Arkansas awarded $38 million education grant
LITTLE ROCK – The U.S. Department of Education has
awarded Arkansas a $38 million grant to improve literacy in the state,
and today I’d like to talk about the benefits to Arkansas.
And it starts with a simple fact: Reading changes everything.
Literacy
is not just another choice in life. For students who fail to develop
high-level reading skills, life will always be a struggle. If our young
people are going to reach their goals and dreams, they must know how to
read.
During my five years in office, I have
encouraged educators to create a culture of reading. This federal grant
rewards and acknowledges the progress we’ve made. The money also helps
us move closer to building that culture of reading.
Arkansas
received the maximum amount allowed under the five-year grant. The
state Department of Education will be able to fund reading projects with
this $38 million to districts around the state. Our goal is to improve
literacy at all levels of school, from preschool through the 12th grade.
The
department will use the money to implement the Arkansas Comprehensive
Literacy State Development Program. The goal of the program is to
provide Arkansas children access to quality education, to improve the
skills of teachers who teach reading, to strengthen literacy
instruction, and my favorite goal, to create a culture of reading.
The
department will receive the first $1.1 million of the grant this year.
With the grant money, we will further increase our efforts to reach
children who are living in poverty, children who aren’t fluent in
English, and children with disabilities.
The
rate of literacy in Arkansas has improved since 2017 when we launched
the statewide reading initiative we named R.I.S.E., or the Reading
Initiative for Student Excellence.
With this grant, we will expand our current programs and provide new resources that will reach even more students.
I
am grateful for the grant, and I am proud the U.S. Department of
Education is aware of our efforts to improve literacy and reading
instruction.
Since we launched R.I.S.E., more
than 6,000 teachers kindergarten through sixth grade have trained at
R.I.S.E. Academies, and more than 3,000 teachers kindergarten through
the 12th grade have received intensive training in the science of
reading, or phonics.
Through the grant, we will
provide books to families through a partnership with Dolly Parton’s
Imagination Library. The education department will increase the number
of R.I.S.E. activities at the pre-K level.
Many
aspects of our state’s success depend on the collective strength of our
reading skill. But it is also a personal matter for me. I love to read.
When I was a boy, I checked out the Hardy Boys books from the library in
Gravette. I love to read history books, and I have learned much about
leadership from books I have read. The First Lady and I passed our love
of reading down to our children and grandchildren. As governor, I want
to pass that legacy along to all Arkansans.
This $38 million grant will go a long way in helping us to give the gift of reading to our students.