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Facts matter | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Facts matter | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


The University of Arkansas-Little Rock’s William H. Bowen School of Law began as UA-Fayetteville’s night division (yes, in Little Rock) in 1965. A decade later, the Legislature created UA-Little Rock’s law school; transferred thereto Fayetteville’s night program; and added a full-time component.

In 2023, Colin Crawford became Bowen’s dean. Shortly thereafter, he suggested killing Bowen’s in-person night program and replacing it with yet another online law school. When confronted with a buzzsaw of opposition in Arkansas’ legal community, Crawford paused this misadventure.

Today, Arkansas-based part-time law students have the option of either attending the state’s only in-person night law school or enrolling in one of several existing online schools. If Bowen’s night program goes online, Arkansans lose this choice.

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Last week, I wrote about state Sen. Dan Sullivan’s efforts to curtail new attempts to replace Bowen’s night program with an online one and his delivery of Ten Commandments posters to Bowen for display.

I relayed Crawford’s unexpected public inquisition of Sullivan, wherein Crawford charged: “So you brought those 19 [framed Ten] Commandments to the law school. You could have gone [elsewhere] . . . but you came here to the law school, and I believe, haven’t gone elsewhere . . . [And] you also then submitted a piece of ‘special legislation’ that would have had the effect of tying up the university budget if, if the law school did not, was, was not prohibited from having an online program. So the question is, because I’ve been asked it many times, what’s [your] beef with us. Why [are you] singling out the school of law?”

Sullivan answered, correcting Crawford’s misrepresentations: “First of all, I’m not singling [the law school] out. I took [the posters previously] to Jonesboro schools. I think I had 400 that I took–close to that–[and] I took [several of] them to Arkansas State University . . . [And] why did I take the position of putting a hold on the [university’s] budget? [I did so] because I had a number of people in the law school and outside of law school, former graduates–people who are attorneys that went to school here that are now in the profession–[raise concerns]. People talk[ed] about retaliation; they were afraid to–if they brought [concerns]–they’d be retaliated against.”

My colleague Josh Silverstein elaborated on the retaliation: “The dean castigated me in my annual review for my opposition to moving the part-time program online and, surprisingly, for criticisms against the online proposal leveled by others whom I don’t control. He later accused me of resisting the change in bad faith, even though much of the Bowen community is similarly opposed.”

The saga continues.

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In August, I wrote a column–which this paper nominated for several journalism awards–stating:

“Why put the Bowen night class online in the first place? At a recent faculty meeting, an administrator stated that the purpose is to enlarge the night class. She highlighted that the incoming night class has 38 students. But that’s not the whole story. Here’s the rest:

” m Both the forthcoming day and night classes have been closed for some time, because they’re completely full.

” m The night class has 38 students in it simply because the school capped the class at 38–not due to lack of demand. Earlier in the year, the class was capped at 40, and it had–you guessed it–40 students. The administration then reduced the size of the night class to 38. If you want the night class to be larger than 38, then allow it to be larger than 38.

” m If the school wants to enroll a larger night class with, say, 50 students, we could do so with qualified folks ready to attend.

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“    m Finally, the school’s admissions policy states: ‘The Law School will enroll each academic year an entering class of approximately 140 applicants to its combined full and part-time divisions.’ The current incoming class has 158 students. Call me old school, but I don’t understand this new math in which having 18 extra students reflects under-enrollment.”

That column remains 100 percent correct, because this paper and I painstakingly verify our information. That column’s source: Bowen’s then-admissions dean. (She also confirmed the information presented today.)

Nonetheless, in my annual evaluation at Bowen, Crawford took issue with the contents of that previous column, which I wrote as a journalist for this paper. (My Democrat-Gazette boss assures me that he won’t be evaluating my law-school performance–nor my cooking, for that matter!)

Crawford wrote: “I write to offer observations about certain activities of yours during the evaluation period that were disruptive to the School of Law community. Specifically, in summer 2025, you publicly stated that the School of Law had ‘excess demand’ for its part-time program that the administration has capped enrollment in the program. However, as reported to the faculty earlier in the Spring by the then Assistant Dean of Admissions, many of the students admitted to the part-time program preferred to be in the full-time program, for which there were no available spaces. There was no excess demand for the part-time program and that was announced at a faculty meeting. Moreover, as the Associate Dean of Academic Affairs has reported on many occasions, the number of any class is dictated by our faculty capacity to cover the labor-intensive research and writing classes–each to a section of no more than 20 students. Inaccurate references to an excess of demand and administrative caps on part-time enrollment were harmful to the work of your colleagues, who, earlier in 2025, voted overwhelmingly in support of a proposal to develop a hybrid part-time program; some of them spent their summers developing courses to that end.”

