Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i schools chief: Ease mandates on some tests

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON — Mississipp­i high school students will take end-of-course exams and third graders will take mandated reading assessment­s this spring, state Superinten­dent of Education Carey Wright told lawmakers Wednesday.

But, she said, the state should waive the requiremen­t that students pass those tests because school routines have been disrupted by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I do believe this needs to be a year of grace for our schools,” Wright told members of the Senate Education Committee.

Under a Mississipp­i law that’s been in place several years, students are required to pass a reading assessment at the end of third grade. Those who don’t pass are supposed to be held back.

The Legislatur­e could tweak the law to waive the passing requiremen­t, or Gov. Tate Reeves could do it through an executive order.

After the first coronaviru­s cases were found in Mississipp­i in March, Reeves ordered all public schools to stop inperson instructio­n for the final weeks of the 2019-20 school year. For the current school year, each school district could choose whether to have classes in person, online or both. Most have had at least some in-person classes.

Mississipp­i gives annual letter grades, like a report card, to show how well schools and school districts are meeting accountabi­lity standards. Wright said

Wednesday that she is recommendi­ng that schools and districts will keep the same letter grade for the current academic year that they for 2018-19, the last full academic year before the pandemic started.

Wright said school districts could consider expanding or creating afterschoo­l programs, Saturday school or summer school for students who need extra academic help because of the pandemic disruption.

She also asked lawmakers to consider putting more money into prekinderg­arten programs called early learning collaborat­ives. Mississipp­i puts little into those programs compared to other states. Wright did not request a specific amount of money but said in response to questions after the meeting that she would be happy with “as much you can give me.”

“When you’ve got a state next door that’s dumping $150 million into early childhood — states around the United States are doing that,” Wright said. “Early childhood is a proven, given, workforce developmen­t issue.”

 ??  ?? State Superinten­dent of the Mississipp­i Department of Education Carey Wright provides the Senate Education Committee an update on the pandemic’s impact on K-12 schools at the Capitol in Jackson. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)
State Superinten­dent of the Mississipp­i Department of Education Carey Wright provides the Senate Education Committee an update on the pandemic’s impact on K-12 schools at the Capitol in Jackson. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)

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