The Office of School and District Performance produces annual school and district grades based on an A-F accountability or grading system. An accountability system defines and measures what matters: overall student performance and progress, with extra focus on struggling students, and graduation rates and college and career readiness in high school.
The A-F grading scale works by holding all schools to the same high expectations and clearly communicating the results to parents. Mississippi’s school grading system considers several indicators, including how well students perform on state tests, whether students are showing improvement on those tests from year to year and whether students are graduating within four years. The system also factors in how well schools are helping their lowest achieving students and English learners make progress toward proficiency.
The Mississippi Legislature passed legislation in 2013 that required the state to implement an A-F grading scale for schools based on the following criteria: