Current:Home > reviewsKentucky’s new education chief promotes ambitious agenda -PrestigeTrade
Kentucky’s new education chief promotes ambitious agenda
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:10:11
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky Education Commissioner Robbie Fletcher is new on the job and already promoting an ambitious agenda that includes developing a new statewide system to track student achievement and the performance of public K-12 schools.
Schools and others are being asked to provide input for revising Kentucky’s assessment and accountability system, Fletcher told a legislative panel Tuesday, weeks after starting his tenure. A stakeholders group will weigh options and could make recommendations sometime after the 2025 legislative session, said Republican state Rep. James Tipton.
“We want to build a prosperous Kentucky, and we will launch an accountability system that is meaningful and useful to all of our learners,” Fletcher told the panel.
Fletcher said he also wants to work on potential changes to the state’s main funding formula for schools to achieve a better balance between property-poor and property-rich districts, he said.
Fletcher also reiterated his commitment to work closely with state lawmakers — a pledge he made in the spring as he won overwhelming state Senate confirmation to become education commissioner.
“We’re not going to agree on everything,” he told the legislative panel on Tuesday. “But I hope we can have those face-to-face conversations to discuss how we move forward together. And then at the end of the day, we can still have dinner together afterward.”
Fletcher’s predecessor, Jason Glass, had a tumultuous stint while guiding schools through the COVID-19 pandemic and clashing at times with GOP lawmakers. Fletcher became education commissioner in July after spending a decade as superintendent of Lawrence County schools in eastern Kentucky. He started his career as a math and science teacher before becoming an assistant principal and then a principal.
Fletcher broadly outlined priorities but gave few details on Tuesday. As the chief state school officer, the commissioner’s roles include recommending and implementing Kentucky Board of Education policies.
Fletcher said he wants to encourage classroom innovations while emphasizing basic fundamentals.
Kentucky students showed some improvement on statewide tests taken in the spring of 2023, especially in elementary schools, but considerable work remains to get back to pre-pandemic levels.
The results, released last fall, showed elementary to high school students were still struggling across a range of core subjects, which is linked to schools’ pandemic-era shift to virtual learning to try to keep people safe. Those struggles reflect a nationwide problem of lagging academic achievement, prompting extensive efforts to help students overcome the setbacks. Fletcher suggested a change in the testing schedule.
“How much different could education be if we didn’t have to wait until the fall to get test results?” he said. “What if we gave the test in the fall, in October, and it changed instruction the next day?”
Fletcher said he’s a fan of using national comparisons, especially in math, reading and science.
And he stressed the role of schools in helping guide children toward their potential.
“We have to teach our kids, so often, that they have tremendous potential,” he said. “We want to teach them to dream. We want to give them opportunities to dream. But also, too, we have to give them opportunities to struggle. Life is tough. We need to lift them up. We need to give them opportunities to grow, to learn, to struggle.”
veryGood! (7565)
Related
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- This week on Sunday Morning (February 25)
- What to know for WWE Elimination Chamber 2024: Date, US time, how to watch, match card
- Vice Media says ‘several hundred’ staff members will be laid off, Vice.com news site shuttered
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- 3 University of Wyoming swimmers killed in highway crash in Colorado
- Houthi missile hits ship in Gulf of Aden as Yemeni rebels continue attacks over Israel-Hamas war
- The Daily Money: Jeff Bezos unloads more Amazon stock
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Allow Angelina Jolie's Blonde Hair Transformation to Inspire Your Next Salon Visit
Ranking
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Denver police seek help finding a former funeral home owner after body kept in hearse for 2 years
- S&P 500, Dow rally to new records after Nvidia's record-breaking results
- Frog and Toad are everywhere. How 50-year-old children's characters became Gen Z icons
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- GOP-led Kentucky House votes to relax child labor rules and toughen food stamp eligibility standards
- Steven Tyler sexual assault lawsuit filed by former teen model dismissed
- Gay rights advocates in Kentucky say expansion to religious freedom law would hurt LGBTQ+ safeguards
Recommendation
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Don Henley's attempt to reclaim stolen Eagles lyrics to Hotel California was thwarted by defendants, prosecutors say
Grey's Anatomy Alum Justin Chambers Gives Rare Glimpse Into Private World With 4 Daughters
Judge in Trump fraud case denies request to pause $354 million judgment
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Wisconsin Assembly approves increases in out-of-state outdoor license fees to help close deficit
2 children died after falling into a river at a campground near Northern California’s Shasta Dam
3.2 magnitude earthquake recorded in Fremont, California; felt in San Jose, Bay Area