Skip to main content

User account menu

  • Log in
  • Rss
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Shopping cart 0
Cart

Search

Search
Home The Winona Times

Domain menu for The Winona Times (main)

  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Leaderboard
    • Payment Settings
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • FAQ
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our History
    • Our Staff
    • Privacy Policy
    • Rack Locations
  • Most Read
  • Most Recent
  • More News
  • Sports
  • E-Editions
  • Opinion
  • Advertising
    • Ad Rates
    • Ad Staff
  • Calendar
  • Obituaries
  • Social
  • Subscribe
  • State
  • The Conservative
  • Post
    • Post Dashboard
    • Leaderboard
    • Payment Settings
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Submit News
    • FAQ
    • Monthly Website Statistics
    • Our History
    • Our Staff
    • Privacy Policy
    • Rack Locations
  • Most Read
    • Most Read This Week
    • Most Read This Month
    • Most Read This Year
    • Most Read All Time
  • Most Recent
  • More News
    • Cartoons
    • Crime
    • Documents
    • Politics
    • Public Notices
    • Videos
  • Sports
  • E-Editions
    • Archives
    • Magazine
    • Newspaper E-Edition
    • Special Sections
  • Opinion
    • Columns
    • Comments
    • Editorials
    • Letters
    • Polls
    • Submit a Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
    • Ad Rates
    • Ad Staff
  • Calendar
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Social
    • Anniversaries/Births
    • Schools
    • Engagements/Weddings
    • Submit an Anniversary
    • Submit a Birth
    • Submit an Engagement
    • Submit School News
    • Submit a Wedding
  • Subscribe
  • State
  • The Conservative

Declining enrollment, increased absences threaten public school funding

By Kate Royals - Mississippi Today , READ MORE > 2,628 Reads
On Fri, 01/08/2021 - 10:25 AM

Schools across the state saw massive drops in student attendance in the fall semester, and more than half of Mississippi school districts appealed to the state superintendent of education with concerns about their funding as a result.

School districts are funded based on a calculation known as average daily attendance. This figure is a snapshot of attendance for the school year taken by averaging daily attendance for the second and third months of the academic year. Students must be present for at least 63% of a school day or they are marked absent.

While enrollment in public schools decreased around 23,000 students from last year to this year, absenteeism among enrolled students was on the rise due to quarantining, positive COVID-19 infections and connectivity issues.

Though the total amount schools stand to lose is unclear, superintendents from 80 school districts asked Carey Wright, the state superintendent of education, to consider whether their funding can be adjusted based on an “inordinately large number of absences” as the result of an epidemic or natural disaster. 

Carla Evers, superintendent of Pass Christian School District, detailed widespread attendance issues in an email to Wright on Nov. 30 appealing for an adjusted funding amount based on a provision in state law. She said despite the fact that nearly 90% of students are learning in person, absences are high due to quarantining and infections.

“Both virtual and in-person students and parents are finding it difficult to balance this new set of circumstances. With parents faced with the difficult choice of keeping their children at home and the need to return to work, children are often left to their own devices during the day,” she wrote. “This COVID-related phenomenon has resulted in unprecedented attendance issues in our schools with some days being in the low 80% range.” 

The district usually has strong attendance rates — above 95% — and very low chronic absenteeism, which is defined as missing more than 10% or more of school days and is linked to poor outcomes such as falling behind academically and a lower chance of graduating from high school. 

“Currently, 29% of students have 5 or more absences with 11% having already met the threshold for chronic absenteeism” as of Nov. 30, she said. 

A rule under the Mississippi Adequate Education Program, the law used to determine public school funding, provides a complicated formula to determine whether a district has experienced an “inordinately large number of absences.” If it has, the district can receive funds based on the prior year’s average daily attendance figure.

Specific figures are unclear, but many districts would stand to lose a substantial amount of money if numbers from this year are used — one reason why Wright is asking the Legislature to consider an alternative approach to calculating average daily attendance.

“There is a lot of concern, and rightfully so, from state superintendents about the children they’ve lost, but we fully expect those children to return once we get past the vaccination and the issues around the pandemic,” she told members of the Senate Education Committee at a hearing on Wednesday. 

Jackson County School District Superintendent John Strycker said if the actual numbers for this year were used to fund his district next year, it would result in a loss of around $900,000, or the equivalent of 14 teacher positions.

The district’s overall enrollment is also down 5% due to students’ transition to home school, private school or moving elsewhere.

“If funding were cut (this year) we’d be hit twice — lower funding in a year with an expected increase in students because of kindergartners delaying entry and homeschooled (students) returning to school,” he said. 

Enterprise School District Superintendent Josh Perkins described the attendance issue in his schools in his appeal to Wright.

Despite operating in a traditional, in-person format all semester, COVID-19 infections and exposure among students and family members has led to an increase in absences. 

