I don’t work in Mississippi but a lot of the data seems to be centered around early childhood literacy acts during COVID. Which if we are selling that as the reason then it’s more indication that more pragmatic lawmaking should be the goal. They were trying to keep up with federal standards. But I haven’t really read the data so I’m just going off of limited knowledge.
However when you flip to Alabama most major laws concerning education are specifically focused on CRT, transgender questions, religious beliefs, sports, and trying to kill the public school system. So not all states are equal in terms of how they approach education.
But my overall point was how school systems work. Take Prichard Al. They have 4 failing high schools in the bottom 50 in the state. Yet we don’t get rid of the deadweight here but we pick schools in the middle to get rid of. Why? Because Vigor brings in a ton of money for Mobile county in sports and combining schools would threaten that money line. It’s how most of these county systems here work. Failing schools are treated in one of two ways… 1) they are “sports” schools or 2) they are day cares so you won’t redistrict them into your exceptional schools in the county.
If we are competing with schools then let some of these places die and redistrict them. If we are educating them then let’s come up with 10 year plans to change the outlook of these failing schools to get them better prepared for post school life. But promoting charter, private, and homeschool is just trying to nuke the fridge with the problem instead of making real changes to the system.