SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 4
Download to read offline
10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com
Page 1 of 4about:blank
Graduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring
Written by LaRaye Brown The Hechinger Report
Sep. 15, 2013 | clarionledger.com
BRANDON — Rico Walton Jr.’s mother died when he was 15 and his academic life soon spiraled
downward. Infractions tallied up. Tardiness, talking back to teachers, threats and fights. Walton
began his senior year an entire semester behind.
“I had no learning disorder,” he said. “I just played around.”
To catch Walton up with his classmates, the Rankin County School District enrolled him in both
traditional classes and online classes, which operate like college correspondence courses.
Walton doubled his academic workload and managed to graduate on time. Now he’s a freshman
at Hinds Community College in Raymond, working toward his dream of being a music engineer.
Online courses like the ones Walton took are among many options available if Rankin students
fall behind. The district’s academic intervention program allows students to take compressed
classes and catch up in a year. Gateway to College, a partnership with Hinds Community
College, encourages students to earn a high school diploma and college credits at the same
time. In addition, all major courses are taught in Rankin’s summer school.
Struggling students who live some 70 miles away in the small Delta city of Durant have fewer
choices, as do those in many small districts throughout the state. In Durant, the only option to
make up lost credits is in the classroom-based, online program known as credit recovery,
available only to students who fail classes by a few points.
Credit recovery would not have been an option for Walton, who had to take entire classes to
catch up. In fact, if Walton had attended Durant schools and started his senior year an entire
semester behind, he could not have caught up with credit recovery alone, nor would he have
been able to receive a diploma last spring.
The disparity of options in Rankin and Durant illustrates how vast inequities among the state’s
school districts have helped produce yawning gaps in Mississippi’s graduation rates, which are
among the lowest in the nation.
Just 64 percent of Mississippi students during the 2009-10 school year graduated in four years,
putting the Magnolia State ahead of only Nevada and Washington, D.C., the U.S. Department of
Education reported. Nationally, 78.2 percent of high school students graduated on time.
In addition, Mississippi’s scores on the ACT exams are well below the national average; just 12
percent of some 28,000 students who took the test in 2012 were deemed college ready in
reading, English, math and science — compared to 26 percent nationwide.
Mississippi lawmakers passed new legislation last session aimed at improving education, and
10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com
Page 2 of 4about:blank
districts across the state are now attempting to make sense of the new reforms.
For example, a new law will prevent most students from moving to fourth grade if they’re reading
below grade level. Another mandates a uniform attendance policy. And for the first time in its
history, the state will pay for selected pre-school programs, potentially giving up to 3,500 children
a leg up on learning before they enter kindergarten.
The state also is pushing to improve graduation rates, insisting high schools posting rates below
80 percent submit improvement plans.
The law doesn’t specify a timeline or guidelines, but this fall the state will tell districts what to
address as they restructure, said Toni Kersh, bureau director of the Office of Compulsory School
Attendance Enforcement. The state may also develop a pilot plan first, she said.
Much uncertainty still remains about what will change and when.
“We cannot speculate on the impact of this new law legislation on districts until the policies are
developed,” said Lynn House, interim state superintendent of education, in a statement.
In the meantime, effects of the new reforms won’t likely be felt for several years. That means
students struggling in smaller, poorer districts like Durant will have fewer opportunities to catch
up and graduate on time.