“Being a rural school district, the quarantining of students with connectivity issues for 14 days had lead to a decrease in attendance and engagement from those individuals,” Perkins wrote in a Nov. 20 letter. 

Perkins said students who have elected to learn virtually full-time are “struggling academically and failing to participate in the daily lessons. Due to this, these students are being marked absent, which significantly lowers our average daily attendance.”

At the legislative meeting this week, Wright presented three different funding scenarios to lawmakers but recommended they use a three-year average of average daily attendance spanning 2018-19 through 2020-21 to fund schools this year. 

“This takes into account the ups and downs over a period of time,” she told lawmakers. “That being said, I would love for us to have a discussion about moving away from (average daily attendance) to average daily membership,” or the use of enrollment to determine funding. “Schools still have to accommodate the kids that have registered and have to pay the teachers for that number of children.”

-- Article credit to Kate Royals of Mississippi Today. --

‹ PreviousNext ›

Sign Up for Notifications of Local Breaking News

Start E-mail NotificationsStop E-mail NotificationsStart Mobile NotificationsStop Mobile Notifications

Obituaries

Susie Kuykendall McElroy

Susie Kuykendall McElroy, 91, born in Money, Miss. on January 3, 1929, passed away Wednesday,… READ MORE

Lora Ann McCuiston
Lester Bell, Jr.
Tannie Dixon, Jr.
Johnnie Forrest
Alberta Miller

Most Recent

USM Researchers Date Timbers from North Mississippi Structure to 1734

What began with a random phone call became an intense research project that led to remarkable… READ MORE

Mississippi Department of Archives and History - Nearly $3M in Preservation Grants Awarded
Professor Christian Pinnen Writes New Book on Colonial History
Lawmakers will work via internet as COVID-19 spreads at the Capitol
Abortion, teacher pay and tax cuts: Bills to watch this legislative session
Mississippi Covid-19 Update : January 22nd, 2021

Most Read News Article

  • Week
  • Month
  • Year
  • All Time

Longtime family favorite recipe

One of our favorite recipes when we were growing up was Momma's chicken spaghetti.  Momma took it… READ MORE

Mississippi Covid-19 Update : January 18th, 2021
One man killed, three injured in highway crash
Two bound over to grand jury
Pro-Initiative 65 groups say city of Madison's lawsuit could deprive Mississippians of their right to amend the state's constitution via ballot initiative
Despite large decrease in enrollment, Education Department seeks only slight decrease in K-12 funds from lawmakers

Recipe even better the next day

I found this great recipe on social media, and I made it last week. It was delicious the day I made… READ MORE

Longtime family favorite recipe
Mississippi federal delegation would vote along party lines on impeachment
Teens charged in Carroll armed robberies
Deputies recover stolen property
State superintendent recommends waiving of passing requirements for statewide tests

Needy families get July 4th holiday boost

For some families in the Carroll and Montgomery area, the Fourth of July holiday just became a… READ MORE

Local legislators hard at work
One person killed in Sunday storms in Carroll County
Favorite dips to enjoy for summer
BREAKING: Montgomery County reporting second case of coronavirus
Recipe even better the next day

“Hill Fire: Knee Deep” based on the stories of the late Arnold Dyre

This weekend, the Montgomery County Arts Council will present a special play inspired by the life… READ MORE

Stars to face St. Joseph in first round
Carpenter wins runoff, Daniels new constable
Orvlie Hunt
Four injured in Carroll plane crash
Black Hawk resident meets Austrian pen pal for the first time

SOCIAL

The littlest angels

In 2019, Matt and Corey Miletello experienced tragedy most could not imagine.  They buried three… READ MORE

Hot soups to warm you on cold days
Keep warm with fall soups
Whatever it takes
Get ready for the big game party
Finding her place

SPORTS

CA Rebels split pair of thrillers

The Carroll Academy boys had a pair of exciting contests this past week as they split a pair of… READ MORE

Welch signs to play football at Delta State
Stars, Lady Stars sweep Indianola Colonels
Sports Column: Drew Brees leaves an unforgettable Saints legacy. The story started in Jackson.
Tigers bring home two big wins
Lady Rebels pick up two wins

Copyright 2019 • Montgomery Publishing
401 Summit St. • Winona, MS 38967 • (662)-283-1131

Emmerich Newspapers proudly serve the following Mississippi communities:
Click on the city name to visit its website.

ACKERMAN • CARROLLTON • CHARLESTON • CLARKSDALE • COLUMBIA • EUPORA • FOREST • GREENVILLE • GREENWOOD • GRENADA • HATTIESBURG • JACKSON • KOSCIUSKO • INDIANOLA • LOUISVILLE • MAGEE • MENDENHALL • McCOMB • NEWTON • PETAL • QUITMAN • SENATOBIA • WINONA • YAZOO CITY

As well as: DUMAS, Ark. • TALLULAH, La • FRANKLINTON, La.

For more information on how to extend your advertising message to these communities, click here.