Crawford is wrong: Bowen did cap the night class, and there was excess demand.

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Bowen admitted 38 students to that night class. The admissions dean stated that Bowen easily could’ve enrolled 50 qualified applicants. So why only 38? As Crawford confessed: because of a lack of supply of faculty. Fifty qualified applicants, but only 38 admitted, equals excess demand (by definition).

Bowen’s math further confounds. In a faculty meeting, the associate dean stated: “[W]e have 38 students coming into the part-time program . . . [and] nine of them expressed a preference for the full-time. So if we had space in the full-time, that would have been down to 29.”

Uh, no. The school admitted 38 applicants. If nine vanished, Bowen would just admit the next nine.

Moreover, whether nine students preferred the day program is irrelevant. Maybe some favored attending Yale. Wanting to go elsewhere doesn’t diminish demand for Bowen’s night school–when the alternatives aren’t available.

In fact, the day program routinely cannibalizes the night class by exceeding the school’s written-policy goal of 90 students for the former by–wait for it–30-plus students. Wanna guess where that overage should’ve been offered admission? Yep, the night school.

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Finally, like with Silverstein, Crawford bizarrely criticized me for the contents of a student column that opposed Bowen going online, because those authors thanked us for our input. Even worse, the dean was explicitly informed that I never reviewed the substance of the students’ article and Silverstein recommended written changes to the very items Crawford whinged about. Sigh.

The proposal to put online Arkansas’ singular-historic night law school didn’t fail because disfavored interlocutors contradicted the party line or had “beef” with Bowen. Rather, that effort collapsed because it is an awful idea (and justifiably reviled by Arkansas’ legal community).

So, rest assured, I will continue to inform you Dear Readers about this topic and others–threadbare false claims of inaccuracy, harm, or disruption notwithstanding–because facts matter.

This is your right to know.


Robert Steinbuch, the Arkansas Bar Foundation Professor at the Bowen Law School, is a Fulbright Scholar and author of the treatise “The Arkansas Freedom of Information Act.” His views do not necessarily reflect those of his employer.

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One dead in Lepanto drowning incident

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One dead in Lepanto drowning incident


LEPANTO, Ark. – One person is dead after a reported drowning Thursday evening in Lepanto, located in Poinsett County, according to the Lepanto Fire and Rescue.

The fire department says they were called to a possible drowning in the Rivervale area a little after 6 p.m.

When emergency crews arrived, they began search efforts in the water.

During that time, they say the body of an individual was found.

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“We extend our thoughts, prayers, and deepest condolences to the individual’s family and friends,” the Lepanto Fire Department said.

They also thanked the Poinsett County Sheriff’s Office, Marked Tree Fire Department, Lepanto Police Department, Lepanto Dispatch, Pafford EMS, Arkansas Game and Fish, and Poinsett County Coroner’s Office for assisting in the search and recovery efforts.



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Arkansas men’s track and field celebrates banner season with updated flag | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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Arkansas men’s track and field celebrates banner season with updated flag | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


FAYETTEVILLE — The number on the flag at John McDonnell Field increased again Thursday at a celebration of the Arkansas men’s track and field outdoor national championship that was clinched six days earlier in Oregon. 

The latest win was Arkansas’ 44th national championship recognized by the NCAA in men’s track and field and cross country. Outdoor titles won in 2004 and 2005 were vacated as part of NCAA sanctions against the program in 2009. 

When coupled with the nine national championships won by Arkansas’ women, the Razorbacks claim 53 national championships — hence the “53” flag that now flies high above Meadow Street. 

It was the second time in three months the white number was changed on the 10-foot tall by 15-foot wide red flag. The Razorbacks’ men won the NCAA indoor championship in March. 

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“This is becoming a pretty frequent occurrence that we really enjoy,” Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek said in remarks to the assembled crowd. “It’s a great tradition for our track and field program.”

 Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek (left) speaks to the crowd as he stands next to men’s track and field coach Doug Case during a flag raising ceremony Thursday, June 18, 2026, in Fayetteville. (Hank Layton/WholeHogSports)
 

It was the fifth time the flag number was updated since a “47” flag was first raised earlier this decade. The men and women swept the 2023 NCAA indoor meet, and the women won national titles indoors and outdoors in 2024. 

“This flag idea was born out of the fact that when our athletes walk out of their locker rooms, they see what we’re about,” said Chris Bucknam, a two-time indoor national champion coach of the Arkansas men who retired in December. “This is what we strive for. It’s not to show off or anything else, but it’s a message to our men and women athletes. 

“It’s a perfect symbol of honoring the past and the incentive of, ‘Hey, now let’s put 54 up, and 55.’” 

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For Yurachek, a dominant year in track and field validated his decision to elevate Doug Case, an 18-year Arkansas assistant, to the head coaching job when Bucknam retired. 

“I think it was an easy transition when Coach Buck said he was going to retire, to hand the baton over to Doug and let him take this,” Yurachek said. “We knew we had an opportunity to have a really successful year, but as a [new] head coach he still had to make sure he put all the pieces together, both in the indoor and the outdoor.

“He had a plan in place for this program to continue the tradition and the legacy that Coach [John] McDonnell started a long time ago, Coach Bucknam continued and now [Case] is stepping right into that. We hadn’t won an outdoor championship in 23 years, and so for him to be able to put the pieces to that puzzle together this year was amazing.” 

Case, 64, had previous head coaching experience at Drake in the late 1990s and had turned down multiple head coaching opportunities to remain an assistant at Arkansas. 

“He was probably more qualified for a head coaching position than any coach in any sport in the NCAA in 2025-26,” Bucknam said. “I knew it and Hunter was able to see it, thank goodness.” 

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When Arkansas won the NCAA outdoor meet last Friday, Yurachek said his first call was to congratulate Case. His second call was to Bucknam, who oversaw the roster assembly and coached the team in practice for several months before the indoor season began. 

“He was very much a part of this,” Yurachek said. 

photo  Former Arkansas men’s track coach Chris Bucknam acknowledges the crowd during a flag raising ceremony Thursday, June 18, 2026, in Fayetteville. (Hank Layton/WholeHogSports)
 

Bucknam, who still lives in Fayetteville, attended Thursday’s ceremony and received a warm ovation when he was recognized during Yurachek’s remarks to the crowd. But he was quick to deflect credit to Case. 

“He did a masterful job to take over when he took over midstream,” Bucknam said. “I thought we did it the right way and the timing was perfect, but then somebody’s got to execute it, and Doug executed it. There were no guarantees that I would have been able to pull this off, but obviously I’m extremely proud. 

“I was close to the team — my name was probably on everybody’s scholarship papers — but it was Doug’s team and he did a masterful job of navigating the big four championships.” 

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Arkansas went 4-0 at the SEC and NCAA indoor and outdoor meets. That had not happened since the 2005 season when the Razorbacks’ NCAA outdoor title was abdicated.

“It was just fun stepping back and watching something that you were part of, but watching the new generation kick ass like they did,” Bucknam said. 

Arkansas had an NCAA-best 21 entries into the outdoor meet, but the Razorbacks suffered a setback on Day 1 when multiple athletes failed to qualify in the 200 meters and 110 hurdles, including star sprinter Jelani Watkins. The two-sport athlete — Watkins is also a receiver on the Razorbacks’ football team — let up at the end of the 200 and failed to qualify for the finals. Watkins was projected to score points in the final, and perhaps win individual gold. 

“If you watched the meet, you saw it didn’t exactly go our way at the beginning,” Case said. “We were fighting tooth and nail the whole way. Nobody ever quit, nobody laid down, nobody thought we couldn’t do this thing.”

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photo  Arkansas men’s track and field coach Doug Case (left) and members of the Razorbacks’ outdoor team stand with SEC and NCAA trophies during a flag raising ceremony Thursday, June 18, 2026, in Fayetteville. (Hank Layton/WholeHogSports)
 

 

Arkansas scored 56 points and won comfortably without an individual or relay title. Georgia finished in second place with 49 points. 

