilley recently was walking with the student after a tutoring session. He was meeting his dad, while she was headed to the gym to work the concession stand. Out of the blue, he told her, “I’m really starting to understand things now.” “For the first time in his life, he’s reading what the teachers are giving him,” she said. “He’s able to process the information and write down answers. His life is totally different – completely, 100 percent different because of the information that we discovered, the intervention that is helping his processing issue in his brain.” While the International Dyslexia Association says dyslexia is a lifelong condition, Query uses a strong descrip22 June 2015 Report Card BEFORE AND AFTER. The page on the left was written by a student with dyslexia early in his fifth grade year when given no restrictions. Teacher Amy Gilley helped him spell “delicious.” The page on the right was written by the same student late in his seventh grade year after less than two years of interventions. It goes on for another page. tor for the results he’s seeing at Flippin: “cured for life.” Students who were being left behind in school are catching up to their peers and will never fall behind again. Parents, naturally, are thrilled. Query displays a text from a dad with a picture of his daughter’s science test where she had scored an A+, signing it with “a very thankful parent.” Her mother told Gilley this was the first time her daughter had earned an A on anything in science. Another parent texted, “I just wanted to express how proud I am of our school. The teachers, principals, and the staff are wonderful. The Susan Barton system is already making a huge difference in our kids. They have gone from average C students to all A’s. Thank you and everyone that is part of making the school enjoyable this year. It is such a joy to hear that they love school now. I just want to let you know that we appreciate everything you do!!” “That’s the norm,” Luttrell said. Parents often cry because they finally have hope. They tell her the nightly homework wars are over. Overcoming dyslexia is a districtwide effort. Six full-time interventionists now are employed to work one-on-one with students with dyslexia markers. Meanwhile, the district took steps to make sure students with dyslexia don’t feel labeled. Bulletin boards feature famous people with the condition – the message being that the students aren’t “disabled.” They’re gifted. This kind of effort requires school board support, which is not a problem in Flippin. Board president Kirk Bryant was elementary principal for 35 years, so he has seen firsthand those same smart, struggling students Query saw. So far, paying for the program hasn’t been a problem. The district found itself with new state funding when its percentage of students eligible for free and reduced price lunches reached 70 percent. But if additional funds are needed, Bryant said the school board will find them. “With a program like that, how can we turn our back on it? We can’t. ... I don’t really know where it’s going to come from or how it’s going to come from, but if we have to dig an oil well out here in the field, let’s do it,” he said. Interventionist Juanelle Potter has a special reason for having what she calls “by far the greatest job I’ve ever had.” Her husband, a math whiz, and two of her children are dyslexic. Now her fifthgrade son, Raymond, is no longer falling behind his peers. “I thought I wasn’t that smart,” he said. He wants to be a mechanical engineer someday. This year, the daughter who would tell Potter “I’m stupid” was invited to the freshman honors banquet. “We would sit for hours after she would come home at the kitchen table with her homework, and I would just try to get her to process enough to put something down on paper, and we did the screaming and the crying and the fussing and the pulling teeth almost to try and get dyslexia in grades K-2, and in other grades where appropriate, and to intervene. The wording of the first law passed in 2013 led to some confusion as to how quickly districts were supposed to begin interventions. When the Arkansas Department of Education interpreted the law to speed up the timetable, districts scrambled. This year’s Act 1268 clarifies the previous law, including who can serve as dyslexia interventionists and therapists. Luttrell testified before legislators about the bill. What Flippin is doing is about to become a lot more common – by law. And as the movement spreads, Query imagines the impact it might have. He asks how many fewer students across America will require speech therapy, or need OVERCOMING. Student Tyler Garst works with tiles to better understand how letters and sounds special education, or be on make words with help from interventionist Debbie Stafford. medication. How many fewer that we can help them with, and they see adults will go to prison if given a chance her to get her lessons done and turn to reach their potential in school? hope,” she said. them in,” Potter said. “When we spread those numbers out Because of laws sponsored during For some students, the program will from Flippin, Arkansas, to the state of the past two legislative sessions by Sen. be the difference between reading well Arkansas to our nation,” he said, “dysJoyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, a retired and a lifetime of near illiteracy. But lexia intervention has the potential of teacher, school districts across the state Luttrell said the benefits have gone far reshaping our whole society.” will be required to screen students for beyond that small population. For the first time in her educational career, she’s ready to move students out of special education, which will allow those teachers to focus on those remaining in the classroom who really need to be there. Unexpectedly, some students are graduating out of speech therapy – the result of treating their root brain development issues rather than the symptoms. Meanwhile, students with mild dyslexic characteristics who were making “C’s” – and therefore not drawing much attention – are doing better in school. Counselor Sherry Rainbolt was seeing students with motivation, anger and . friendship issues prior to the district’s dyslexia program. It turned out that most of all three types had dyslexia markers. 8700 Remount Rd. Once they started receiving intervenNorth Little Rock, AR 72118 tion, those problems began to melt away. “Once they’re told that there’s a reason, (501) 835-3111 it’s instantaneous that they know, ‘Well, I’m not dumb. Nothing’s wrong with me, really.’ I mean, this is something Arkansas Department of Emergency Management Federal Surplus Property $$Saving you Money$$ Office furniture, musical instruments, vehicles, hand tools, and anything in between www.adem.arkansas.gov Report Card June 2015 23 EXECUTIVE SESSION with Alan Oldman By Steve Brawner Editor The Westside School District brings students from the communities of Cash, Bono and Egypt onto a single campus a few miles outside Jonesboro. School board member Alan Oldman points with pride to the new fine arts center, passed with the help of a millage increase he helped sell. Oldman works nights as a clinical laboratory scientist performing biopsies and tests at St. Bernard’s Medical Center. His hours make it easier for him to spend time on campus with the students – sometimes bringing a human brain as a teaching tool. Like everyone in the community, Oldman vividly remembers March 24, 1998, when two Westside Middle School students killed four classmates and a teacher and wounded 10. The shooting left a permanent mark on the school district, but Oldman says it has done what it can to ensure safety and wants to be known for more than that terrible day. Report Card sat down with Oldman at the high school to discuss Westside’s past, present and future. How did you get involved in school board service? “When my daughter first started school, I was involved in the parentteacher organization in elementary and served as vice president down there and president of that organization, and once she started to move to the middle school, fifth grade, I had thought about running for school board. I really enjoyed what I was doing with that and how we were making a difference and impacting the 24 June 2015 Report Card classroom and I thought, ‘OK, I can do this on a bigger scale, hopefully.’ And so that was my first thought when running for the board. Several people had approached me and asked me if I would consider it, and I did. ... I was in a runoff. There were four of us that ran for the position.” Was it hard to get everybody back together? Elections can be divisive. “No, no, I don’t think so. The other candidates and I had good friendships, good relationships, so that wasn’t a contentious thing or anything like that. No, I think it was fine. “I didn’t know, but at the time when I got on the board, it was my first meeting in November, and January we were put into fiscal distress. So as a patron running for the board, I didn’t know that was coming down the pipeline, so it was kind of like, ‘Oh, slap you in the face all of a sudden. Here we go!’ ... “It was a hard time. It was a hard time to be on the board. I know many nights I went home and asked my wife why in the world would anybody want to do this. I would tell her, ‘I need to hear it. I need to hear it.’ And she’d tell me, ‘You want to make a difference. You want to make a difference.’ And that’s one reason I wanted to run. ... And we got through that rough time, came out of fiscal distress. We’re in wonderful financial shape right now, being able to do all these things that we’re doing and adding programs. But that was a rough time, especially for a new board member.” How did you get out of fiscal distress? “We had a RIF (reduction in force) of a few employees, reorganized how we were doing things, looked at our finances, made a lot of cuts in that area, and then were able to get out of that, then were able to actually go back and offer all the employees at some point in time a position back. For the moment, it was a tough time for all of us. It was hard. But now then after it was over with, you got through all that turmoil and those situations, then we’re back in a good place and moving forward.” I wonder how your job as a clinical laboratory scientist affects the way you think as a school board member. “Well, I’ve been a manager of the lab, a supervisor of the chemistry department, so I’ve had those kind of leadership roles all my life in my profession, and I think that carries over into a school organization. It’s a business, from my perspective. We’re in the business of attracting kids, quality teachers, quality administrators, and so that process is kind of the same as how