It means thousands of students will be left to rely on whatever interim solutions their districts can
afford to create — an inequity that blocks progress, said Anne Foster, executive director of
Parents for Public Schools in Mississippi, a national organization of community-based chapters
working to strengthen public schools.
“That’s still part of our problem in Mississippi,” Foster said. “Until we provide that equity, we will
not see the kind of advancement in achievement we’re trying to see.”
Back on track
Charlotte Young, Rankin’s director of Student Support Services and Dropout Prevention, said it’s
not unusual for students’ home lives to cause academic setbacks. Death, divorce, financial
problems, undiagnosed learning conditions and untreated emotional disorders can all distract
students and lead to academic failure.
In Walton’s case, his mother’s death changed his outlook on life.
“It made me see we just live to die,” he said.
Young, who makes school and home visits throughout her district, identifies students like Walton
who might benefit from nontraditional paths to graduation, including taking classes at Rankin
County Learning Center, the district’s alternative school.
10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com
Page 3 of 4about:blank
Walton was sent to the Learning Center during his junior year at Brandon High School because
he got in trouble. He and his father decided on home schooling instead, and Walton missed an
entire semester. When he returned to Brandon High his senior year, he had to finish his assigned
time at the Learning Center.
Walton, now 18, sighs when talking about falling behind. Learning disabilities may cause some
students to get behind, but he and many others don’t have that problem.
“I know it’s not every kid’s fault,” Walton said, “but we have to stop playing around and get on
with what we need to do.”
That’s exactly what Walton did, and it worked, said Young, adding that getting students like
Walton on an academic level with their peers by ninth-grade makes it more likely they will
graduate.
Larger, wealthier districts in Mississippi can save students like Walton by offering richer and
deeper academic programs and more options. Rankin County is in one of the state’s more
prosperous regions; Its July unemployment rate (the most recent figure available) was 4.6
percent, the lowest in the state; 10 percent of its residents live below the poverty level.
Rankin has about 19,500 students, more than 20 campuses and countless extracurricular
activities, including several bands. The state graded it a “B,” on its most recent report card.
In comparison, Durant is in struggling Holmes County, where 43 percent of the county’s residents
live below the poverty level and the median income is just above $22,000. The July
unemployment rate was 18.2 percent, the second highest in the state. Many parents look for jobs
elsewhere and move their children to other districts.
Durant’s school district enrolls only about 560 students. With far less revenue, the district has
little budgetary flexibility—and it shows. All of the school buildings are housed on one small
campus. The high school has football and basketball teams but can’t afford a band.
The state labeled Durant a "D" district, based largely on test scores.
“A poor school district is still a poor school district, and it’s reflected in everything down the line,”
said William Jones, a member of the state Board of Education.
Not "enough staff"
Willie Dale, who recently retired from his post as the only principal of Durant’s school district, said
his district simply can’t afford many programs or interventions. He wished they could have offered
summer school, but said “we don’t have enough staff for that.’’
Financially strapped districts like Durant can devise creative solutions to stretch their resources,
like partnering with other districts to provide summer school — but there are limits.
10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com
Page 4 of 4about:blank
“It’s going to be based on the money, at the end of the day, and whether you can have additional
personnel,” said Kersh of the state’s attendance office.
This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-
news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University.

