Chattanooga Times Free Press

An estimated 1,800 students will repeat third grade under new law

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — An estimated 1,800 Alabama students will repeat third grade because of low reading scores under a new state promotion requiremen­t, the education superinten­dent said Thursday.

The high-stakes requiremen­t of the 2019 Alabama Literacy Act, which mandates that third graders meet reading benchmarks to move to fourth grade, is taking effect this year. State lawmakers delayed implementa­tion until this year to give students and schools time to recover from pandemic-related learning losses. The requiremen­t only applies to students in public schools.

Superinten­dent Eric Mackey on Thursday gave a presentati­on to state school board members about the number of students facing retention. An estimated 1,832 third graders will be held back and repeat third grade. Mackey said the numbers are preliminar­y. Schools will report their final numbers next month.

Mackey said if students must be held back that it is better to do it in the earlier grades.

“The later students are retained, the worse the social outcome. Third grade is not considered the beginning. It’s kind of the last effort,” Mackey said.

The 2019 law requires third graders to make a minimum score on the state’s standardiz­ed reading assessment or otherwise demonstrat­e mastery of third grade state reading standards through a portfolio. Students can also be promoted to fourth grade for a “good cause” exemption under the law.

Significan­tly fewer students are being retained than initially feared.

Standardiz­ed test scores from the spring showed that 4,808 students were not meeting the required score. The students were given the opportunit­y to attend summer reading camps and take the test a second time.

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