it is in the business world. “Obviously it’s a different situation here. We’re in the job of teaching kids and preparing them for the future. But I think there’s a lot of overlap in that area of how you manage things, how you manage the money, how you manage your budget, how you prepare your budget, plan for your budget, plan for the next year, what capital things you want to do, what projects you want to do. So that kind of goes along with the lab, what kind of capital projects do you want to budget for or what do you need, what gets us to the next level, what makes us more efficient?” not going on with the public whose tax dollars are paying for that school to function. And a lot of times they don’t have all the information or they have a piece of it, and people put their own spin on things a lot of times, and by the time it gets filtered down through, it has a different meaning than when it originally started. So I think that’s important as a board member to be that liaison between the community and the school to keep those lines of communication open where they have a good understanding, and we can answer those questions and solve things before they fester and become blown out of proportion and distorted from the true facts.” What about from the perspective of your job involving thinking of diseases like cancer, which is a problem best caught early. Does that affect the way that you think about school issues? “Sure, and I think that’s that way in the business world, too. You’ve heard that saying, ‘Nip it in the bud,’ you know, before it festers and becomes a huge problem. And maybe from the standpoint of as a board member, we answer to the patrons of the district so many times, and they question us why are we doing this, why are we doing that, or they may have part of the information, not all of the information; they’re upset about something. So I feel like a board member is a liaison between the school and whatever is going on or You represent three communities: Egypt, Bono and Cash. Are there special challenges bringing three separate communities together? “I think maybe not as much now as it was then when the consolidation began. Not being here at that time, I’ve heard there was a lot of animosity because when you consolidate, people are giving up control of their local school, and people are passionate about that, and I understand that, obviously. So I don’t really have that perspective from when actually the consolidation took place, but it still has its dynamics because each of those communities are represented, and we want to make sure that they’re all represented.” SPRINGDALE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAR-BER HIGH SCHOOL Continued, next page MID-SOUTH COMMUNITY COLLEGE JEREMY JACOBS HOSPITALITY CENTER WD&D: EXPANDING CAREER TECHNICAL EDUCATION BETWEEN K-12 TO TWO-YEAR COLLEGES LITTLE ROCK 501.376.6681 FAYETTEVILLE wddarchitects.com 479.442.6681 Report Card June 2015 25 Executive Session and a direction that they want to go in, and we can provide those foundations for them to do that or to pursue.” “ I think there’s a fine line. Yes, we’ve got to do those things that make our kids safe and feel safe and our staff feel safe, and our community thinks and knows that they’ve got a safe place to send our kids. But on the same hand ... you’ve got to have a little freedom, too, and not just feel like you’re in a prison every time you walk through the door. ” You passed a millage increase recently after the previous one had failed. How did you pass it the second time? “I think the key was, I stopped counting at 32 meetings. I mean, we just inundated folks. We wanted to tell you about it. If you wanted us to come to your group or organization, we wanted to. We wanted to let you know what we wanted to do and why we needed to do this, and I think that was the key. We went to each of those three individual communities as well, met in their community centers, their local town halls or whatever, and invited them to come in at nights, had meetings during the day, during the night. Whatever convenienced people, we made accommodations to do so, so we could get the word out. So I think that was the critical part right there.” The millage increase paid for a fine arts center and athletic facility, along with a kindergarten wing and cafeteria. Sometimes it can make it harder to sell the public on raising taxes for projects that are less obviously academic. “It does, but when you look at it, too, either kids are involved in some type of sports activity in school, or they’re involved in a fine arts program. ... Yes, it was a challenge to build a per se fine arts because it was hard to convince people that it was not just for the band and choir, which that was the perception because those were the organizations that were going to be in there. The main groups that were going to be in there are band and choir and drama. That had its own dynamic. The public had to trust us in telling them it’s not just for those 26 June 2015 Report Card programs. Yes, we’re putting them in there because that makes sense for them to be in there, but this facility is for the whole district. It’s for the community, too.” You’re expanding your agriculture program. “I can’t begin to tell you what all that teacher does out there. It’s just phenomenal how he gets (so much) done with those kids and the competitions that