More Related Content

What's hot

The State of Low-Income Students in Polk County
The State of Low-Income Students in Polk CountyThe State of Low-Income Students in Polk County
The State of Low-Income Students in Polk CountyLauren R. Johnson
 
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegas
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las VegasWhat education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegas
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegastodaydailynewslasvegas
 
HV Housing & Schools Guide
HV Housing & Schools GuideHV Housing & Schools Guide
HV Housing & Schools GuideAlise Newman
 
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount Vernon
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount VernonOpportunity Neighborhoods: Mount Vernon
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount VernonFairfax County
 
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)Katelyn Goodrich
 
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...ALEC
 
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and Success
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and SuccessProgram: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and Success
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and SuccessMarissa Lowman
 
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...Vicki Alger
 
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School Reform
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School ReformA Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School Reform
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School ReformLeila Jerusalem
 
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...ALEC
 
You Can Afford College
You Can Afford CollegeYou Can Afford College
You Can Afford CollegeChip Knighton
 
Minnesota Morelos
Minnesota MorelosMinnesota Morelos
Minnesota MorelosMinnMore
 
Complete dissertation prospectus
Complete dissertation prospectusComplete dissertation prospectus
Complete dissertation prospectusjuliuswairimu1
 
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014Education Week Top News August 20, 2014
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014Gtomko
 

What's hot (20)

MC 401 Rough Draft
MC 401 Rough DraftMC 401 Rough Draft
MC 401 Rough Draft
 
The State of Low-Income Students in Polk County
The State of Low-Income Students in Polk CountyThe State of Low-Income Students in Polk County
The State of Low-Income Students in Polk County
 
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegas
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las VegasWhat education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegas
What education savings bill will mean for low-income families in Las Vegas
 
Study Group XVI
Study Group XVIStudy Group XVI
Study Group XVI
 
HV Housing & Schools Guide
HV Housing & Schools GuideHV Housing & Schools Guide
HV Housing & Schools Guide
 
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount Vernon
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount VernonOpportunity Neighborhoods: Mount Vernon
Opportunity Neighborhoods: Mount Vernon
 
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)
SO385 Executive SummaryKG (1)
 
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
 
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and Success
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and SuccessProgram: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and Success
Program: The Role of Parent Engagement in Student Access and Success
 
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...
20081001 Murray and Stacey Peeking Behind the Blue Ribbon How the NCLB Blue R...
 
Sreb florida facts_report
Sreb florida facts_reportSreb florida facts_report
Sreb florida facts_report
 
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School Reform
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School ReformA Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School Reform
A Right Denied - The Critical Need For Genuine School Reform
 
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, ...
 
You Can Afford College
You Can Afford CollegeYou Can Afford College
You Can Afford College
 
Minnesota Morelos
Minnesota MorelosMinnesota Morelos
Minnesota Morelos
 
Pathways to Student Success: Slideshow
Pathways to Student Success: SlideshowPathways to Student Success: Slideshow
Pathways to Student Success: Slideshow
 
Complete dissertation prospectus
Complete dissertation prospectusComplete dissertation prospectus
Complete dissertation prospectus
 
collegeaccessmatters_2_2
collegeaccessmatters_2_2collegeaccessmatters_2_2
collegeaccessmatters_2_2
 
Ignite
IgniteIgnite
Ignite
 
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014Education Week Top News August 20, 2014
Education Week Top News August 20, 2014
 

Viewers also liked

BPS Internet Safety Campaign
BPS Internet Safety CampaignBPS Internet Safety Campaign
BPS Internet Safety Campaignjkiddtech
 
Calendário 2014
Calendário 2014Calendário 2014
Calendário 2014Sarah Sousa
 
Libro pioneros del Trabajo Social
Libro pioneros del Trabajo SocialLibro pioneros del Trabajo Social
Libro pioneros del Trabajo Socialtefa06
 
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PR
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PRBb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PR
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PRGreg Turchetta
 
Algoritmos programacion
Algoritmos programacionAlgoritmos programacion
Algoritmos programacionMiguel Vill
 
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121DaishinSecurities
 
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedin
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedine-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedin
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec LinkedinJacques Eltabet Formations
 
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...Yateamo
 
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011JacquieWM
 
Data carpentry instructor-onboarding
Data carpentry instructor-onboardingData carpentry instructor-onboarding
Data carpentry instructor-onboardingtracykteal
 
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographs
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographsKnorr Sampling in Train activity photographs
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographsArchan Gurtu
 
Apostila de Cozinha das Américas
Apostila de Cozinha das AméricasApostila de Cozinha das Américas
Apostila de Cozinha das AméricasCarolina Sá
 

Viewers also liked (18)

BPS Internet Safety Campaign
BPS Internet Safety CampaignBPS Internet Safety Campaign
BPS Internet Safety Campaign
 
Calendário 2014
Calendário 2014Calendário 2014
Calendário 2014
 
Libro pioneros del Trabajo Social
Libro pioneros del Trabajo SocialLibro pioneros del Trabajo Social
Libro pioneros del Trabajo Social
 
