Arkansas ESSA Resources
Contact the Arkansas Department of Education
Tina Smith, Special Projects Director
Arkansas Department of Education
Office of Communications
Four Capitol Mall, Room 305-A
Little Rock, AR 72201
Phone: 501-682-3667
Email: tina.smith@arkansas.gov
What is the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)?
The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) was signed by President Obama on December 10, 2015, and reauthorized the 50-year-old Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the nation’s education law that provides opportunity for all students. Read the Every Student Succeeds Act at http://bit.ly/1TFr29X
As part of the Vision for Excellence in Education, Arkansas will define the Arkansas Accountability System and submit the proposal to the U.S. Department of Education(USDOE) for approval. Arkansas is committed to transparent communication with all stakeholders. ESSA Summary
ADE is committed to transparency of the process. Please see the log of meetings and presentations at http://bit.ly/2aKz0ma
Arkansas Accountability System (ESSA) Timeline

Handout: Arkansas Accountability System (ESSA) Timeline
Stage 1
Please visit http://bit.ly/2bPQ1fP to learn about all Stage 1 activities.
Stage 2
- The Steering Committee will continue meeting on a monthly basis.http://www.arkansased.gov/public/userfiles/ESEA/ESSA_Steering_Committee_Calendar.pdf
- Arkansas Department of Education begins writing the state accountability and support plan, continues to gather stakeholder feedback, and modify the plan based on the stakeholder feedback.
- The Advocates for Students group will provide targeted feedback on the state accountability and support plan through the lens of the students they represent. The advocate groups are: English Language Learner, Special Education Economically Disadvantaged, Race/Ethnicity, Foster Children, Military Dependents, Homeless and Equity for all Students
What is my role as a stakeholder?

* DOWNLOAD this diagram in PDF format at http://bit.ly/2fbZ1wu.
- Stay Informed. Stakeholders may sign up to receive the most current information about the ESSA process. We invite you to to visit this webpage often for new information. Sign up to receive email alerts to updated information and feedback opportunities regarding ESSA at http://www.arkansased.gov/divisions/communications/stay-informed.
- Get involved. Sign up to be an Ambassador and share the latest ESSA news with your colleagues, community members, friends and family. If you are interested in learning more about being an ambassasor, please complete the requested information and Ms. Tina Smith will be in contact with you. Thanks. View the list of Ambassador Hosted Community Listening Forums.
- Advocate for Students – Committees will be asked to review the Arkansas Accountability System with the lens of student’s subgroups-English Language Learner/Title III, SPED, Economically Disadvantaged, Race/Ethnicity, Foster Children, Military Dependents, Homeless, Equity for All Students. To access the application to be a student advocate, please go to http://bit.ly/2b9yUlC.
- Tune in to Steering Committee Meetings. The Vision for Excellence in Education and Arkansas Accountability System Steering Committee will meet on the last Wednesday of each month (beginning August 31, 2016) at 9:30 am in the Arkansas Department of Education auditorium. The meetings will be open to the public, live streamed, and recorded.
- Access the Steering Committee agenda
- View Steering Committee meeting dates
- Watch the monthly Steering Committee meetings in person or via live stream.
- Learn more about the ESSA Steering Committee members
- View Steering Committee agenda, minutes and videos
- Submit Public Comment. Submit comments, questions, concerns and celebrations regarding ESSA.
Additional Resources
- The Alliance for Excellent Education website offers one-page fact sheets, five-minute videos and a side-by-side chart comparing No Child Left Behind(NCLB) and ESSA.
- The U. S. Department of Education website offers the full ESSA Act, resources, and opportunities to sign up for federal updates.
- The USDOE updated the Transitioning to the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) Frequently Asked Questions on June 29, 2016.
- The National PTA website offers resources for families on the Every Students Succeeds Act (ESSA) at pta.org/ESSA.
- Spanish translations of “Family Engagement Provisions in ESSA” and “ESSA: What does this new law mean for my child?” are available at
ARKANSAS ESSA NEWS
Why to Test Kids in Science – and How
What do chefs, politicians, mechanics, educators, and doctors all have in common? The answer is science and engineering. Most of us probably didn’t realize when we started Kindergarten that science and engineering would affect us every day for the rest of our lives.
read moreDeVos Defends Civil Rights Record
House Democrats and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos sparred over civil rights, the Every Student Succeeds Act, and teachers’ salaries at a hearing Tuesday, but lawmakers from both parties largely avoided controversial questions about school safety in the aftermath of a Texas high school shooting last week that left 10 students and staff dead.
read moreVIDEO: High School Graduation Rates and Their Effect on the American Economy
https://youtu.be/-Hr9TiK7hhM How does an individual’s decision to drop out of high school affect the rest of us? And, conversely, how does a student graduating from high school benefit all of us? Those were the questions the Alliance for Excellent Education (All4Ed)...
read moreWill the Texas Shooting Prompt Action From Trump’s School Safety Commission?
