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Why are D-linemen getting so rich? Chris Jones, Fletcher Cox show us

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Kansas Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones, shown here celebrating with his son after defeating the Philadelphia Eagles in the 2023 Super Bowl, has become the highest paid lineman in NFL history. (AP Photo/Steve Luciano)

Two Mississippi State football legends were huge in the news over this past . Within a 24-hour window, two blockbuster NFL stories shook the league.

One, Kansas City Chiefs great Chris Jones, a Houston, Miss., native and former Bulldog, signed the most lucrative contract ever for a defensive lineman when the Chiefs agreed to pay him $158 million over the next five seasons. That's roughly $31.8 million per season — about one hundred grand a year more than Los Angeles Rams superstar Aaron Donald makes.

Rick Cleveland

Two, Yazoo City's Fletcher Cox, another former Bulldog, announced his retirement from the Philadelphia Eagles, thus ending one of the most productive careers of any defensive lineman in pro football history.

Cox retires at age 33, still playing at an elite level, still double-teamed by any offense that cares anything at all about the of its quarterbacks and running backs.

Jones signs one of the richest deals in NFL history at age 29. It says much about Jones' worth that the Chiefs would pay that many millions for that many years when he will play his next next at the ripe, old football page of 30.

Cox and Jones share many more attributes, besides the fact they have made enough money to buy their hometowns. To wit:

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  • Both are clearly the largest on the field any time they step onto a field. In a sport that puts a premium on height, weight and muscle, both still stand out. Even on a TV screen, they make other huge men appear smallish. Jones is listed at 6 feet, 6 inches and 310 pounds. If anything, he appears even bigger. Same goes for Cox, listed at 6-4 and 310.
  • Both are remarkably quick and fast for their girth. Both know how to use their long arms and strong hands to shed blockers. Both are athletic enough to play inside or on the edge.
  • Both grew up in small-town Mississippi, where Friday night high school football is king, and where little grow up dreaming of being part of that royalty.
  • Both stand as living, quarterback-ravaging proof of why defensive linemen have become among the highest paid position players in football, much more highly valued than touchdown-scoring running backs who once commanded the higher salaries. You see, if you do not assign two offensive linemen to block people like Cox and Jones, they blow up anything you try to do offensively. Two blockers sometimes aren't enough. And, of course, when you use two of your players to block one of them, that usually frees up another defender to make the play.
  • Both have been consistent Pro Bowlers and both own Super Bowl rings. Indeed, Jones now has three. Both are among the primary reasons their teams won it all.
  • Both seem as easy-going and pleasant out of uniform as they are dominating and disruptive when they don the helmets and pads. In small-town Mississippi terminology, they are good folks. They were raised right.
The football field where Fletcher Cox played high school ball is now known as Fletcher Cox Stadium. Credit: Rick Cleveland

Here's a sample. In Yazoo City, the football facility is now called Fletcher Cox Stadium because of how he has given back to his high school alma mater. Last summer, Yazoo athletic director Tony Woolfolk remembered the first time he ever saw Cox. It was in the summer before Cox's ninth grade year at Yazoo City High, where Woolfolk was then the head football coach.

Said Woolfolk, “There were a bunch of kids out on the field playing ball and one of them was at least a head taller and a whole lot faster than the rest of them. I pointed and said, ‘Who is that kid?' Somebody said, ‘That's Bug-eye Cox.'”

Bug-eye?

“Yeah, that's what everybody called him back then. His granny named him that because his eyes kind of bulged,” Tony says. “It stuck. Over time, I shortened it to Bug. I still call him Bug, but I knew the first time I saw him, we had us one — a potential superstar. Even then, he was bigger than everybody else and he could really, really . You know Bug ran the 4 x 100 relay in track for us.”

Imagine: A defensive tackle fast enough to run sprints. That pretty much says it all.

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Funny thing: At first, Cox's mama didn't want him to play football because she was scared he would get . Said Woolfolk, “I told her not to worry about that. The only worry was how many people he was gonna hurt.”

Jones, too, has given back to Houston High School, where he presented the Houston Hilltoppers athletic program a $200,000 check in 2022. 

“If I hadn't have from here, I wouldn't have my attitude,” Jones once told a reporter when asked about the contribution. “If I were given a silver spoon, I'd probably be different. Your background kind of makes who you are. After you see the houses I grew up in, and the hardships I , it makes me almost more excited where I am today.

“It makes me want to give back more.”

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One thing certain: With this new contract, the three-time Super Bowl champion has plenty more to give.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

Mississippi’s ‘reading miracle’ has been out of reach for some schools

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mississippitoday.org – Julia James – 2024-05-21 14:38:37

CLARKSDALE — On a Tuesday afternoon in the fall, Jessica Johnson held up index cards of words as students crowded around the table to identify the type of vowel sound and sort them into buckets.

In another classroom, Shalandria Ivy guided students as they identified images, sounded out the first letter of the item in the drawing, and found that letter in their cards. These teachers at Kirkpatrick & Medical Science Magnet, an elementary school in the Clarksdale Municipal School District, are also tutors in the Reading Roadmap after-school literacy program. 