Una nova economia: més enllà de l’oferta i la demanda
Una nova economia: més enllà de l’oferta i la demandaUna nova economia: més enllà de l’oferta i la demanda
Una nova economia: més enllà de l’oferta i la demanda
 
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PR
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PRBb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PR
Bb_CollierCounty-CaseStudy-PR
 
Algoritmos programacion
Algoritmos programacionAlgoritmos programacion
Algoritmos programacion
 
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121
대신리포트_모닝미팅_131121
 
Ecs 1º bac a
Ecs 1º bac aEcs 1º bac a
Ecs 1º bac a
 
Cinema desembre 2012
Cinema desembre 2012Cinema desembre 2012
Cinema desembre 2012
 
Presentation_NEW.PPTX
Presentation_NEW.PPTXPresentation_NEW.PPTX
Presentation_NEW.PPTX
 
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedin
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedine-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedin
e-Reputation: Les 9 erreurs à éviter avec Linkedin
 
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...
Unidad v. derecho laboral (ley del servicio civil del estado y los municipios...
 
DP
DPDP
DP
 
Modul 3-1-ikan
Modul 3-1-ikanModul 3-1-ikan
Modul 3-1-ikan
 
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011
Ethics In Ct 2 Mar2011
 
Data carpentry instructor-onboarding
Data carpentry instructor-onboardingData carpentry instructor-onboarding
Data carpentry instructor-onboarding
 
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographs
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographsKnorr Sampling in Train activity photographs
Knorr Sampling in Train activity photographs
 
Apostila de Cozinha das Américas
Apostila de Cozinha das AméricasApostila de Cozinha das Américas
Apostila de Cozinha das Américas
 

Similar to GraduationGaps

Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIR
Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIRChronic_Absence_STEGMEIR
Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIRMary Stegmeir
 
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's Future
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's FutureDavid Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's Future
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's FutureMark Wills
 
StarTribune Article
StarTribune ArticleStarTribune Article
StarTribune ArticleNate Schwab
 
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...Future Education Magazine
 
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docx
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docxAN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docx
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docxnettletondevon
 
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...slpr2013
 
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts Report
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts ReportNC Early Childhood Attendance Counts Report
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts ReportEducationNC
 
Final Presentation - Workforce and College Preparation
Final Presentation - Workforce and College PreparationFinal Presentation - Workforce and College Preparation
Final Presentation - Workforce and College PreparationDaniel Lebowitz
 
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debtpauldylan06
 
Accountability In Online Learning
Accountability In Online LearningAccountability In Online Learning
Accountability In Online LearningJeff Piontek
 
States test a new school model | Reuters
States test a new school model
| ReutersStates test a new school model
| Reuters
States test a new school model | Reuterstypicalruin872
 
Higher Education Department - College Readiness
Higher Education Department - College ReadinessHigher Education Department - College Readiness
Higher Education Department - College ReadinessValerie Crespin-Trujillo
 
Washington D.C. Schools
Washington D.C. SchoolsWashington D.C. Schools
Washington D.C. SchoolsSlacko23
 
Roderick Hooks 4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docx
Roderick Hooks         4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docxRoderick Hooks         4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docx
Roderick Hooks 4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docxcarlstromcurtis
 
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copyGentry Fitch
 

Similar to GraduationGaps (17)

Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIR
Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIRChronic_Absence_STEGMEIR
Chronic_Absence_STEGMEIR
 
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's Future
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's FutureDavid Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's Future
David Catania's Vision to Secure Our City's Future
 
StarTribune Article
StarTribune ArticleStarTribune Article
StarTribune Article
 
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...
High Rates Of Student Absenteeism Challenge Massachusetts Education | Future ...
 
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docx
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docxAN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docx
AN INTERIM REPORT ON A PILOT CREDITRECOVERY PROGRAM IN A LAR.docx
 
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...
Communities in schools pennsylvania announces continued improvement graduatio...
 
