Northwest Arkansas school districts eye seventh-grade athletics

NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Davson Andres, a seventh-grade student at Sonora Middle School, participates Friday in a dribbling drill during practice with the seventh-grade team at the school. A few local school districts are engaged in discussions of starting seventh-grade athletic programs, to include an athletic period during the school day with a certified teacher coach. Springdale School District has had seventh-grade athletics since 2015.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Davson Andres, a seventh-grade student at Sonora Middle School, participates Friday in a dribbling drill during practice with the seventh-grade team at the school. A few local school districts are engaged in discussions of starting seventh-grade athletic programs, to include an athletic period during the school day with a certified teacher coach. Springdale School District has had seventh-grade athletics since 2015.

Efforts to launch seventh-grade sports programs are gaining momentum in some of Northwest Arkansas' largest school districts.

Local educators say expanding sports programs to include seventh grade will get students more interested in coming to school and may lead to better academic results as well.

Stipend schedule

The Bentonville athletic department is requesting the following stipends for seventh-grade athletics at each of its three junior high schools, effective July 1. The Bentonville School Board will vote Monday on the proposal.

Head football coach: $1,000

Assistant football coach: $625

Basketball (two coaches per school): $625 per coach

Volleyball (two coaches per school): $625 per coach

Cross country: $625

Track (two coaches per school): $625 per coach

Cheer: $625

Dance: $625

Total cost for seventh grade athletic stipends per school: $7,250

Total cost for district (three schools): $21,750

Source: Bentonville School District

The Bentonville School Board is expected to decide Monday on implementing seventh-grade athletics starting next school year. The Rogers and Fayetteville districts also are considering doing the same.

The Springdale District began offering seventh-grade football, volleyball and basketball for both boys and girls two years ago.

"It's outstanding. I think it's one of the best things we've done," said Wayne Stehlik, Springdale's athletic director.

Playing a sport gives students a connection to their school they wouldn't otherwise have, thereby engaging them in a unique way, Stehlik said.

"I think our grades are going up," he said of the student athletes. "I think we have fewer kids missing school. It increases the purpose for coming to school," he said.

A dozen seventh-grade boys at Springdale's Sonora Middle School, all dressed in gray shirts and red shorts with "Sonora Athletics" printed on them, ran through dribbling, shooting and passing drills in the school gym Friday under the guidance of basketball coach Elliott Bailey.

Bailey said he wants to instill in the kids lessons they can apply beyond the basketball court. He wants them to learn teamwork, respect and how to handle adversity.

And, in case their dreams of a professional basketball career don't pan out, "find something else that you love and be passionate about it, and give 100 percent, no matter what it is in life," Bailey said.

The team is 4-0 this season with wins over Springdale's Hellstern and Tyson middle schools and Huntsville and Gravette middle schools. Bailey, who also coaches an eighth-grade team at Lakeside Middle School, described strong camaraderie among the boys, who hang out together inside and outside school, he said.

Siloam Springs has offered football, basketball and track to seventh-graders for many years. The district also began offering volleyball within the past few years, according to Superintendent Ken Ramey.

Scott Passmore, Bentonville's athletic director, said the region's biggest school districts have been talking about seventh-grade sports for almost a year.

Seventh-grade activities would be integrated into the Northwest Arkansas Junior High Conference. Seventh-grade teams would not play for a conference title, but conference teams would play a full schedule against each other, according to Passmore.

He hopes to replicate for seventh grade what Bentonville offers in the eighth grade: football, basketball, volleyball, cross country, track, cheer and dance. The seventh-grade athletic period would replace a student's physical education credit.

All coaches would be certified coaches through the Arkansas Activities Association. The move would not require hiring additional personnel, but would require the district to pay an additional $21,750 in stipends to the coaches, Passmore said.

The Bentonville Athletic Booster Club has agreed to pay for the startup cost of equipment and uniforms, which shouldn't exceed $50,000, he said.

There will be additional costs having to do with ongoing program operations, transportation and event staffing, but Passmore said his department would not seek a budget increase.

"Gate receipts will generate enough funds to help cover this," he said.

Passmore said offering seventh-grade athletics is the right thing for kids because many of them can't afford the same kinds of activities other kids get to do outside school.

Debbie Jones, Bentonville's superintendent, said there's a strong connection between participation in sports and improved academic performance.

"It's engagement in school. They see something to stay eligible for, so they work harder on their grades," Jones said.

Steve Janski, Fayetteville's athletic director, said administrators are vetting all the options that would entail implementing seventh-grade athletics. Their plan is to present a proposal to the School Board next month.

The Rogers School District added sports to the school day for eighth grade last school year. Adding seventh-grade sports is something district administrators are discussing, said Keith Kilgore, athletic director.

"We're in the discussion phase of it and figuring out how it will impact every building," Kilgore said. "Hopefully we can come up with a plan in the form of a proposal we can take to our board."

That could happen as early as next month, he said.

Forty-six percent of Rogers students in grades eight through 12 were involved in athletics last school year, according to Kilgore.

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NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Jessica Olson (center), seventh-grade basketball coach at Sonora Middle School, discusses Friday energy and enthusiasm with her seventh-grade team at the school. A few local school districts are engaged in discussions of starting seventh-grade athletic programs, to include an athletic period during the school day with a certified teacher coach. Springdale School District has had seventh-grade athletics since 2015.

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NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Elliot Bailey (center), seventh-grade basketball coach at Sonora Middle School, reviews Friday a three-person passing drill with his seventh-grade team at the school. A few local school districts are engaged in discussions of starting seventh-grade athletic programs, to include an athletic period during the school day with a certified teacher coach. Springdale School District has had seventh-grade athletics since 2015.

NW News on 12/17/2017

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