JACKSON, Miss. – The Mississippi Department of Education recently released the results of the third grade reading assessment. District-wide in the Louisville Municipal School District, 74.8 percent of third graders passed the assessment and 25.2 percent did not. At Louisville Elementary, 68 percent of third graders passed the assessment and 32 percent did not. 81.3 percent of students at Nanih Waiya Attendance Center passed and 18.3 percent did not and 90 percent of students at Noxapater Attendance Center passed and 10 percent did not.
The students were given a second chance to take the test during the week of May 6 through May 10 and if they did not pass the second time, will be given a third chance June 17 through June 28. If they don’t pass on the third attempt, unless they have a good cause exemption, they will be retained.
LMSD’s precentage of passing was just under the state percentage, according to a press release from MDE, it anounced that 75.7% of 31,787 third graders passed the initial administration of the third-grade reading assessment given this spring for the 2023-24 school year.
The percentage is nearly the same as the initial pass rate in 2022-23 of 76.3% when 31,623 third graders took the assessment, and higher than the pre-pandemic initial pass rate of 74.5%.
“When it comes to literacy, the collective efforts of teachers, administrators, literacy coaches and families are essential to students’ success,” said Dr. Ray Morgigno, interim state superintendent of education. “The MDE is committed to supporting instruction and resources aligned to the Science of Reading that will foster more achievement.”
In accordance with the Literacy-Based Promotion Act (LBPA), third graders who do not pass the initial administration of the reading test are given up to two attempts to retest. After the final retest in 2022-23, 84.9% of third graders passed the test, and 85% passed the test in 2021-22.
The LBPA became law in 2013 to improve reading skills of kindergarten through third-grade students in public schools so every student completing the third grade is able to read at or above grade level. The LBPA requires Mississippi third graders to pass a reading assessment to qualify for promotion to fourth grade. An amendment to the law in 2016 raised reading-level expectations starting in the 2018-19 school year, requiring third graders to score at level three or higher on the reading portion of the Mississippi Academic Assessment Program (MAAP) English Language Arts (ELA) assessment.
Students who did not pass the reading assessment on their first attempt last month were retested May 6-10. The second retest window is June 17 – 28. Some students may qualify for good cause exemptions to be promoted to fourth grade.
To see the district- and school-level initial pass rate report for 2023-24, go to mdek12.org/OPR/Reporting/Assessment/2023-24.
Final district-level pass rates will be published this fall in the Literacy-Based Promotion Act Annual Report of Performance and Student Retention for the 2023-24 school year.
Find all MDE news releases at mdek12.org/news.