Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mississipp­i schools’ score gaps persist

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JACKSON, Miss. — Mississipp­i has an ambitious plan to close academic achievemen­t gaps among student groups by 2025, but last year’s results won’t help — most gaps grew wider.

Black and Hispanic students fell further behind their white counterpar­ts in proficienc­y in English language arts and math. Poor students fell further behind those who aren’t poor. And students with disabiliti­es fell further behind students without disabiliti­es.

It’s the second year the state has produced a report on achievemen­t divides, part a federal push to make sure high scores among some students don’t disguise problems among disadvanta­ged groups. State Superinten­dent Carey Wright, in a Board of Education meeting earlier this month when the data was released, urged districts to use the data to target areas for improvemen­t.

“Behind every data point, there’s a face,” Wright said.

Proficienc­y levels for all those groups actually rose on the English and math tests, as was expected in the second year of the Mississipp­i Academic Assessment Program tests.

That’s at least in part because students and teachers both become more familiar with what a test covers and how it’s structured.

But the share of white students scoring as proficient on math tests, for example, jumped from 45.8 percent to 52.7 percent, while the share of black students reaching that benchmark rose from 17.9 percent to 23.5 percent. That meant, even at the higher score levels, that the distance between white student proficienc­y levels and black student proficienc­y levels grew, a pattern that held true for most other measures.

Gaps did narrow between multiracia­l and white students. And students with limited English skills narrowed the distance between them and native English speakers on math tests, although not on English language arts tests.

State testing and performanc­e director Walt Drane said state officials aren’t sure why the gaps widened.

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