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
Podcast: Every Student Succeeds Act
Rhythm & News interview with Dr. Elizabeth Primas, Program Manager for the National Newspaper Publishers Association’s “Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) initiative, about ESSA and its impact on our community. Interview by Chris B. Bennett.
read moreLearning Policy Institute & National Education Policy’s Brief on Community Schools under ESSA
In a new brief, the Learning Policy Institute and the National Education Policy Center argue that “community schools can be an effective school improvement strategy” under ESSA. The groups found that “the evidence base on well-implemented community schools and their component features provides a strong warrant for their potential contribution to school improvement,” and “sufficient evidence meeting ESSA’s criteria for ‘evidence-based’ approaches exists to justify including community schools as part of targeted and comprehensive interventions in high-poverty schools.”
read moreExperts Discuss How to Find – and Keep – Teachers of Color
Dante Little, a former public middle school teacher in Boston, Massachusetts, was one of only a few black males teaching in the city. But then he reached his breaking point. While he was administering a state test, the assistant principal came in to ask if all the students had handed in their cell phones. Even though they told him they had, he wasn’t satisfied and began to search and frisk each of them to be sure. According to Little, the students were treated that way regularly. “This isn’t a prison,” he said before he decided to quit. “I’m just done.”
read moreNATIONAL: Learning Heroes Hosts Research Webinar on ESSA
Learning Heroes will host a research webinar on effective ways to “communicate school performance and accountability information to parents and guardians in a manner that is accessible and actionable” under ESSA. Learning Heroes worked with Edge Research to “conduct multiple focus groups, surveys, and in-depth…
read moreStates Struggle to Define ‘Ineffective Teachers’ Under ESSA
Education Week examined states’ struggle to “define ineffective teachers under ESSA.” Civil rights organizations and other education groups “have expressed deep frustration with how some states ignored this portion of the law in the 17 plans submitted so far” and are “pushing the Education Department…
read moreVIDEO: How New Federal Education Law (ESSA) Can Improve Access to Education for Juvenile Justice Youth
Recording of webinar – Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA): How the New Federal Education Law Can Improve Access to Education for Juvenile Justice Involved Youth – held on January 27, 2016 hosted by Robert F. Kennedy Juvenile Justice Collaborative with technical support from Open Society Foundations.
read moreNATIONAL: Beware of School Voucher Doublespeak
The fate of the Trump-DeVos privatization agenda may hinge on the public’s ability to root out the euphemisms and codewords used to disguise the failure of school vouchers.
read moreNational News: Here’s what DeVos said today on Capitol Hill
There were few fireworks Wednesday as Education Secretary Betsy DeVos testified before a House appropriations subcommittee on the Trump administration’s 2018 budget proposal. DeVos deflected much of the skepticism she received and continued to push the administration’s support of school choice.
read moreNATIONAL: Trump’s Budget Slashes Education Funding, Declared “Dead on Arrival” by Republicans and Democrats Alike
President Trump released his Fiscal Year (FY) 2018 budget on May 23 and immediately received bipartisan criticism from members of Congress concerned with deep cuts to education, health-care programs for low-income adults and children, and a variety of other federal programs. “I can understand why President Trump wanted to be overseas when he released a […]
read moreNATIONAL: Initial analysis of Administration’s FY2018 Budget request to Congress
Tuesday, May 23, President Trump released the Administration’s FY2018 budget request to Congress which calls for a number of program eliminations within the U.S. Department of Education, a few of which would impact K-12 programs. For a number of programmatic changes that are proposed, the…
read moreVIDEO: Five startling things Betsy DeVos just told Congress
Secretary of Education Betsey DeVos testified before Congress on the Trump administration’s 2018 budget proposal. During the hearing, DeVos discussed Title I funding and school choice, and underscored her belief in local control. She stressed that she “believes states should continue to have flexibility in…
read moreNATIONAL: Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act.
NATIONAL: NSBA Statement on Trump administration’s proposed education budget
NSBA Executive Director & CEO Thomas J. Gentzel today released the following statement in response to the Trump Administration’s Proposed FY 2018 Education Budget: “President Trump’s proposed $9.2 billion cut to education initiatives will deliver a devastating blow to the country’s public…
read moreNATIONAL: SETDA Response to President’s FY18 Budget
Of particular interest to state digital learning leaders is the elimination of the Student Support and Academic Enrichment (SSAE) Grants, also known as Title IVa of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
read moreCharter School Efforts Not Mentioned in Most State ESSA Plans
Education Week finds that few state ESSA plans are mentioning charter school efforts. Jennifer Thomsen, the author and director of the Education Commission of the States Knowledge and Research Center, argued that, “what we’re really seeing in most of the accountability sections is that district and charter schools are being treated exactly the same.” States that did mention charter school efforts included Maryland, Tennessee, and New Mexico, as well as the District of Columbia.
read more