Earlier this year, shortly after 17 students and teachers were killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., President Donald Trump created a school commission, led by U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, to explore solutions.
read moreVIDEO: Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
Every Student Succeeds Act focuses fully on Preparing all Students for College and Careers.
read moreCOMMENTARY: Teachers Are Organizing. But What About Teachers’ Unions?
This blossoming spring of teacher uprisings—marching on state capitols, winning hefty pay raises—cheers any citizen who knows that robust societies depend on vibrant schools.
read moreFive Things to Watch for When Betsy DeVos Makes Rare Visit to Capitol Hill
For the fifth time since the start of last year, U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos will testify publicly before Congress on Tuesday.
The secretary will speak to lawmakers on the House education committee about the “policies and priorities” of the U.S. Department of Education. Compared to her predecessors, DeVos hasn’t been on Capitol Hill a lot during her roughly 16 months as education secretary, at least in terms of public appearances: She’s testified before spending committies three times, and once to the Senate education committee for her rocky confirmation hearing in January 2017. Tuesday’s hearing would be the first time she’s testified before the House committee that deals with K-12 issues.
DeVos has met privately a few times recently with lawmakers on Capitol Hill. But education committee lawmakers haven’t had the chance to ask DeVos detailed questions in public about her track record. In fact, on Friday, House committee Democrats sent out a fact sheet pointing out that her predecessors spent significantly more time testifying to Congress over comparable periods of time. In former Secretary Arne Duncan’s first 15 months, for example, he testified to Congress nine times.
read moreMAKING A DIFFERENCE: Friends of the Children offers mentor program for foster kids
LOS ANGELES WAVE NEWSPAPER — After a stint as a successful businessman, Campbell sold his timber firm to focus on helping at-risk children break out of generational poverty. That’s when he started Friends of the Children, a nonprofit that soon grew nationally.
read moreArne Duncan: Parents Should Boycott Schools Until Gun Laws Are Fixed
Parents of public school students should consider pulling their children out of school until the nation passes new restrictions on gun laws, former U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan tweeted Saturday.
read moreNAACP Statement on Santa Fe High School Shooting
BLACKVOICE NEWS — BALTIMORE, Md., May 18, 2018 /NNPANewswirePR/ The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the nation’s premier civil rights organization, issued the following statement regarding the tragic shooting at Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas:
read moreJanelle Wood and the Black Mothers Forum are Champions of Parental Engagement
Led by Wood, who has served as a pastor in a women’s prison and as Chief of Staff for the Phoenix City Council, the group has taken the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), the education law passed during the Obama Administration, very seriously. The Black parents’ group is using ESSA to leverage their awareness and involvement in their children’s education and to ensure that African American students excel in the public school system.
read moreESSA: How Can States Figure Out If New School Improvement Ideas Work?
One of the biggest changes in the Every Student Succeeds Act is that states and districts get to come up with their own school improvement ideas, as long as they are backed by evidence.
read moreSchool Officials Urge Congress to Update Student-Data Privacy Law
School officials urged federal lawmakers to update the law governing the handling and disclosure of student data, saying that it must provide more clarity to education leaders and reflect challenges educators face in the digital learning environment.
read moreIt Takes A Village: Closing the STEAM Gap Requires Early Education
BLACKPRESSUSA.COM — We’re all familiar with the popular proverb, “It takes a village to raise a child.” As a 21st century society, this still holds true, literally and figuratively. For non-millennials, who grew up in a vastly different era, there is a nostalgic mindset that a diverse community of inspiring people interacting with children has a positive and sustained life-changing impact on their development. By no means should this mean the village is responsible for raising your children, but we all have a stake in their development and success.
read moreSocial Implications of FCC Changes to Internet Access and Content
MILWAUKEE COURIER — A while ago, I joined my Democratic colleagues on the state and federal level in expressing concerns about last year’s Federal Communications Commission (FCC) decision to repeal Net Neutrality rules. However, aside from the obvious reasons for alarm, I am also anxious about how this issue impacts social justice movements like #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter.
read more