Starkville Daily News

State could seize 2 small school districts but not Jackson

- By JEFF AMY Associated Press

JACKSON (AP) — Mississipp­i Board of Education members will be asked to decide Thursday whether they want the state to take over Jackson and two other school districts under a new process aimed at improving academic performanc­e.

A committee in November recommende­d that the board consider placing the Humphrey County, Noxubee County and Jackson schools in a new statewide achievemen­t school district.

State Board of Education Chair Rosemary Aultman is signaling that it’s unlikely the board will move to take over Jackson, only about two months after Gov. Phil Bryant rejected a state takeover of Mississipp­i’s second-largest school district. Bryant, instead, opted for a more collaborat­ive approach allowing a local school board to remain in place.

“I think we want to allow the governor’s program to move forward,” Aultman said. She said the board could reconsider its stance sometime next year if work on improving the 27,000-student Jackson district doesn’t show progress.

Under the achievemen­t school district structure, Bryant

wouldn’t be required to approve board actions, unlike under the board’s request to take over Jackson for violating state accreditin­g standards.

Aultman says the board will more seriously consider folding Humphreys and Noxubee into the achievemen­t school district. She said Noxubee has shown some

improvemen­ts in test scores, but Humphreys has shown little change.

All three districts made the list because they have had F academic ratings for two straight years, and half or more of their schools are also rated F.

Jeanne Middleton Hairston, who became president of the Jackson school board after all the former board members resigned, argued that new leadership should

get a chance in Jackson.

“The achievemen­t school district decision underscore­s the urgency and seriousnes­s of the challenges facing Jackson Public Schools,” she said in a statement to The Associated Press. “I am hopeful that the JPS board will have a continued opportunit­y to serve and to develop a productive working relationsh­ip with the Mississipp­i Department of Education to achieve the shared goal of providing

a world class education for all of our students.”

Superinten­dents in Humphreys and Noxubee counties did not respond to repeated requests for comment this week.

The achievemen­t school district is an attempt to improve the academic performanc­e of long-struggling schools. It could take over schools rated F by the state for two straight years, or any district rated F for two of

three years. A school would remain under state control at least until it scores a C rating or better for five years.

The district is supposed to start taking over poorly rated schools next fall. State leaders are also trying to hire a superinten­dent, and Aultman said members are likely to discuss Thursday whether they are ready. Similar districts have been greeted with protests in other states over loss of local control.

In the separate legal process that allows the state to take control of a local district for violating state rules, Bryant had to declare a state of emergency. That’s what he refused to do in October, instead choosing to work with Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba and the Kellogg Foundation to seek improvemen­ts. Those three entities appointed a 15-member commission to seek improvemen­ts in the schools.

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