Student Well-Being & Movement

Arkansas Backs Off Extracurricular GPA Requirement

By Kerry A. White — October 01, 1997 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Four years ago, when Arkansas state school board members passed a “no pass, no play” policy requiring secondary school students to maintain a C average to play sports or take part in extracurricular activities, they thought they had found the ideal incentive to get students with less-than-perfect grades to hit the books.

After the new rules were adopted, school board members, administrators, teachers, and, especially, coaches waited for the good grades to start rolling in. And they waited. And waited.

Finally, when it seemed that not only were the low achievers not achieving at higher levels, but that the lowest-performing students who were disqualified from after-school activities were dropping out of school altogether, one lawmaker decided to do something about it.

State Sen. John E. Brown, a Republican and former college president, has been working since last spring to get the state school board to amend the new grade-point-average requirements. Arkansas school board members have since agreed to abandon the 2.0 policy.

“The punitive system was not working,” he said of the 2.0 requirement. “There’s been no upsurge in student performance. All that can be shown is a dramatic decrease in the number of students taking part in school activities.”

With its C requirement, the Arkansas policy is particularly strict, but since the early 1980s, many school districts and a few states--Alabama, New Mexico, Texas, and West Virginia--have adopted “no pass, no play” measures, according to the Kansas City, Mo.-based National Federation of State High School Associations.

Today, as college officials continue to debate the merits of the tougher academic requirements set by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, some secondary school policymakers are rewriting their rules. In Texas, for example, the legislature last year changed a mandatory six-week sidelining period for students--the equivalent of one grading period--to three weeks in cases where students can demonstrate improved grades.

Data From Arkansas

A recent study commissioned by the Arkansas education department and the Arkansas Activities Association backs Sen. Brown’s arguments against the minimum-GPA rule.

The study, released earlier this year, reported that an estimated 41,000 students--22 percent of all Arkansas secondary students--were ineligible to participate in extracurricular activities during the 1995-96 school year because of the 2.0 requirement. Data collected by the department showed a sharper decrease in the number of boys eligible for school activities than girls and a sharper decrease in the eligibility of African-American students than any other racial group.

“The GPA policy may have encouraged some students to perform better academically, but overall it has had a devastating effect on student participation in interscholastic activities in Arkansas,” the report concluded. “However noble its intent, [the policy] has served to exclude students from participating, especially in sports.”

Even so, state board member Martha Dixon voted against changing the state’s policy. “What is school for?” she asked. “If I had a child in school, and they didn’t make a C average, they wouldn’t be involved in those activities. Lessons should come first.”

Proposed changes--which the state board will be voting on this fall--would allow Arkansas students who don’t make a C average to take part in school activities if they attend remedial tutoring programs, have no more than three unexcused absences each semester, stay out of trouble both in and out of school, and demonstrate academic progress over the school year.

Board members voted 6-5 this summer to eliminate the state’s GPA requirement and to put the related policy changes into effect next spring, pending this fall’s vote. Board Chairman William B. Fischer said that it was a tough decision for board members to make.

“People have this intuitive belief that these requirements are a good thing, but there’s no data that supports that,” he said. “The policy had the best intentions, but we learned that it did more harm than it helped.”

Misuse Feared

Board member Edwin B. Alderson Jr. has some concerns over how strictly the new policy will be interpreted by school districts. He voted for the policy change, but said he wants to make certain that the tutoring component is “very strict and very focused.”

“I don’t have a problem in changing the regulations to the extent that it helps well-meaning, hard-working students,” he said. “But I fear that some schools will misuse the new rules in order to have a great sports team.”

The board will decide in coming months how to monitor districts for compliance.

Art Taylor, the associate director of the Center for the Study of Sports in Society at Northeastern University in Boston, contends that backing away from straight GPA requirements is not a lowering of standards, but rather an attempt “to work with the whole kid.”

“Yes, we need high academic standards. But you just can’t say, ‘Whoops, you didn’t make it,’” he said. “Attention and energies need to be focused early on in teaching kids consequences” of low grades, he continued, and giving them the resources--good teachers, counselors, and tutors--to help them achieve at higher levels.

Related Tags:

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
AI in Schools: What 1,000 Districts Reveal About Readiness and Risk
Move beyond “ban vs. embrace” with real-world AI data and practical guidance for a balanced, responsible district policy.
Content provided by Securly
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Recruitment & Retention Webinar
K-12 Lens 2026: What New Staffing Data Reveals About District Operations
Explore national survey findings and hear how districts are navigating staffing changes that affect daily operations, workload, and planning.
Content provided by Frontline Education
Education Funding Webinar Congress Approved Next Year’s Federal School Funding. What’s Next?
Congress passed the budget, but uncertainty remains. Experts explain what districts should expect from federal education policy next.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Student Well-Being & Movement Half of 16-Year-Old Boys Are Gambling. What Can Schools Do?
A Common Sense Media report examines adolescent boys' experiences with gambling and gambling-like activities.
4 min read
Image of dice showing on a cellphone with red alarming background.
E+
Student Well-Being & Movement Educators Want Schools Delivering Broad Array of SEL Skills, Survey Shows
An EdWeek Research Center survey finds support for building students' communication and problem-solving.
5 min read
Photo of cheerful dreamy girl dressed in checkered shirt closed eyes practicing yoga, SEL skills
Vanessa Solis/Education Week via Canva
Student Well-Being & Movement Opinion Is Your School’s SEL Strategy Working? The Questions Every Educator Should Ask
The evidence for social and emotional learning is strong, but the field is messy.
Christina Cipriano
5 min read
Figures tend to a student shaped garden
Mary Hassdyk Vooys for Education Week
Student Well-Being & Movement School Counselors See Rising Trauma Linked to Immigration Enforcement
The school staff whose job it is to support students say they see major signs of emotional distress.
6 min read
Students take a recess break outside of St. Paul district school in St. Paul, MN, February 23, 2026.
Students take recess outside an elementary school in St. Paul, Minn., on Feb. 23, 2026.
Tim Evans for Education Week