• Former Mississippi state literacy director visits Michigan to discuss how to increase student reading scores
  • Mississippi holds struggling third graders back while Michigan school districts are no longer required to 
  • Literacy is a top issue on the campaign trail

LANSING — With Michigan ranking below most other states in fourth-grade literacy, some education advocates are calling on the state to bring back a controversial law requiring schools to hold struggling third graders back.

Retention is the “elephant in every room that I go into,” said Kymyona Burk, the former Mississippi state literacy director. 

Burk was among three panelists at a Wednesday discussion organized by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy on ““What Michigan Can Learn About Reading From Mississippi.”

Once at the bottom, Mississippi has increased its fourth grade reading rankings to ninth on the most recent national test in what some have dubbed the “Mississippi Miracle.” Meanwhile, Michigan has fallen. States across the country are looking to Mississippi for guidance

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“So retention is seen as a last resort,” said Burk, who led Mississippi’s implementation of its literacy law and is now a senior policy fellow at ExcelinEd, an education policy advocacy organization founded by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. “It’s our goal to ensure that students weren’t being socially promoted to the next grade without having the knowledge and skills.”

A seated woman poses
Kymyona Burk, former Mississippi state literacy director and current senior policy fellow at ExcelinEd, was in Michigan to talk about what the state can learn from Mississippi. The Magnolia State has seen literacy gains on national tests as Michigan has fallen behind. (Isabel Lohman/Bridge Michigan)

Wednesday’s discussion marked at least the third time in the past year where current or former Mississippi literacy officials or players have visited Michigan leaders to talk about literacy. 

Former Mississippi State Superintendent Carey Wright spoke to the Business Leaders for Michigan group in November. At Michigan’s Literacy Summit in December, three Mississippians spoke on the state’s literacy gains.

State Rep. Nancy DeBoer, R-Holland, and Sen. Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, attended the Wednesday event. 

The conversation comes at a crucial time: fourth graders rank 44th in reading on a national test, lawmakers are discussing options to mandate literacy training for teachers and school districts are in the midst of implementing new curricula.

Meanwhile, gubernatorial candidates are making education a central issue in their campaigns, and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has said literacy is her number one priority in her final months in office.

Here are three things to know about how Mississippi and Michigan compare. 

Mississippi has a third grade retention law. Michigan doesn’t

Teacher with her students in a classroom. 
Some Mississippi school districts offer summer school to help students with reading skills. Summer school teacher Amelita Ross told Bridge literacy instruction is ‘way more focused’ since the state passed a law with a high-stakes third grade test. (Rory Doyle for Bridge Michigan)

Mississippi requires schools to screen K-3 students for reading skills, notify parents if their student is struggling and hold struggling third graders back.

Under a Republican-backed law signed in 2016, starting in the 2019-2020 school year, Michigan districts had been required to hold back third grade students who struggled to read.

But the pandemic’s halt on testing and wide use of exemptions meant few students were held back before Whitmer and a Democratic-led Legislature repealed the retention requirement in 2023. 

“I think some form of retention — it could be helpful. I don’t know if people are ready to vote for that,” DeBoer, chair of the House Education Committee, told Bridge. 

Senate Education Chair Dayna Polehanki, D-Livonia, told Bridge she is not going to support an effort to hold back third-graders, especially when Michigan outperforms Mississippi on eighth grade reading. 

“I reject the notion that a miracle has taken place based on flunking third graders in Mississippi,” Polehanki said.

“I’m happy for them that they’ve increased student literacy supports, but until I see them carrying that out longitudinally and doing better than Michigan does by the time the kids reach eighth grade, I’m not sure how you can log that as a miracle.” 

Results are mixed 

Research is mixed on the benefits of holding students back, and states vary on what additional support they provide students who repeat third grade.

A study of Michigan third graders found that students who scored just below the cutoff and were flagged for retention scored higher on tests a year later than students who scored just above the cutoff. 

In Mississippi, one study found that students who were held back later had higher English language arts scores and the same attendance rates as students who scored just above the cutoff.

A new study of Texas students found that those held back were less likely to graduate high school and had lower wages at age of 26

Burk told Bridge she would like to see more research on the effect of specific supports students receive when they repeat third grade, not just the effect of retention. 

Panelists sit in front of a Mackinac Center for Public Policy backdrop
As Michigan leaders discuss ways to raise literacy scores, the Mackinac Center for Public Policy hosted a discussion of what Michigan can learn from Mississippi. From left, Jarrett Skorup, vice president for marketing and communications at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, Kymyona Burk, senior policy fellow at ExcelinEd, Molly Macek, director of education policy at the Mackinac Center, and Chris Hobson, a second grade teacher at Hillsdale Community Schools. (Isabel Lohman/Bridge Michigan)

Chris Hobson, a second grade teacher at Hillsdale Community Schools who spoke at the event, told Bridge she is not sure if the state should go back to holding third graders back but she does think there “needs to be some accountability.”

If Michigan brought back retention requirements, Hobson said, there would need to be “a little bit more in depth” since “retention isn’t a fix-all, it’s kind of a Band Aid.” 

Both states have changed how they train teachers 

Both Mississippi and Michigan have literacy coaches aimed at helping teachers improve their reading instruction skills. 

In Mississippi, teachers at the lowest-performing schools underwent a “science of reading” course called LETRS. Word of mouth helped ensure more teachers took it too, Burk said. 

Now, Mississippi uses a training program called AIM Pathways


Michigan has already put $44 million toward LETRS training. DeBoer is sponsoring a bill that would require K-5 teachers to complete the training while a different bill would add training requirements for teacher certification

DeBoer told Bridge Wednesday she is still talking to the state superintendent about ways to incorporate training as part of the school year and ensure teachers receive continuing education credits for taking the course.

So far, 6,300 teachers have completed the training and another 5,600 people are taking the course, State Superintendent Glenn Maleyko previously said. 
He said there are an estimated 44,000 additional K-5 instructors who need to be trained.

Lawmakers are in the process of discussing education priorities in their budget proposals.

Polehanki urged state leaders to consider following the example of Massachusetts, which routinely ranks at or near the top of national rankings. She said it’s “baffling” that others aren’t talking about Massachusetts and that funding is important for improving student achievement.

An analysis from EdTrust-Midwest released Wednesday finds that if Michigan funded students from low-income backgrounds like Massachusetts, the state would spend $4.2 billion more annually.

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