NewsPronto

 
The Times


.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Mississippi’s education miracle: A model for global literacy reform

  • Written by Harry Anthony Patrinos, Professor of Education Policy, University of Arkansas
imageMississippi's reforms have led to significant gains in reading and math, despite the state being one of the lowest spenders per pupil in the U.S.Klaus Vedfelt/Getty Images

In a surprising turnaround, Mississippi, once ranked near the bottom of U.S. education standings, has dramatically improved its student literacy rates.

As of 2023, the state...

Read more: Mississippi’s education miracle: A model for global literacy reform

More Articles ...

  1. Medetomidine is replacing xylazine in Philly street fentanyl − creating new hurdles for health care providers and drug users
  2. Maritime truce would end a sorry war on the waves for Russia that set back its naval power ambitions
  3. Sudan’s civil war: What military advances mean, and where the country could be heading next
  4. Deep-sea mining threatens sea life in a way no one is thinking about − by dumping debris into the thriving midwater zone
  5. The solution to workplace isolation might be in the gap − the generation gap
  6. Trump is not a king – but that doesn’t stop him from reveling in his job’s most ceremonial and exciting parts
  7. Trump’s desire to ‘un-unite’ Russia and China is unlikely to work – in fact, it could well backfire
  8. Engineering students explore how to ethically design and locate nuclear facilities in this college course
  9. Amid a tropical paradise known as ‘Lizard Island,’ researchers are cracking open evolution’s black box – scientist at work
  10. Mae Reeves used showstopping hats to fuel voter engagement and Black entrepreneurship
  11. Rethinking repression − why memory researchers reject the idea of recovered memories of trauma
  12. Ukraine will need major rebuilding when war ends − here’s why the US isn’t likely to invest in its recovery with a new Marshall Plan
  13. How many types of insects are there in the world?
  14. Genomic sequencing reveals previously unknown genes that make microbes resistant to drugs and hard to kill
  15. Poor neighborhoods, health care barriers are factors for heart disease risk in Black mothers
  16. National monuments have grown and shrunk under US presidents for over a century thanks to one law: The Antiquities Act
  17. How Japanese anime draws on religious traditions to explore themes of destiny, sacrifice and the struggle between desire and duty
  18. Egg prices soar as outdated supply chains crack under pressure
  19. Who gets to brand Puerto Rico: Its tourism agency or its biggest star?
  20. Trump’s executive order to dismantle the Education Department was inspired by the Heritage Foundation’s decades-long disapproval of the agency
  21. What are AI hallucinations? Why AIs sometimes make things up
  22. Why the words in your job posting may attract rule-bending narcissists
  23. Avoiding your neighbor because of how they voted? Democracy needs you to talk to them instead
  24. Defending humanitarian aid in terms of national security obscures its real purpose
  25. Trump’s firings of military leaders pose a crucial question to service members of all ranks
  26. Cuts to research into inequality, disparities and other DEIA topics harm science
  27. Helper bots in online communities diminish human interaction
  28. Digital imperialism: How US social media firms are using American law to challenge global tech regulation
  29. Debate over H-1B visas shines spotlight on US tech worker shortages
  30. What causes the powerful winds that fuel dust storms, wildfires and blizzards? A weather scientist explains
  31. Trump administration seeks to starve libraries and museums of funding by shuttering this little-known agency
  32. Tyrannical leader? Why comparisons between Trump and King George III miss the mark on 18th-century British monarchy
  33. 5 years on, true counts of COVID-19 deaths remain elusive − and research is hobbled by lack of data
  34. Atlantic sturgeon were fished almost to extinction − ancient DNA reveals how Chesapeake Bay population changed over centuries
  35. Insomnia can lead to heart issues − a psychologist recommends changes that can improve sleep
  36. How power imbalance, misread signs and strategic blunders clouded Hamas’ judgment over Gaza ceasefire
  37. Arrested and stripped of degree: Twin moves to bar Istanbul mayor from ballot suggests Turkey’s Erdogan is really worried this time
  38. Trump’s defiance of a federal court order fuels a constitutional crisis − a legal scholar unpacks the complicated case
  39. US isn’t first country to dismantle its foreign aid office − here’s what happened after the UK killed its version of USAID
  40. Revoking EPA’s endangerment finding – the keystone of US climate policies – won’t be simple and could have unintended consequences
  41. The Gaza ceasefire is dead − Israeli domestic politics killed it
  42. Measles cases are on the rise − here’s how to make sure you’re protected
  43. Humans aren’t the only animals with complex culture − but researchers point to one feature that makes ours unique
  44. Fires, wars and bureaucracy: The tumultuous journey to establish the US National Archives
  45. Can animals make art?
  46. Shaken baby syndrome can cause permanent brain damage, long-term disabilities or death – a pediatrician examines the preventable tragedy
  47. Donald Trump’s nonstop news-making can be exhausting, making it harder for people to scrutinize his presidential actions
  48. The story of the Great Migration often overlooks Black businesses that built Detroit
  49. As mountain glaciers melt, risk of catastrophic flash floods rises for millions − World Day for Glaciers carries a reminder
  50. Social media design is key to protecting kids online