Johnson and Ivy are among hundreds of Mississippi reading teachers and that helped create a rise in test scores after the passage of the Literacy-Based Promotion Act in 2013. Mississippi, which has long struggled with reading outcomes for students, has been showered with international acclaim for its gains that some dubbed the “Mississippi Miracle.”

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But in several school districts across the state, including here in Clarksdale, the drastic reading gains haven't been as strong. For the teachers and students, the effects have felt less than miraculous, for reasons ranging from resources to teacher turnover.

“We're in a where students need hardcore remediation, (we) can't really teach the grade-level themes because their comprehension is not there,” said Janice Citchens, a first-year English teacher in the West Tallahatchie School District. “My students are 100% capable, if they had the resources and the right people … then the sky is the limit.”

‘The science of reading'

The 2013 state law created a more robust infrastructure around helping learn to read and holding them back at the end of third grade if they didn't hit a certain benchmark. While the law did not create a mandatory curriculum, the State Board of Education promoted, and in some cases required, teacher training on the principles of the “science of reading.” This term refers to a body of research that demonstrates the importance of phonics instruction in learning to read.

The of the new system, which includes targeted teacher training, more parent communication and interventions for lower-performing students, brought much national attention to the state. 

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These test score improvements have come primarily on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test administered by the federal government in the fourth and eighth grades that is often used to compare between states. A decade ago, Mississippi ranked near the bottom of the list for its fourth-grade reading scores. In 2019, the state made headlines for making the most gains in the nation on fourth-grade reading. Again in 2022 and 2023, Mississippi has been lauded for surpassing the national average in this area.

Nearly every district in the state has seen some amount of improvement: A recent analysis by Mississippi First, an education policy nonprofit, found that 97% of school districts improved third-grade reading scores since the passage of the 2013 state law. 

Despite this success, many districts across Mississippi are still struggling to get all their students to be successful readers, with 24 10 percent fewer students passing the third-grade “gate” on the first try than the state average. Teachers and policy experts attribute the to multiple factors, including higher teacher turnover rates and fewer resources in low-income communities.

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“One of the things I think we did with the Literacy-Based Promotion Act is prove … that Black kids and low-income kids can learn to read just like everybody else,” said Kelly Butler, former CEO of the Barksdale Reading Institute that workeds to improve Mississippi students' pre-literacy and reading skills. “So when you think about those districts that still have big pockets of low performance, I think part of it has to do with being able to attract (educators) in these hard-to-serve schools.”

Citchens, the West Tallahatchie teacher, said she can see in the data that many of her seventh- and eighth-grade students have regularly been behind grade level. She attributes this to her students receiving inconsistent reading instruction and a disparity in resources.

Citchens also said the teaching coaching she received has been some of the most influential training in her career, as it covered resources and best practices as well as how to use them in her classroom. She believes the benefits of these trainings are stemmed when teachers regularly leave a district. 

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“They're pouring into the teacher, they're getting these coaches, but if (the teachers) don't stay long enough to perfect these practices … then the students are still at a disadvantage,” she said. 

A recent Mississippi First analysis had similar findings. Its of state testing and teacher turnover data for the 2022-23 school year found districts with higher rates of turnover were more likely to have low proficiency on state tests. While this analysis does not prove one factor is causing the other, it also points to research on the negative impacts on student learning when teachers leave. 

Other educators have also observed this pattern. Rosemary Collins, a reading interventionist working in Leland, said that, while some districts have more resources, knowledge and experts to implement new tools, other districts are “asked to do more with less.”

Collins works with third-grade students who are projected to fail the reading assessment, or “third-grade gate” as it is colloquially known. She said she would like to see a highly structured literacy curriculum implemented for all students, not just those she works with, as she believes it would decrease the need for intense intervention. She also discussed the need for effective and equitable teaching training to make this happen, something that is stymied by turnover.

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“To keep teachers in the classroom, it has to be a mindset change about what educators are and who they are for the community,” Collins said. “You have to feel respected and valued as an individual to want to stay in an .”

Both Citchens and Collins described an increased investment from parents in helping their children pass the third-grade test after all of the discussion and positive press related to Mississippi's “reading miracle.”

“With the growth, and with all of the positive promotion of the growth, I see parents in my community … willing to be more active in their child's education because they're not only proud for their child, it's like a sense of pride for themselves as well,” Citchens said.

‘The gains aren't zero-sum'

‘The science of reading'Reading Roadmap, founded in Kansas, came to the Mississippi Delta in 2017. The interactive program places students in small groups based on their skill level and uses instructional materials that follow the “science of reading” principles promoted by the state education board.

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Taurean Morton, state director of Reading Roadmap, helps students practice sounding out the first letter in a word during the afterschool literacy program in the Mississippi Delta, Oct. 10, 2023. Credit: Julia James/Mississippi Today

“Mississippi as a whole has done it successfully, but here in this area, an area that's sort of marginalized or stigmatized, I think we wanted to bring equity and bring a better light to this area,” said Taurean Morton, Mississippi state director with Reading Roadmap. 

