Schools OK'd to raise caps on enrollment; state board declines to review decisions of charter panel

FILE — The state Capitol is shown in this 2019 file photo.
FILE — The state Capitol is shown in this 2019 file photo.

The Arkansas Board of Education on Thursday approved amendments to the charters of four open-enrollment and conversion charter schools, including the addition of a kindergarten-through-12th grade Northwest Classical Academy campus in Rogers.

The nonprofit Responsive Education Solutions of Texas charter management organization that already operates several charter school campuses in Arkansas — including the Northwest Classical Academy in Bentonville — had requested approval for a classical academy campus to be constructed on Dodson Road in Rogers

Responsive Education planners have said they intend to open a kindergarten-through-eighth-grade school to start in 2022-23 and add the high school grades by 2024, both on the Dodson Road site. After the high school’s opening, the existing Bentonville school would shift from a kindergarten-through-12th-grade school to a kindergarten-through-eighth grade campus. All high school students would go to the Rogers campus.

Also Thursday, the Education Board gave final approval to the Springdale School District to raise its Don Tyson School of Innovation student enrollment cap from 2,000 to 8,000.

The Fayetteville School District received approval to expand its Virtual Academy from a maximum enrollment cap of 500 in fourth-through-12th grades to as many as 5,000 to be spread over kindergarten-through-12th grades.

Arkansas Virtual Academy, an open-enrollment charter school based in Little Rock but serving students statewide, received approval to increase its enrollment cap from 3,000 to 4,000.

In each case, the Education Board endorsed the recommendations of the state’s Charter Authorizing Panel without conducting its own hearing on the proposals. The charter panel decisions on charter applications and amendments are subject to review by the Education Board, which has the authority to accept the panel decisions or conduct its own hearing on a proposal before making a final decision.

The requests from the charter schools for the increases to their virtual school enrollment caps come at a time when the school systems have to be ready to serve students who can’t or won’t be able to attend classes in a traditional school classroom in the coming year because of the threat of the contagious coronavirus.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Education Secretary Johnny Key have said traditional campuses must at a minimum open for face-to-face instruction starting Aug. 24 but also can offer virtual-instruction options. Additionally, school districts must be be prepared to pivot to online instruction for students in the event of a viral outbreak that makes it necessary to close a campus or a district for on-site instruction.

Amy Johnson, head of Arkansas Virtual Academy, told the Education Board that she anticipates that her school will be close to the new 4,000-student cap at the end of the first week of school.

Marcia Smith, an associate superintendent in the Springdale district, that the increase in the Don Tyson School of Innovation is necessary to give a virtual instruction option to all who desire it. So far, a total of 2,637 students in the 23,000-student system are enrolled in the School of Innovation, Smith said in response to Education Board questions.

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