The Importance of Being in School
The Importance of Being in SchoolThe Importance of Being in School
The Importance of Being in School
 
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts Report
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts ReportNC Early Childhood Attendance Counts Report
NC Early Childhood Attendance Counts Report
 
Final Presentation - Workforce and College Preparation
Final Presentation - Workforce and College PreparationFinal Presentation - Workforce and College Preparation
Final Presentation - Workforce and College Preparation
 
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt
6 facts you must know about student loans and college debt
 
CALLBOOKLETweb
CALLBOOKLETwebCALLBOOKLETweb
CALLBOOKLETweb
 
Accountability In Online Learning
Accountability In Online LearningAccountability In Online Learning
Accountability In Online Learning
 
States test a new school model | Reuters
States test a new school model
| ReutersStates test a new school model
| Reuters
States test a new school model | Reuters
 
Higher Education Department - College Readiness
Higher Education Department - College ReadinessHigher Education Department - College Readiness
Higher Education Department - College Readiness
 
Washington D.C. Schools
Washington D.C. SchoolsWashington D.C. Schools
Washington D.C. Schools
 
Roderick Hooks 4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docx
Roderick Hooks         4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docxRoderick Hooks         4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docx
Roderick Hooks 4Roderick HooksEN 106262020Ineq.docx
 
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy
2015-SVT-Postsecondary-Project-Report-full copy
 