The excitement and investment around reading is something Clarksdale Municipal Superintendent Toya Harrell-Matthews said Reading Roadmap helped bring to her district. While interrupted some of it, she said she is working to see the energy return and help the program thrive. 

“The first training they did in that little boardroom right over there, just the excitement (of) the teachers learning a new approach and the science of what they were actually going to be doing … I want to get back to that,” Harrell-Matthews said. 

Morton, the state director for Reading Roadmap, said the program uses the local district's benchmark testing results to sort students into skill groups and track their movement to ensure they are getting the interventions they need. Activities at each skill level are interactive or gamified, which allows students and teachers to reset from the school day. 

He also said he's noticed a gap in higher education teacher training programs around phonics and “the science of reading.” Morton said he hopes that if they can show the effectiveness of these strategies in their work, it will help create a shift at the post-secondary level. 

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Butler, the former CEO of the Barksdale Reading Institute, also said strengthening Mississippi's teacher training programs remains one of her key focuses. She said the programs have made improvements but there is still a lack of accountability for higher education programs. 

“Until they are required to do something differently, we're always going to be retraining teachers,” Butler said. 

The Mississippi Department of Education attempted to address this issue in 2016 by requiring candidates to pass the Foundations of Reading assessment to receive an elementary education license. 

Elizabeth Streeter, a teacher with Reading Roadmap, helps students practice sounding out words on Oct. 10, 2023 in Clarksdale. Credit: Julia James/Mississippi Today

Morton is excited by the growth students in the program are experiencing, with some of the schools they serve in Clarksdale also seeing improvements in their accountability grades. But even in the years where the program hasn't seen huge improvements, his team still considers it a success. 

“Each year we've seen movement and growth,” said Becky Nider, director of programs for Reading Roadmap. “Maybe a kid doesn't go from being in the red to the green like we want, but we see them move through the red… We get to celebrate those small successes because it's not a small success for that child.”

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This mindset of incremental progress is one that some teachers would like to see more consistently represented in discussions of the so-called “miracle.” 

Langly Dunn, an elementary librarian in the West Tallahatchie School District, said her district can have both a celebratory attitude and a clear understanding of the work they have left to do. It's something she wishes politicians would also embody instead of “weaponizing and politicizing” the reading gains for their own benefit. 

“When it comes to reading, the gains aren't zero-sum,” she said. “It's not like ‘we solved all problems and the way that we teach reading in Mississippi is perfect in every district, in every school, in every classroom all the time' or ‘the results are unreliable'. It doesn't have to be one of those two things. We can have made great strides and still interrogate what's left for us to do.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1892

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-05-21 07:00:00

MAY 21, 1892

of Ida B. Wells, circa 1893 Credit: Courtesy of National Park Service

Crusading journalist Ida B. Wells published a column exposing the lynchings of African-American and denouncing claims that the lynchings were meant to protect white women.

Her anti-lynching campaign came after a mob killed three of her friends, who had reportedly opened a grocery store that competed with a white-owned store in Memphis.

Upset by Wells' writings, a white mob destroyed her presses and threatened to kill her if she ever published again. She left Memphis for Chicago, but she continued to expose lynchings, calling for national legislation to make lynching a .

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In 1898, she took her protest to the White House.

“Nowhere in the civilized world save the United States of America do men, possessing all civil and political power, go out in bands of 50 and 5,000 to hunt down, shoot, hang or burn to a single individual, unarmed and absolutely powerless,” she wrote. “We refuse to believe this country, so powerful to defend its citizens abroad, is unable to protect its citizens at home.”

The National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, which opened in 2018, features a reflection in honor of her.

finally passed an anti-lyncing in the 2021-22 . The Emmett Till Antilynching Act defines lynching as a federal hate crime.

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This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1961

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-05-20 07:00:00

MAY 20, 1961

In this 1961 , leader John Lewis, left, stands next to James Zwerg, a Fisk student. Both were attacked during the Rides. Credit: AP

A white mob of more than 300, Klansmen, attacked Freedom Riders at the Greyhound Bus Station in Montgomery, Alabama. Future Congressman John Lewis was among them. 

“An angry mob came out of nowhere, hundreds of people, with bricks and balls, chains,” Lewis recalled. 

After beating on the riders, the mob turned on reporters and then Justice Department official John Seigenthaler, who was beaten unconscious and left in the street after helping two riders. 

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“Then they turned on my colleagues and started beating us and beat us so severely, we were left bloodied and unconscious in the streets of Montgomery,” Lewis recalled. 

As the mob headed his way, Freedom Rider James Zwerg said he asked for God to be with him, and “I felt absolutely surrounded by love. I knew that whether I lived or died, I was going to be OK.” 

The mob beat him so badly that his suit was soaked in blood. 

“There was nothing particularly heroic in what I did,” he said. “If you want to about heroism, consider the Black man who probably saved my . This man in coveralls, just off of work, happened to walk by as my beating was going on and said ‘Stop beating that kid. If you want to beat someone, beat me.' And they did. He was still unconscious when I left the hospital.” 

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To quell the violence, Robert Kennedy sent in 450 federal marshals.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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