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Arizona Schools Chief Cancels $70M in COVID Funding to Set Up Tutoring Program

But the tutoring will only help about 10% of the students who need help.

Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne announces $40 million to tutor students affected by pandemic-related learning loss in Phoenix, Arizona, on Sept. 5. The Republican clawed back the money from contracts awarded by his Democratic predecessor, Kathy Hoffman. (Gloria Rebecca Gomez/Arizona Mirror)

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State schools chief Tom Horne is canceling millions of dollars in contracts funded by COVID-19 aid that his Democratic predecessor awarded to Arizona education programs in order to funnel the money into a new tutoring program for struggling students. But the tutoring will help only about 10% of the students who are falling behind academically.

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Arizona received three federally funded grants to bolster public schools and improve student outcomes. Former state Superintendent of Public Instruction Kathy Hoffman awarded money from the third grant package to , a particular focus of her administration. Recipients included the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Valley and Playworks Arizona, which serves low-income schools and teaches inclusivity and conflict resolution via play.

On Sept. 6, Horne, a Republican who has vowed to raise academic achievement, announced that his office has eliminated and reduced ESSER-funded contracts by as much as $70 million. Of that, $40 million will be earmarked for a new tutoring program aimed at students in first grade through eighth who failed to meet a proficiency benchmark on state assessments.

鈥淲e have to make up for the deficiencies of our predecessors and make sure that the students learn more and we have better academic progress,鈥 Horne said at a Tuesday news conference.

Students who qualify will be able to take advantage of extra help four times a week for six weeks. Teachers who choose to tutor can teach a maximum of three students per six-week session, earning $30 an hour. And $200 bonuses would be awarded for every student who shows a one-half year academic gain between the pre-test administered at the start of the tutoring session and the post-test at its end.

It鈥檚 unlikely, however, that the funding will pay for tutoring sessions for more than a fraction of students who failed to meet state standards. There are at least 525,000 students who tested below proficiency in at least one subject, and the $40 million would cover tutoring sessions for only about 54,000 of them.

But Horne dismissed that criticism, saying any help is valuable.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 solve the whole problem,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 generate money out of thin air and we have to deal with the money we have, but a 40 million dollar program 鈥 for 1.3 million hours of tutoring 鈥 is very major.鈥

Neither will the program target the populations most affected by pandemic-related learning loss. High poverty schools , and the inequality that already existed was . Instead, the program will be awarded on a first-come, first-serve basis, with applications set to launch on the department of education鈥檚 website on Sept. 15.

鈥淩ace has nothing to do with it, I鈥檓 looking purely at academic performance,鈥 said Horne.

If the program is successful, Horne anticipates taking the idea to the state legislature to continue it beyond the ESSER funding鈥檚 September 2024 deadline.

Organizations left in the lurch

As many as 27 contracts were eliminated entirely or reduced. On Aug. 18, the Arizona Department of Education, which Horne oversees, contacted organizations awarded grants under Hoffman and gave them five days to prove their work was improving students鈥 academic achievement. If an organization could present tangible data showing the benefits of its programs, but wasn鈥檛 spending enough to use up its award by 2024, the contract was simply readjusted to cover the rest of the grant period. Any leftover money will be returned to the federal government.

Among those cut off completely was Playworks Arizona, which focuses on creating a welcoming environment during recess to improve student鈥檚 well-being. Last year, more than 22,000 Arizona students experienced the structured play offered by the organization. In an emailed statement, spokesperson Beth Eisen said Playworks was still in discussions with the department of education about restoring its grant.

鈥淟ast school year, 94% of educators in Playworks Arizona partner schools agreed that Playworks helps to create a supportive learning environment in their schools,鈥 Eisen said. 鈥淲e remain steadfast in our belief that every child in Arizona should benefit from safe and healthy play every day.鈥

Horne on Tuesday noted that, despite the five-day deadline, organizations still have the opportunity to prove they deserve to keep their funding. While $70 million was pulled back, only $40 million is currently set aside for the tutoring grants. The rest is a buffer in case an organization earns back its funding and will also be used to pay for the development of the tests used during the tutoring sessions to show improvement levels.

Marisol Garcia, president of the Arizona Education Association, the state鈥檚 largest teacher鈥檚 union, was unimpressed by Horne鈥檚 decision to rescind contracts.

鈥淥nce again, Tom Horne is giving us a side show,鈥 she said, in an emailed statement. 鈥淗e is throwing unneeded chaos into the work of programs serving kids and reneging on promises made to families so that he can get a cheap headline.”

is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Arizona Mirror maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jim Small for questions: [email protected]. Follow Arizona Mirror on and .

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