“We had a great amount of depth on the team,” Case said Monday on the WholeHogSports Daily Podcast. “We were good from the 100 to the 10K. We just qualified so many people into the meet … that we had a little room for error.” 

An estimated 150 to 200 people were in attendance at Thursday’s flag raising, which began at 4 p.m. Bucknam called the workday turnout “great” and “super important” to show support for an Olympic sport.

“These wins couldn’t have come at a better time,” Bucknam said. “As Doug said, we’re just trying to do our part to make Arkansas proud of a program that is national and global. … We’re getting it done on all levels and it’s extremely important that people see the value of what we’re trying to do here.”

 

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End-of-year ATLAS test scores show improvements but most Arkansas students still not proficient | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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End-of-year ATLAS test scores show improvements but most Arkansas students still not proficient | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


Arkansas students’ end-of-year test scores improved across grade levels and subject areas, state officials said Thurday, but most students still aren’t meeting performance targets.

Results from the Arkansas Teaching and Learning Assessment System exam, known as ATLAS, showed students’ overall proficiency rose from 36.9% in 2025 to 42.2% in 2026, according to an executive summary of the scores.

The number of students performing at the lowest level across all subjects declined from 27.3% in 2025 to 23.1% in 2026, according to the report.

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This is only the third year that Arkansas has used the ATLAS test, limiting direct comparisons to years before 2024. State Education Secretary Jacob Oliva has said the state shifted to ATLAS from its previous end-of-year test, the ACT Aspire, to better align measurement of student performance with Arkansas’ academic standards.

“The 2026 ATLAS exam scores confirm what we’re hearing from educators across the Natural State: Arkansas LEARNS is working and students across Arkansas are doing better because of it,” Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a news release.

Sanders’ signature legislative package on education, the LEARNS Act, mandated the state move to a new student test and adopt a new grading system for schools and districts. The state offers grants for districts to administer high-impact tutoring, and students who struggle to read can also qualify for supplemental literacy tutoring.

Under LEARNS, third grade students who don’t read at grade level will be held back, though school districts also may give students good-cause exemptions from the requirement. Early numbers suggest that large numbers of third graders in some districts will be promoted to fourth grade even though they fell short of the literacy standards.

LEARNS also includes the Educational Freedom Account program, which significantly expanded state taxpayer funding of student tuition and other costs related to private schools and homeschooling. Over 44,000 students received an Educational Freedom Account in the 2025-26 school year, the first year participation was open to all K-12 students.

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Participants in the school choice program are not required to take the ATLAS but still must take a national, norm-referenced test each year.

In the 2024-25 school year, Arkansas students showed slight increases in subject mastery overall, with the most notable increases in math and science.

The results come roughly a month after the release of the 2026 Education Scorecard, a cross-state analysis that says schools across the nation — including Arkansas — are in the midst of a “learning recession” that began in 2013. Math and reading performance declined over the past decade in most places, according to that report. Though the longer-term trend is downward nationally, the Education Scorecard says student performance has partly rebounded from the damage done by COVID-19.

As of 2024, Arkansas’ math and reading scores continued to lag national averages on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test often called the Nation’s Report Card.

Students who take ATLAS are classified into one of four performance levels, with level four being the highest. Level three indicates mastery of grade-level content, according to the report released Thursday. It describes each level as follows:

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Level 4: Students demonstrate an advanced understanding of the knowledge and skills required of the grade-level standards. These students are on track for career and college, and demonstrate readiness for advanced and accelerated content at the next grade/course.

Level 3: Students demonstrate a proficient understanding of knowledge and skills and show mastery of grade-level standards. These students are on track for career and college, and demonstrate readiness for content at the next grade/course.

Level 2: Students demonstrate a basic understanding of knowledge and skills required of the grade-level standards and personalized support and intervention may be needed to access content taught in the next grade/course.

Level 1: Students demonstrate limited understanding of knowledge and skills required of the grade-level standards and will require significant support/scaffolding and intervention to access content taught at the next grade/course.

Check back for updates.

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With support from the ADG Community Journalism Project, LEARNS reporter Josh Snyder covers the impact of the law on the K-12 education system across the state, and its effect on teachers, students, parents and communities. The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette maintains full editorial control over this article and all other coverage. View all LEARNS Act coverage at arkansasonline.com/learns



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