Downtown Dive – remodeled 0.07-acre commercial project in downtown Bentonville

Corner Square LLC, whose members include Asa Hutchinson III, Scott Tucker and Kurt Blackaby, bought the 528-square-foot building at 115 N.W. Second St. The purchase price equals $1,136 per square foot.

Oct 23, 2021

DOWNTOWN DIVE
A remodeled 0.07-acre commercial project in downtown Bentonville changed hands recently for $600,000.

Corner Square LLC, whose members include Asa Hutchinson III, Scott Tucker and Kurt Blackaby, bought the 528-square-foot building at 115 N.W. Second St. The purchase price equals $1,136 per square foot. Dalwarr LLC, led by Rex Warr, was the seller.

Encore Bank in Rogers provided financing with a five-year, $467,500 loan.

Bentonville Dive, a casual dive bar with an outdoor patio opened in February this year and owned by Kyle Reidy, will remain the building tenant.

Dalwarr paid the Pruitt Family Trust $375,000 for the property, formerly Corner Barber & Styling, in December 2019.

My son Abel is now entering his senior season at Bentonville high school

My son Abel is now entering his senior season at Bentonville high school in Bentonville, Arkansas (home of Walmart). He will be a third year starter on the varsity team and will likely go to college on a basketball scholarship although he could go on an academic scholarship to any number of colleges.

Oct 23, 2021

My son Abel is now entering his senior season at Bentonville high school in Bentonville, Arkansas (home of Walmart). He will be a third year starter on the varsity team and will likely go to college on a basketball scholarship although he could go on an academic scholarship to any number of colleges. Last year he was all conference in the states largest athletic division and all-state runner up. Bentonville is ranked pre-season #2 in the state after losing in the state tournament last year to the state champions and returning all of Bentonville’s starters from last year.

Gov­ernors hear Hutchin­son pitch – State’s com­puter plan goes national

Gov. Asa Hutchin­son touted Arkan­sas’ suc­cess in fur­ther­ing com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion as he unveiled an ini­ti­at­ive to take the pro­gram nation­wide at a lunch­eon of the National Gov­ernors Asso­ci­ation on Fri­day in Wash­ing­ton, D.C.

Oct 07, 2021

Gov. Asa Hutchin­son touted Arkan­sas’ suc­cess in fur­ther­ing com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion as he unveiled an ini­ti­at­ive to take the pro­gram nation­wide at a lunch­eon of the National Gov­ernors Asso­ci­ation on Fri­day in Wash­ing­ton, D.C.

Hutchin­son’s national ini­ti­at­ive — NGA Chair­man’s Ini­ti­at­ive, K-12 Com­puter Sci­ence Edu­ca­tion — will mir­ror the Arkan­sas Com­puter Sci­ence Ini­ti­at­ive he kicked off in 2015.

“Arkan­sas has become known nation­ally for our com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion pro­gram and, through this ini­ti­at­ive, I want to show­case the efforts in other states and show why this mat­ters and how we can expand com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion,” Hutchin­son said.

“Arkan­sas has become known nation­ally for our com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion pro­gram and, through this ini­ti­at­ive, I want to show­case the efforts in other states and show why this mat­ters and how we can expand com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion,” Hutchin­son said.

The ini­ti­at­ive encour­ages gov­ernors around the nation to imple­ment the ten­ets of Arkan­sas’ pro­gram in their home states in order to build a wider tech work­force and keep com­puter jobs from going over­seas.

“It is an ini­ti­at­ive that is urgent and it is very neces­sary,” Hutchin­son said.

Carl Frank, a com­puter sci­ence teacher at the Arkan­sas

School for Math­em­at­ics, Sci­ences and the Arts, said he was excited to hear Hutchin­son’s announce­ment. Frank has served on two of the gov­ernor’s task forces on com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion and cyber­se­cur­ity and on numer­ous stand­ards and frame­work com­mit­tees for the Arkan­sas Depart­ment of Edu­ca­tion and what is now the Divi­sion of Career and Tech­nical Edu­ca­tion.

“The suc­cess of the Arkan­sas Com­puter Sci­ence Ini­ti­at­ive and the multistate col­lab­or­a­tion efforts and part­ner­ships that have been formed here may serve as a model to other states,” Frank said. “Every state has unique chal­lenges and per­haps solu­tions to those chal­lenges. A national com­puter sci­ence ini­ti­at­ive will help facil­it­ate strategies that work among the states, and provide mech­an­isms for shar­ing new ideas and approaches that may emerge.”

“The suc­cess of the Arkan­sas Com­puter Sci­ence Ini­ti­at­ive and the multistate col­lab­or­a­tion efforts and part­ner­ships that have been formed here may serve as a model to other states,” Frank said. “Every state has unique chal­lenges and per­haps solu­tions to those chal­lenges. A national com­puter sci­ence ini­ti­at­ive will help facil­it­ate strategies that work among the states, and provide mech­an­isms for shar­ing new ideas and approaches that may emerge.”

