Mississippi has been
the poorest state in the United States for decades, and by a significant margin. It has the highest percentage of Americans living in poverty, and places last or nearly last on a host of measures, to the point that the satirical phrase "
Thank God for Mississippi" exists in other low-performing states, since Mississippi usually spares them the shame of being last. Education was no exception; in 2013, the
National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) ranked Mississippi in 49th place nationally for fourth-grade literacy, with the average fourth-grade student receiving a reading score of 209, considerably lower than the national average of 221. Seeing this, Mississippi attempted to tackle the problem with the Literacy-Based Promotion Act, a bill introduced to improve students' reading skills "so that every student completing third grade reads at or above grade level". The bill was sponsored by 7 Republicans and 1 Democrat. The bill garnered support from both parties, including all but 2 Republicans and 14
Democrats in the House. It passed both houses of the
Mississippi Legislature by wide margins, having passed the Senate 51–0, and the House 113–5–2. It was then signed into law by Governor
Phil Bryant on April 18, 2013. Similar circumstances inspired Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee, and Arkansas, among other states, to tackle their own struggling education systems. ==Literacy-Based Promotion Act==