they go to. Everything that they do and they’ve accomplished is amazing. We’re turning kids away from that program because it’s not just about the welding and the wood shop like when I grew up in school, and that’s what agri was. It’s a whole new realm of things. It’s animal science. It’s vaccinations and testing and all kinds of things that are interesting to kids nowadays. And I think a lot of those classes too are along the tech career line, where I may not be a college-bound student, but those kind of tech classes that I can find my niche or what I like better and go that avenue.” In the age of No Child Left Behind, agriculture programs are the kind that have suffered in recent years, and you guys are going the other direction. “No Child Left Behind, I think that this kind of turns that around because ... it gives (students) lanes and avenues to go down that they didn’t have before. So where they thought that they had to go to college or not, now there are different lanes and different pathways that they can choose. I think that (this encompasses) No Child Left Behind. We’re doing this, and we’re expanding this so that there is no child left behind. Hopefully, (students) all can find a path You work nights. How do you work school board service into that? “(Laughs.) You know, actually, it’s really worked out well. My wife works days in a lab. She works in a lab, too, and I work nights. And we kind of did that with an intent that she would be there at night with our daughter, and I would be there during the day when she got out of school. By doing that, we were always able to be at whatever function she had. If it was during a school day, I can make up sleep. I’d get up and come to whatever it was she had at school. So the school board, the responsibilities of the school board kind of feel that same way.” When do you sleep? “Actually, I got off about five o’clock this morning, so I came home, slept ‘till about noon, got up and got my shower to come meet you. (Laughs.) And I do that a lot because I get asked to come up here a lot to the classrooms because what I do is interesting to kids, and so any time anybody asks me to, I just drop what I do and come do it. Like I said, I can make up sleep. That’s not a problem.” Editor’s note: Oldman later expounded on this topic in an email to Report Card. “I use my education and profession to hopefully inspire kids to dream and know they can accomplish their dreams and goals in life. I am in a position by working nights to be able to come to school and do presentations that I might normally wouldn’t be able to do. I will bring a human brain we have at the hospital for the kids in elementary, usually fourth grade, to hold and discuss the parts and functions and how amazing the brain actually is. It’s awesome to see the looks on their faces and how engrossed they become and want to learn. I will also bring culture plates and let the kids go around and swab different things; then they learn how to streak the plate, we incubate them overnight, and the next day I let them see what is growing on the plates, usually lots of bacteria. This then turns into a lesson on how important it is to wash your hands and have good hygiene. They are very grossed out with some of the stuff they see, but think it is awesome and it makes them realize things we just take for granted every day – how dirty the bottom of our shoes are, for example, and how we are carrying around all kinds of bacteria on them.” We have to talk about what happened with the school shooting at the Westside Middle School in 1998. Do you remember where you were when you heard the news? “I was at work. My wife and I, we worked in the same lab at that time, and one of our best friends that worked with us there got the call that her daughter was one of the girls that had been (wounded). I remember standing out in front of the office when she hung up the phone and told us. It was just like we couldn’t believe it. It was just devastating.” What was that like in the community and in the school district when that happened? “You always think that can’t happen here, but it can. It can happen in any school district. There’s no school district or any place that is immune. If somebody wanted to do a horrific act like that, they could do it. So, I don’t know that I could even give you words to describe how you feel and what you go through. It’s numbing. It’s very numbing. I remember at the time, everybody, you were just kind of to yourself, and you were just trying to absorb it. What just happened? How? Why? You ask yourself all those questions.” Did everybody come together? “Oh, yes. This community came together, pulled together. I remember the attitude at that time was, ‘This will not do us in. We will rise above this.’ And we have.” How much does that still color your district? “It probably will always have a lot of an effect on it. That’s just the way it’s going to be. I like to focus on what good has come out, how the community came together, how we banded and bonded, and it’s like one big family here. I think, usually in a tragedy, that’s what happens. A family comes together and (says), ‘We’ll get through this.’ And I think that’s exactly what this community did.” So how does that affect your views toward school security? “Well, we have a security officer on each campus – elementary, middle and high school. You have to be escorted into our building or signed in just like when you arrived. ... You don’t just have free roam of where you want to go in our school. We want to know you’re here, why you’re here, and who’s with you. “Now, is any security measure 100 percent perfect? No. It’s not. And do we want to get to the point where it feels like a prison? No. I think there’s a fine line. Yes, we’ve got to do those things that make our kids safe and feel safe and our staff feels safe, and our community thinks and knows that they’ve got a safe place to send our kids. But on the same hand ... you’ve got to have a little freedom, too, and not just feel like you’re in a prison every time you walk through the door.” When I searched online “Westside school district Jonesboro Arkansas,” I went through page after page and there wasn’t a lot about the shootings. “And when you did that before, that’s all you would see. I guarantee you that’s all you would see. But I’m glad to hear you say that because to me, that tells me that, ‘OK, that’s not what people relate us to.’ And that’s not what we want to be related to. We want to be related to that we provide your kid with a very good, quality education, and we have a great sense of family and community at this district that you’re not going to find anywhere else. That’s what we want to promote.” WE TURN MAJOR DISASTERS INTO MINOR SETBACKS. Disasters come in all shapes and sizes, but one common thread connects them all: afterward, you want to get your life back on track as fast as possible. At ALL-CLEAN USA, we understand that when we’re restoring your property, we’re restoring your life. That’s why we’re available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year – working quickly and stopping at nothing short of making everything like new. See how at AllCleanUSA.com or by calling 866-360-3473. LITTLE ROCK CONWAY HOT SPRINGS NW ARKANSAS JONESBORO MEMPHIS Report Card June 2015 27 Marketplace Stephens can help districts utilize state partnership funding The latest news from Report Card’s advertisers The Arkansas Division of Public School Academic Facilities and Transportation recently released its list of approved projects to receive partnership funding. Enacted in 2005, the program provides state financial participation for eligible academic facilities projects. As the funding amount is based on a wealth index, districts generally only receive a percentage of the total eligible cost of the project. Frequently, a district can utilize reserve funds to make up the difference. However, in some instances, the district may not have enough funds on hand to complete the project. In these cases, Stephens is available to discuss financing options that can assist the district in securing those funds. To learn more about how Stephens can assist your district, please contact Paula Morehead of Stephens Public Finance at 800.643.9691. Hight-Jackson is Bentonville West High School architect Hight-Jackson Associates is the architect of record for the second high school for the Bentonville School District. The school, designed for 2,000 students, is currently under construction and is scheduled to open in August 2016. Hight-Jackson collaborated with DLR Group on the design. The 437,621-square-foot facility includes: • Competition gymnasium and auxiliary gymnasium 28 June 2015 Report Card • Performing arts auditorium • Drama classroom with black box theater • Culinary arts program • Medical professions program • Broadcast journalism studio • Field house and indoor practice field The site development includes baseball/softball fields, 8-lane track, and football/soccer field combination. Crafton Tull donates surveying for Rogers elementary school Crafton Tull donated surveying services as well as monetary contributions to the recently opened outdoor classroom at Mathias Elementary School in Rogers. Crafton Tull’s mission statement is, “Improving communities through professional design and surveying ... one project at a time.” The firm has a history of helping schools teach students the importance of sustainable practices and civic responsibility. For more information, contact Crafton Tull at 479.636.4838, or visit craftontull.com. East-Harding opens Watson Chapel elementary campus East-Harding Construction celebrated the new year by opening the new Watson Chapel School District’s Edgewood Elementary K-1 campus. Designed by Dave Sadler (Nelson Architecture), the new $8.9 million, 50,000-square-foot K-1 school includes two new playgrounds, outdoor classroom, media center, and cafetorium, along with minor upgrades to the existing physical education facility. The three-phase project includes demolition of the old school for new bus drives. For more information about East-Harding, go to www.eastharding.com. Modus Studio designs E.A.S.T.’s national headquarters Modus Studio recently completed the new national headquarters for the Environmental and Spatial Technology (E.A.S.T.) Initiative, which provides technology and computer science training to students, educators and community members. The 14,000-square-foot facility in Little Rock will allow expanded professional development and training in high-end technology such as computer coding, GIS and GPS, 3D animation, and computer aided drafting. From concept to keys in hand, the project was completed in five months. Originally a compartmentalized insurance claims office, it consists of open, flexible spaces. For more information please visit www.modusstudio.com or call 479.455.5577. All-Clean to help districts with spring, summer storm cleanups The spring and summer weather are upon us, and that also means storm season is here as well. ALL-CLEAN USA is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week for all of a district’s weather emergencies due to tornadoes, heavy winds and rain, and structural damage to a school’s property. More information can be found at www.allcleanusa.com or by calling 866.360.3473. Beardsley can help with new funding, teacher salaries Musco provided a complete solution – from foundation to pole top. For more information, go to www.musco.com or call Jeremy Lemons at 501.249.8056. Districts will need to be even more diligent in managing expenses in the next couple of school years after this past legislative session, and First Security Beardsley Public Finance can help. Under Act 1248, public school districts will receive only $63 per average daily membership increase for the 201516 school year, and a $62 increase for the 2016-17 school year. Each of these figures represents less than a one percent increase from the previous year’s funding amount. Additionally, Act 1087 compounds the difficulty by increasing the minimum starting salary for teachers from $29,244 to $30,122 next year and to $31,000 in 2016-17. Additionally, the law increases all other salary schedule steps for both bachelor’s and master’s level teachers. To schedule a board finance workshop to discuss funding, call one of First Security Beardsley Public Finance’s professionals at 800.965.4644. For more information about the firm, go to fsbeardsley.com. Federal Surplus closing June 15-30 for inventory Musco lights reduce energy costs, glare at Pine Bluff field Musco’s Light-Structure Green™ lighting system is cutting energy consumption at Pine Bluff’s Taylor Memorial Field by 40 percent while significantly reducing glare for athletes. Youth across the state have played on this historic field since it was built in 1940. In preparation for hosting its seventh Babe Ruth World Series Game, city officials and the local Babe Ruth league needed to replace the existing lighting that produced excessive spill light and glare, consumed significant energy, and created constant maintenance headaches. Federal Surplus Property will be closed for inventory June 15-30 and will reopen Wednesday, July 1. School districts are asked to make necessary arrangements to obtain their Federal Surplus Property needs. The agency apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause and looks forward to serving school districts. For more information, call 501.835.3111. Five schools join Arkansas A+ network Five schools have joined the Arkansas A+ Schools network: Retta Brown Elementary in the El Dorado School District; Sylvan Hills Elementary and Tolleson Elementary in the Pulaski County Special School District; and two public charter schools, Arkansas Arts Academy High School and Lighthouse Academies. The schools will undergo training this summer to learn about the network’s arts-centered curriculum. To learn more or to observe the training, contact the office at 501.353.0832, or go to www. arkansasaplus.org. WD&D designing career tech facilities WD&D is on the cutting edge of career technical education in Arkansas. Its education team has worked across the spectrum of K-12 and higher education. It designs facilities for the state’s most innovative educators in K-12 and twoyear colleges who are preparing students for emerging workforce sectors. Careers in the culinary arts are highly desirable. WD&D works hard to keep Arkansas students hard at work. For more infor- mation, go to www.wddarchitects.com or call 501.376.6681 or 479.442.6681. Crossland is finishing Rogers’ tallest building With its cranes cutting through the skyline, Crossland Construction is rapidly constructing the tallest building in Rogers. The 10-story Hunt Tower is an approximately 260,000-square-foot class “A” office that is expected to create 300 jobs with room for 1,000 people once it is fully leased. This high performance building will be finished in only 14 months and will be opening its doors in fall 2015. Sport Court does floor work for top safe room Sport Court handled the floor work for an award-winning safe room/gym at the Ouachita School District. The facility, which features a P.E. gym and classroom, received the Arkansas Concrete Institute’s 2014 Award of Excellence in Concrete Construction in the under $6 million category. It was finished at the end of the 2013-14 school year. It was funded by FEMA, state partnership, and school district funds. For more information about Sport Court, call Patti LaFleur at 501.316.2255. Baldwin & Shell’s NLR construction progressing Baldwin & Shell is nearing completion of phase one of the state’s largest K-12 construction project. The North Little Rock School District projects include more than 900,000 square feet of renovated and newly constructed education space. Construction has been completed on three elementary schools and is ongoing in three additional elementary schools, a middle school and North Little Rock High School. All phases are scheduled to be completed on time and on budget in December 2016. Report Card June 2015 29 ASBA Commercial Affiliate Members Serving schools and school boards throughout Arkansas Ace Sign Company / Mark Bridges / 800.224.1366 / [email protected] / www.acesigncompany.com AdvancED Arkansas / Kenny Pennington / 888.413.3669, ext. 5620 / [email protected] / www.advanc-ed.org All Clean USA / Hayden Finley / 870.972.1922 / [email protected] / www.allcleanusa.com All-Storage Products, Inc. / Tom Garner / 501.666.8600 / [email protected] / www.allstorageproducts.com American Bus Sales / George Lewis / 818.205.5000 / [email protected] / www.americanbussales.net Arkansas Copier Center, Inc. / Bruce Blevins / 501.562.8297 / [email protected] / www.arkansascopier.com AR Dept. of Emergency Mgment. / Kathryn Mahan-Hooten / 501.835.3111 / [email protected] / www.adem.arkansas.gov ASBA - Workers’ Compensation & Risk Management Program / Shannon Moore / 501.372.1415 / [email protected] / www.arsba.org Baldwin & Shell Construction Company / Bobby Gosser, Jr. / 501.374.8677 / [email protected] / www.baldwinshell.com C.R. Crawford Construction / Richard Johnson / 479.251.1161 / [email protected] / www.crcrawford.com Capital Business Machines / Ben Higgs / 501.375.1111 / [email protected] / www.capbiz.com Central States Bus Sales, Inc. / Mike Wingerter / 501.955.2577 / [email protected] / www.centralstatesbus.com CertaPro Painters / Aaron Lewis / 479.587.1250 / [email protected] / www.fayetteville.certapro.com Chartwells School Dining / Verdelle Bowie / 615.374.8464 / [email protected] / www.compass-usa.com Cobb and Suskie, LTD / Michael Cobb / 501.225.2133 / [email protected] / www.cobbandsuskie.com Crafton Tull / Frank Riggins / 501.664.3245 / [email protected] / www.craftontull.com Cromwell Architects Engineering, Inc. / Jennifer Southerland / 501.372.2900 / [email protected] / www.cromwell.com Crossland Construction Co., Inc. / Chris Schnurbusch / 479.464.7077 / [email protected] / www.crosslandconstruction.com David H. Frieze Assoc., Inc. / Paul Frieze / 501.922.9704 / [email protected] East-Harding Construction / Christina Lusk / 501.661.1646 or 479.287.7333 / [email protected] / www.eastharding.com Educational Benefits, Inc. / Lisa Boone / 501.212.8926 / [email protected] First Security Beardsley Public Finance / Scott Beardsley / 501.978.6392 / [email protected] / www.crewsfs.com/beardsley Fisher Tracks, Inc. / Jordan Fisher / 515.432.3191 / [email protected] / www.fishertracks.com Freedom Roofing Solutions Inc. / Jeannie Williams / 501.796.2061 / [email protected] / www.freedomroofingsolutions.com Gabbart Communications / Brian Allen / 580.921.9333 / [email protected] / www.gabbart.com GCA Services Group / Jim Heatherly / 888.588.0863 / [email protected] / www.gcaservices.com Generation Ready / Michael Ward / 501.515.9353 / [email protected] / www.generationready.com Grasshopper Company / Connie Estep / 620.345.8621 / [email protected] / www.grasshoppermower.com Harco Constructors / Ed Lowry / 501.351.7757 / [email protected] / www.harco.net Hight-Jackson Associates, P.A. / Liz Cox / 479.464.4965 / [email protected] / www.hjarch.com Houghton Mifflin Harcourt / James Machen / 225.240.2753 / [email protected] / www.hmhco.com Jackson Brown Palculict Architects / Misty Snell / 501.664.8700 / [email protected] / www.jbparchitects.com KLC Video Security / Bill King / 903.792.7262 / [email protected] / www.klcvideosecurity.com Kronos, Inc. / Karen Bailey / 978.244.6376 / [email protected] / www.kronos.com Lifetouch National School Studios, Inc. / Phillip Martin / 501.664.5550 / [email protected] / www.lifetouch.com LifeTrack Services, Inc. / Cassie Dunn / 800.738.6466 / [email protected] / www.lifetrack-services.com Midwest Bus Sales, Inc. / Tim Toolen / 479.474.2433 / [email protected] / www.midwestbussales.com Milestone Construction Company / Kelli Gemmell / 479.751.3560 / [email protected] / www.mstonecc.com Nabholz Construction Corporation / Jake Nabholz / 501.505.5126 / [email protected] / www.nabholz.com National Playground Compliance Group / Darwin Sharp / 866.345.6774 / [email protected] / www.playgroundcompliance.com Preferred Meal Systems, Inc. / Tom Romano / 717.321.4141 / [email protected] / www.preferredmeals.com Pro Benefits Group, Inc. / Gary Kandlbinder / 501.321.0457 / [email protected] / www.pbfsi.com Quality One Painting / Troy Hudson / 501.664.3083 / [email protected] Rave Mobile Safety/ Don Basler / 508.532.8935 / [email protected] / www.ravemobilesafety.com Raymond James / David Fortenberry / 501.671.1238 / [email protected] / www.raymondjames.com School & Office Products of AR, Inc. / Scott Greene / 501.663.5500 / [email protected] / www.school-officeproducts.com Seon / Marsha Severyn / 877.630.7366 / [email protected] / www.seon.com Southern Bleacher Company / Carla Herndon / 800.433.0912 / [email protected] / www.southernbleacher.com Sport Court / Patti LaFleur / 501.316.2255 / [email protected] / www.sportcourtsouth.com Stephens Inc. / Jason Holsclaw / 501.377.2297 / [email protected] / www.stephens.com SubTeachUSA / Tammy Winn / 870.239.6608 / [email protected] / www.subteachusa.com The Interlocal Purchasing System (TIPS/TAPS) / Mickey McFatridge / 870.926.9250 / [email protected] / www.tips-usa.com The Learning Institute / LisaWalker / 501.760.5525 / [email protected] / www.tli.net The Playwell Group, Inc. / Jeff Popenoe / 501.625.7529 / [email protected] / www.theplaywellgroup.com Trammell Piazza Law Firm, PLLC / Chad Trammell / 870.779.1870 / [email protected] / www.trammellpiazza.com Van Horn Construction / Chad Weisler / 479.968.2514 / [email protected] / www.vanhornconstruction.com Virco, Inc. / Bruce Joyner / 501.908.9461 / [email protected] / www.virco.com Voyager Sopris Learning / Farrah Lemoine / 337.258.1323 / [email protected] / www.voyagersopris.com Whatley Sign Company / Brittney Spriggs / 870.773.2139 / [email protected] / www.whatleysign.com Witsell Evans Rasco / Eldon Bock / 501.374.5300 / [email protected] / www.werarch.com Wittenberg, Delony & Davidson, Inc. / Glen Woodruff / 501.376.6681 / [email protected] / www.wddarchitects.com 30 June 2015 Report Card Take care and God bless Editor’s Note: Jerry Don Woods has resigned from the Dardanelle School Board for family reasons and under ASBA’s by-laws can no longer serve as ASBA’s president (story, page 3). Here, he offers some lessons learned during more than 23 years of school board service. In 1991 a dear friend of mine, Dr. Jerry Hodges, suggested that I consider running for the Dardanelle School Board. He had been a member of the board during some turbulent times. His experiences combined with his familiarity with my personality led him to suggest that I should try my hand at the office. I had never considered that role, and the idea of placing my name on a ballot along with someone else and asking people to pick between us was a bit intimidating. But as I considered the idea I asked myself the question, “What’s the worst that could happen?” Little did I know that this recommendation would start me on a journey that would be life-changing. Before my first meeting, and for several more to come, I remember praying, “God, please don’t let me mess this up.” Since I have resigned my position on the Dardanelle board and this is my last Report Card article, I thought I would share some lessons that I have learned over the years in hopes that it might be helpful to some of you. School board governance is the only elected position in our society that cannot become political. In recent years we have seen partisan politics become a spectator sport, as each party has fought for a majority so it could have its way. As a result, we have witnessed concepts such as No Child Left Behind create such an emphasis on objective metrics that children’s needs ultimately fell through the cracks. As everyone raced to the top, children were left in the starting blocks. School board members and their superintendent and principal colleagues stood in the gap and protected children’s interests. When board leaders become chess pieces in the game of politics, children lose. When a board convenes, partisan by Jerry Don Woods Former ASBA President politics must be invited to leave the room, and children must take priority over all else. When it is time to hire a superintendent for your district, follow the phrase I once heard applied to premarriage therapy: “Choose wisely; treat kindly.” This person is not only the single most important person in your district according to the law, but he or she also is your best resource. Your relationship with your superintendent individually and as a board will directly influence the achievement of your children. Your role as a board member is not diminished by a strong superintendent. Neither is their role in any way undermined by a strong board/board member. Instead, both are elevated. Don’t be hesitant to engage this person. Like you, they are vested in the process. Hire the best principals you can afford. They not only set climate and strongly influence education culture, but they also are the instructional leaders in your buildings. Good ones can take timid rookie teachers and create inspirational world changers. Their role in student achievement is invaluable. And once you’ve hired them, support them to the limit. The decision to teach is a calling with divine implications. Insist on the best you can find, regardless of their relationships or popularity. William Arthur Ward said, “The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires.” Always insist on inspirational teachers, those that will encourage children to dream about what could be, not what the world tells them they must be. A bond forms among individuals who come together under a common cause of promoting the best interests of children. One of my favorite phrases comes from the old hymn by Thomas Grinfield, “Oh How Kindly Hast Thou Led Me.” It goes like this; “Oh how kindly hast Thou led me, Heavenly Father day by day. Found my dwelling, Clothed and fed me, Furnished friends to cheer my way.” Over the past few years as I have traveled the state and nation representing the state of Arkansas and the Arkansas School Boards Association, I’ve experienced many things. But one constant has remained – the encouragement of fellow board members to cheer me along the way. I’ll miss that. You’ve validated my efforts, and reinforced my resolve to defend public education, its children, teachers, administrators and staff. I will always be a passionate advocate for public education. But I’ll miss my friends. Take care. God Bless. Flippin Elementary School | Northwest Entry Flippin Elementary School | Aerial View Flippin Elementary School | Library Interior Report Card June 2015 31
Similar documents
March - Arkansas School Boards Association
Region 13: Erma Brown, Stephens Region 14: Katie Daniel, McGehee
More information