Hutchin­son told the group gathered in the National Press Club ball­room that jobs that require com­puter sci­ence skills will con­tinue to grow and there are cur­rently more than 410,000 open com­put­ing jobs.

“Today, com­ing out of the pan­demic, through the pan­demic, the need has never been greater to emphas­ize com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion,” he said. “Take advant­age of this unique moment in his­tory when stu­dents see it, under­stand it and value it.”

Global com­pet­i­tion for com­puter sci­ence jobs is intensi­fy­ing with the major­ity of H1B skilled-worker visas com­ing from com­pan­ies that can­not fill their open­ings, Hutchin­son said.

Fur­ther­more, the U.S. Bur­eau of Labor Stat­ist­ics projects that the num­ber of com­puter sci­ence jobs will grow by 11% by 2029, Hutchin­son said. Com­puter sci­ence majors earn up to 40% more than the aver­age col­lege gradu­ate.

Arkan­sas became the first state to require every pub­lic and charter high school to offer a com­puter sci­ence course when Hutchin­son’s ini­ti­at­ive was imple­men­ted six years ago.

The Arkan­sas Com­puter Sci­ence Ini­ti­at­ive was ini­tially launched as a peer-learn­ing pro­gram that took teach­ers from five of the state’s pub­lic high schools into a peer-learn­ing pro­gram to bring com­puter learn­ing to the state’s stu­dents.

The Arkan­sas Com­puter Sci­ence Ini­ti­at­ive was ini­tially launched as a peer-learn­ing pro­gram that took teach­ers from five of the state’s pub­lic high schools into a peer-learn­ing pro­gram to bring com­puter learn­ing to the state’s stu­dents.

The Arkan­sas School for Math­em­at­ics, Sci­ences and the Arts in Hot Springs led the project by provid­ing train­ing, sup­port and ment­or­ing for teach­ers across the state, who in turn provide com­puter sci­ence courses to stu­dents in their dis­tricts.

In 2014, before the ini­ti­at­ive began, fewer than 500 high school stu­dents in Arkan­sas took a class in com­puter cod­ing, and 25% of that num­ber hailed from the Arkan­sas School for Math­em­at­ics, Sci­ences and the Arts.

Today, more than 10,000 of the state’s high school stu­dents have taken a com­puter sci­ence class, and the num­ber of com­puter-sci­ence cer­ti­fied teach­ers has grown from fewer than 20 to more than 600, Hutchin­son said.

Today, more than 10,000 of the state’s high school stu­dents have taken a com­puter sci­ence class, and the num­ber of com­puter-sci­ence cer­ti­fied teach­ers has grown from fewer than 20 to more than 600, Hutchin­son said.

Hutchin­son has been to more than 80 school assem­blies in the state pro­mot­ing com­puter sci­ence.

“The mes­sage that I had for them is, ‘If you learn to code and you have access to high-speed broad­band inter­net, you could run the the world from your front porch in rural Arkan­sas,” the gov­ernor said.

There are six major goals of the NGA ini­ti­at­ive, Hutchin­son said:

Increase the num­ber of the nation’s high school stu­dents who take at least one com­puter sci­ence course.

Engage more gov­ernors in the part­ner­ship.

Grow policy sup­port for com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion.

Increase the fund­ing by the states to sup­port com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion.

Expand the num­ber of states that require pub­lic and charter schools to have at least one com­puter sci­ence class for high school stu­dents.

Increase racial and gender diversity in cod­ing classes.

“We’re going to do this by mes­saging, just like today,” Hutchin­son said. “We’re going to do it by call­ing national atten­tion to it. We’re also going to have regional con­fer­ences at which we are going to be able to show­case what other gov­ernors are doing, draw atten­tion to it and try to engage other states.”

“We’re going to do this by mes­saging, just like today,” Hutchin­son said. “We’re going to do it by call­ing national atten­tion to it. We’re also going to have regional con­fer­ences at which we are going to be able to show­case what other gov­ernors are doing, draw atten­tion to it and try to engage other states.”

Hutchin­son praised the bipar­tisan sup­port for the ini­ti­at­ive from numer­ous gov­ernors around the nation.

Frank said Arkan­sas has already helped to shape com­puter sci­ence in other states through col­lab­or­a­tion and through the par­ti­cip­a­tion by Arkan­sas mem­bers of the Com­puter Sci­ence Teach­ers Asso­ci­ation in devel­op­ing a multistate com­puter sci­ence licen­sure test.

“Arkan­sas has been a leader in com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion and has done a tre­mend­ous job in trans­form­ing com­puter sci­ence edu­ca­tion in the state,” Frank said.

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