Bearcat Wrap-up Podcast - Week 29: The End of the 94th General Assembly
Episode Date: April 6, 2023Happy Thursday!We have a short week and a long weekend due to Good Friday. I hope you have had a good week despite the sadness that came from the loss of one of our students. Amanda Tolbert’s funera...l was today. Despite the somber mood, it was very good to see many of our school staff attending to offer support and condolences to the family. Many staff members have poured their time, energy, and emotion into that situation, and the district thanks them for that effort. Even though we are suffering heartache over losing a student, it does not deter our mission that is set for so many more students now and in the future.According to our district goals data, our efforts in the classrooms and offices continue on the same trends as they were before Spring Break. Attendance and discipline have been updated to include the weeks before and after Spring Break. Attendance rates remain close to the same and we are continuing to beat our goal for discipline. Our reading goal will be updated by the 18th, which is when our next board meeting will be.In this week’s Wrap-up, I will continue with more of the vision for the state from Secretary Oliva and update you on further developments with our salary schedule and the new minimum.Vision for Education in ArkansasSecretary of Education, Jacob Oliva, spent a couple of hours with superintendents and business managers at the coop to outline his vision for the state. Last week, I wrote about what he plans for ELA. This week, I will share his message about math and the new Value-Added Growth report.MathMany of us remember how Common Core Math created a lot of controversies and how much of that was related to how math instruction changed to meet the new standards. The strategies used to teach math have evolved to become more conceptual in order to help students understand how numbers work. There were some side effects to this. First, parents did not understand the strategies because, in the past, we were taught procedures for math. Our new strategies were confusing and many parents could not help their children. Second, the focus on concepts decreased math fluency practice and many basic math skills have been diminished. Our students are not as capable of using math facts as quickly and accurately as they need to in order to be prepared for work and life. Based on this information, the Secretary has charged our state department staff with rebuilding math standards and, just as with ELA, assessing those standards according to what students should have learned and constantly progress monitor. The standards will have a balance between math concepts and fluency and they will be expressed in a way that is easily understood by parents.Value-Added GrowthThe Secretary had the data scientists and code writers at the department create a data dashboard for schools to use. The dashboard is much more robust than the reports we have from the ACT Aspire even though it uses the same data. After the ACT Aspire, the dashboard will use the data from the Arkansas Teaching and Learning Assessment System (ATLAS).The dashboard will display data in graphs and tables to help us understand the academic growth of a school, a student, and a teacher. We will be able to pinpoint areas of excellence and areas of need at every level. It will be a powerful tool for data-based decision-making. Here are a few slides with examples of the data display and types. I also think that based on the way this system is designed that it will be what the state uses to pay its performance bonuses to teachers.This data is not as valuable now because the ACT Aspire is not aligned with Arkansas standards but this will change soon. When standards are built to be clear and concise and assessments are created to assess how well the students learned the standards. The data we get from this system will be very meaningful and informative to improve teaching and learning.Salary ScheduleThis issue has evolved since my plan was laid out for the board a couple of weeks ago. Superintendents and business managers from around the state, and especially within our coop, have collaborated to come up with a salary schedule that remains very similar to what we have and honor the daily rate of pay based on the new minimum without having to suffer a large increase in unfunded amounts. I will be scheduling meetings in the buildings starting next week to explain this to everyone and answer questions.Legislative UpdateSince the session is about to end, there has been a flurry of new bills. Here are some you may be interested in:* SB510 - Irvin - TO AMEND THE CRITERIA CONSIDERED IN A SCHOOL DISTRICT'S REDUCTION IN-FORCE POLICY. The current policy for RiF is based on seniority. This bill changes that requirement.* SB512 - Irvin - CONCERNING SCHOOL DISTRICT PERSONNEL POLICIES; AND CONCERNING A SCHOOL DISTRICT COMMITTEE ON PERSONNEL POLICIES. This bill requires that PPC meetings be recorded and made public.* SB556 - J. Dotson - TO CREATE THE RELIGIOUS VIEWPOINT ANTI DISCRIMINATION ACT. This bill protects students who express religious views in class or at school. * SB571 - J. English - TO AMEND THE ARKANSAS CODE TO CLARIFY WHICH INDIVIDUALS ARE REQUIRED TO DEMONSTRATE PROFICIENCY IN KNOWLEDGE AND PRACTICES OF SCIENTIFIC READING INSTRUCTION. This adds more special education teachers to the list.ClosingCongratulations to our Bearcat Band for the Superior rating they earned in the competition this week! Our FBLA students had an outstanding performance in their contests, too. Their competitions are based on real-world jobs and talents and it means a lot when our students are performing well. We have also recently recognized our assistant principals, librarians, and paraprofessionals and I want to thank all of them for their effort in helping us make Mena Schools successful at achieving our mission and vision.At Mena Public Schools our students are prepared, our staff is supported, and our community is confident.Have a great long weekend!! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bearcatwrap.substack.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Good afternoon and welcome to the week 29 wrap-up entitled the end of the 94th
General Assembly. Our legislators are supposed to end the session on Friday
culminating in the most impactful legislative session on education in 25
years. I'll get to more of that later but first happy Thursday. We have a short
week and a long weekend due to
Good Friday I hope you've had a good week despite the sadness that came from
the loss of one of our students Amanda Tolbert's funeral was today despite the
somber mood it was very good to see many of our school staff attending to offer
support and condolences to the family many staff members have poured their
time energy and emotion into that situation,
and the district thanks them for that effort.
