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
VIDEO: KEYNOTE – U.S. Secretaries of Education Panel on the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
Keynote: “U.S. Secretaries of Education Panel on the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)” on Thursday, Dec. 1 at the 2016 National Summit on Education
read moreFinal Rule Released on Identifying Racial Bias in Special Education
The department’s regulation creates a standard approach that states must use in determining if their districts are over-enrolling minority students in special education compared to their peers of other races. If the disparities are large enough, districts are required to use 15 percent of their federal allotment under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act on “coordinated, early intervening services” aimed at addressing the issue.
read moreWill Trump Get His K-12 Budget Cuts? Washington Edu-Insiders Say No.
President Donald Trump alarmed a lot of the education community when he proposed slashing the U.S. Department of Education’s nearly $70 billion budget by $9 billion. So will those cuts become a reality?
read moreThree Ways Betsy DeVos Could Push School Choice Without Congress
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’ school choice agenda has run into roadblocks on Capitol Hill. But, from her perch at the department, she has other levers to get states and districts to offer kids more schooling options, without help from anyone in Congress.
read moreGet the facts on school segregation
School “resegregation” has been in the news lately, but is it real? Are our schools becoming less diverse, even as our student body becomes increasingly so?
read moreParents Deserve “Real” School Choice
Dr. Elizabeth Primas challenges Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on school choice.
read moreThe Importance of Educating All Children
“Some students begin school ahead of the pack. As educators, it is our responsibility to ensure all children, irrespective of their initial academic level continue to make progress.” – Dr. Elizabeth Primas talk about the Every Student Succeeds Act and the importance of educating all children.
read moreALC Panel Encourages High School Students to Pursue STEM Careers
A recent panel discussion hosted by members of the Congressional Black Caucus, showcased the importance of an education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).
read moreVIDEO: FULL COMMITTEE HEARING – Senate Committee Discussed State Innovation under ESSA
The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee held a hearing on state innovation under ESSA. During the hearing, Chairman Lamar Alexander commented that “Tennessee, Louisiana, and New Mexico have taken the most advantage of the flexibility” offered under ESSA, in terms of “creating innovative…
read moreEnglish Language Learners: How Your State is Doing
About 1 out of every 10 public school students in the United States right now is learning to speak English. They’re called ELLs, for “English Language Learners.”
read moreCommentary: Have We Lost of the Promise of Public Schools?
In the days leading up to and after Betsy DeVos’s confirmation as secretary of education, a hashtag spread across Twitter: #publicschoolproud. Parents and teachers tweeted photos of their kids studying, performing, eating lunch together.
read moreAverages mask regional differences in school segregation
We recently released a report on school segregation in the U.S. While we think that following national trends are helpful, and that lessons can be learned from one region to another, we also acknowledge that segregation looks different in each region, state, and metropolitan area. So, even though racial balance overall has been improving over …
read moreInnovation, Civil Rights, and DeVos Focus of Senate ESSA Hearing
State education chiefs at a Senate hearing Tuesday outlined how they are using the Every Student Succeeds Act to initiate and expand on efforts to improve college- and career-readiness and help low-performing schools. Senators, meanwhile, expressed concerns along partisan lines about the proper balance of power between Washington and the states.
read moreState Chiefs: We Won’t Walk Away From Disadvantaged Groups Under ESSA
Washington – When the Every Student Succeeds Act passed in 2015, there was widespread worry that states would walk away from making sure that particular groups of students, English-language learners, students in special education, and racial minorities, mattered in their school accountability systems.
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President Donald Trump has tapped Mitchell “Mick” Zais, the former South Carolina chief state school officer and a vehement opponent of the Common Core State Standards, as deputy secretary, the number two position at the U.S. Department of Education.
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