KCPS Launches Literacy Push as Test Scores Plunge in Missouri
Kansas City Public Schools (KCPS) has launched a comprehensive reading initiative targeting elementary students as proficiency rates continue to fall. The district is requiring all early elementary teachers, reading specialists and related staff to undergo training in evidence-based reading methods through the LETRS program, a science-of-reading curriculum adopted by Missouri in 2022. This move comes as KCPS grapples with declining test scores, mirroring broader challenges in Missouri's urban districts where third-grade reading proficiency lags significantly below state averages.
The effort aligns with SchoolSmartKC's city-wide literacy plan, announced after data summits and listening sessions in spring 2023 and 2024. When fully funded, the plan will provide full-time literacy coaches to 41 elementary schools and high-dosage tutoring during school hours for every kindergarten through third-grade student. A $6.4 million donation from the Kansas City Royals Foundation and Sherman Family Foundation kickstarts phase one in nine schools, with coaches starting in the 2024-25 school year.
Community involvement is central, with calls for volunteers to tutor, fund supplies or adopt schools. Parallel initiatives like Turn the Page KC's Read 360 program empower neighborhood literacy councils to direct resources, aiming for kindergarten readiness and third-grade proficiency. A tutoring push targets K-3 students citywide, while Missouri's neighbor Kansas advances its Blueprint for Literacy under Senate Bill 438, mandating science-of-reading credentials for teachers by 2030.
KCPS Superintendent Dr. Jennifer Wolfsie emphasized the urgency, noting that strong early literacy underpins long-term academic success in Kansas City's diverse classrooms. As the 2025-26 school year ramps up, these layered efforts represent a pivotal response to proficiency rates hovering far below national benchmarks.
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