Even though we are suffering heartache over losing a student,
it does not deter our mission that is set for so many more students now and in the future.
According to our district goals data,
our efforts in the classroom and offices continue on the same trends as they were before spring break.
Attendance and discipline have been updated to include the weeks before and after spring break.
Attendance rates remain close to the same and are continuing to beat our goal for discipline.
Our reading goal will be updated by the 18th, which is when our next board
meeting will be. In this week's wrap up, I'll continue with more of the vision for the state
from Secretary Oliver and update you on further developments with our salary schedule and new
minimum. The vision for education in Arkansas. Secretary of Education Jacob Bolivar spent a couple of hours with superintendents and business managers at the co-op to outline his vision for the state.
Last week, I wrote about what he plans for English language arts.
There's a link to that story in the text.
This week, I'll share his message about math and the new value-added growth report.
Math.
Many of us remember how common core math created a lot of controversies and how much of that
was related to how math instruction changed to meet the new standards.
The strategies used to teach math have evolved to become more conceptual in order to help
students understand how numbers work.
There were some side effects to this.
First, parents did not understand the strategies because, in the past, we were taught procedures for math.
Our new strategies were confusing to many parents, and they could not help their children.
Second, the focus on concepts decreased math fluency practice, and many basic math skills have been
diminished. Our students are not as capable of using math facts as quickly and accurately as
they need to in order to be prepared for work and life. Based on this information, the Secretary
has charged our State Department staff with rebuilding math standards and, just as with the
ELA, assessing those math standards according to as with the LA assessing those math
standards according to what students should have learned and constantly
progress monitor the standards will have a balance between math concepts and
fluency and that will be expressed in a way that's easily understood by parents
value-added growth the secretary had a data scientist had data scientists and understood by parents. Value added growth.
The secretary had a data scientist, had data scientists and code writers at the state department
create a data dashboard for schools to use.
The dashboard is much more robust than the reports we have from the ACT Aspire, even
though it uses the same data.
After the ACT Aspire, the dashboard will use the data from the Arkansas
Teaching and Learning Assessment System, or ATLAS. The dashboard will display data in graphs and
tables to help us understand the academic growth of a school, a student, and a teacher.
We will be able to pinpoint areas of excellence and areas of need at every level it will be
a powerful tool for database decision-making here there are a few
slides a link to a few slides in the text with examples of the data display
and types also think that based on this way based on the way this system is
designed that it will be what the state uses to pay its performance bonuses to teachers this data is not as valuable now as the ACT aspire is not as
valuable now because the ACT aspire is not aligned with Arkansas standards but
this will change soon when the standards are built to be clear and concise and
assessments are created to assess how well the students learn
the standards the data we get from this system will be very meaningful and informative to
improve teaching and learning salary schedule this issue has evolved since my plan was laid
out for the board a couple of weeks ago superintendents and business managers from around the state
especially within our co-op,
have collaborated to come up with a salary schedule that remains very similar to what
we have and honor the daily rate of pay based on the new minimum without having to suffer
a large increase in unfunded amounts.
I will be scheduling meetings in the buildings starting next week to explain this to everyone
and answer questions.
Legislative update.
Since the session is about to end, there have been a flurry of new bills.
Here are some you may be interested in, although I suggest that you go look at the entire list.
First is Senate Bill 510 is to amend the criteria considered in a school district's reduction in force policy.
The current policy for RIF is based on seniority.
This bill changes that requirement.
Senate Bill 512 concerning school district personnel policies and concerning a school district committee on personnel policies.
This bill requires that the PPC meetings be recorded and made public.
In Senate Bill 566, this is to create the Religious Viewpoint Anti-Discrimination Act.
This bill protects students who express religious views in class or at school.
In Senate Bill 561, to amend the Arkansas Code to clarify which individuals are required to demonstrate proficiency in knowledge and practice of scientific reading instruction this adds more special education teachers to the list in closing congratulations to our
Bearcat band for the superior rating they earned in the competition this week
our FBLA students had an outstanding performance in their contest too their
competitions are based on real-world jobs and talents and it means a lot when our students are
performing well. We've also recently recognized our assistant principals,
librarians, and paraprofessionals. I want to thank all of them
for their effort helping us make Mena schools successful at achieving our
mission and vision. At Mena schools, our students are prepared,
our staff is supported, and our community is confident. Have a great long weekend.