GraduationGaps

  • 1. 10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com Page 1 of 4about:blank Graduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring Written by LaRaye Brown The Hechinger Report Sep. 15, 2013 | clarionledger.com BRANDON — Rico Walton Jr.’s mother died when he was 15 and his academic life soon spiraled downward. Infractions tallied up. Tardiness, talking back to teachers, threats and fights. Walton began his senior year an entire semester behind. “I had no learning disorder,” he said. “I just played around.” To catch Walton up with his classmates, the Rankin County School District enrolled him in both traditional classes and online classes, which operate like college correspondence courses. Walton doubled his academic workload and managed to graduate on time. Now he’s a freshman at Hinds Community College in Raymond, working toward his dream of being a music engineer. Online courses like the ones Walton took are among many options available if Rankin students fall behind. The district’s academic intervention program allows students to take compressed classes and catch up in a year. Gateway to College, a partnership with Hinds Community College, encourages students to earn a high school diploma and college credits at the same time. In addition, all major courses are taught in Rankin’s summer school. Struggling students who live some 70 miles away in the small Delta city of Durant have fewer choices, as do those in many small districts throughout the state. In Durant, the only option to make up lost credits is in the classroom-based, online program known as credit recovery, available only to students who fail classes by a few points. Credit recovery would not have been an option for Walton, who had to take entire classes to catch up. In fact, if Walton had attended Durant schools and started his senior year an entire semester behind, he could not have caught up with credit recovery alone, nor would he have been able to receive a diploma last spring. The disparity of options in Rankin and Durant illustrates how vast inequities among the state’s school districts have helped produce yawning gaps in Mississippi’s graduation rates, which are among the lowest in the nation. Just 64 percent of Mississippi students during the 2009-10 school year graduated in four years, putting the Magnolia State ahead of only Nevada and Washington, D.C., the U.S. Department of Education reported. Nationally, 78.2 percent of high school students graduated on time. In addition, Mississippi’s scores on the ACT exams are well below the national average; just 12 percent of some 28,000 students who took the test in 2012 were deemed college ready in reading, English, math and science — compared to 26 percent nationwide. Mississippi lawmakers passed new legislation last session aimed at improving education, and
  • 2. 10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com Page 2 of 4about:blank districts across the state are now attempting to make sense of the new reforms. For example, a new law will prevent most students from moving to fourth grade if they’re reading below grade level. Another mandates a uniform attendance policy. And for the first time in its history, the state will pay for selected pre-school programs, potentially giving up to 3,500 children a leg up on learning before they enter kindergarten. The state also is pushing to improve graduation rates, insisting high schools posting rates below 80 percent submit improvement plans. The law doesn’t specify a timeline or guidelines, but this fall the state will tell districts what to address as they restructure, said Toni Kersh, bureau director of the Office of Compulsory School Attendance Enforcement. The state may also develop a pilot plan first, she said. Much uncertainty still remains about what will change and when. “We cannot speculate on the impact of this new law legislation on districts until the policies are developed,” said Lynn House, interim state superintendent of education, in a statement. In the meantime, effects of the new reforms won’t likely be felt for several years. That means students struggling in smaller, poorer districts like Durant will have fewer opportunities to catch up and graduate on time. It means thousands of students will be left to rely on whatever interim solutions their districts can afford to create — an inequity that blocks progress, said Anne Foster, executive director of Parents for Public Schools in Mississippi, a national organization of community-based chapters working to strengthen public schools. “That’s still part of our problem in Mississippi,” Foster said. “Until we provide that equity, we will not see the kind of advancement in achievement we’re trying to see.” Back on track Charlotte Young, Rankin’s director of Student Support Services and Dropout Prevention, said it’s not unusual for students’ home lives to cause academic setbacks. Death, divorce, financial problems, undiagnosed learning conditions and untreated emotional disorders can all distract students and lead to academic failure. In Walton’s case, his mother’s death changed his outlook on life. “It made me see we just live to die,” he said. Young, who makes school and home visits throughout her district, identifies students like Walton who might benefit from nontraditional paths to graduation, including taking classes at Rankin County Learning Center, the district’s alternative school.
  • 3. 10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com Page 3 of 4about:blank Walton was sent to the Learning Center during his junior year at Brandon High School because he got in trouble. He and his father decided on home schooling instead, and Walton missed an entire semester. When he returned to Brandon High his senior year, he had to finish his assigned time at the Learning Center. Walton, now 18, sighs when talking about falling behind. Learning disabilities may cause some students to get behind, but he and many others don’t have that problem. “I know it’s not every kid’s fault,” Walton said, “but we have to stop playing around and get on with what we need to do.” That’s exactly what Walton did, and it worked, said Young, adding that getting students like Walton on an academic level with their peers by ninth-grade makes it more likely they will graduate. Larger, wealthier districts in Mississippi can save students like Walton by offering richer and deeper academic programs and more options. Rankin County is in one of the state’s more prosperous regions; Its July unemployment rate (the most recent figure available) was 4.6 percent, the lowest in the state; 10 percent of its residents live below the poverty level. Rankin has about 19,500 students, more than 20 campuses and countless extracurricular activities, including several bands. The state graded it a “B,” on its most recent report card. In comparison, Durant is in struggling Holmes County, where 43 percent of the county’s residents live below the poverty level and the median income is just above $22,000. The July unemployment rate was 18.2 percent, the second highest in the state. Many parents look for jobs elsewhere and move their children to other districts. Durant’s school district enrolls only about 560 students. With far less revenue, the district has little budgetary flexibility—and it shows. All of the school buildings are housed on one small campus. The high school has football and basketball teams but can’t afford a band. The state labeled Durant a "D" district, based largely on test scores. “A poor school district is still a poor school district, and it’s reflected in everything down the line,” said William Jones, a member of the state Board of Education. Not "enough staff" Willie Dale, who recently retired from his post as the only principal of Durant’s school district, said his district simply can’t afford many programs or interventions. He wished they could have offered summer school, but said “we don’t have enough staff for that.’’ Financially strapped districts like Durant can devise creative solutions to stretch their resources, like partnering with other districts to provide summer school — but there are limits.
  • 4. 10/8/13 4:30 PMGraduation gaps among Miss. school districts glaring | The Clarion-Ledger | clarionledger.com Page 4 of 4about:blank “It’s going to be based on the money, at the end of the day, and whether you can have additional personnel,” said Kersh of the state’s attendance office. This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education- news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University.