8/26: SAT results are in
News roundup: SAT results are in
Mississippi students did well on the SAT and AP program tests, scoring higher than the national average. However, only 996 high school seniors took the SAT out of 1.5 million nationwide; most students in the state take the ACT, which is required by the state's universities.
In South Carolina, average scores dropped nine points compared with last year's results yp 1,452, 57 points below the national average. South Carolina now ranks 47th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Virginia students posted higher reading scores this year, but were slightly below the national average on math scores. The scores were nearly identical to those posted last year. Forty percent of Virginia's SAT test takers were minority students. Black students were the largest minority in the state taking the test, accounting for 20 percent of all test takers, compared to 13 percent nationwide.
In Kentucky, more students are taking AP exams and doing well on them, and scores improved overall on the SAT. Georgia students didn't fare as well, as average scores for the state's students fell for the third year in a row.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: U.S. Rep. Bright uses telephone town halls to inform constituents
ARKANSAS: AG McDaniel wants lawmakers to phase out $60 million in desegregation funds
FLORIDA: State's ban on gay adoptions headed to appeals court
GEORGIA: Environmental groups opposed to proposed dock rule from DNR
KENTUCKY: Democrat Rep. Webb wins NE Kentucky senate seat formerly controlled by GOP
LOUISIANA: State shrimpers to protest low shrimp prices at Capitol today
MISSISSIPPI: Nearly 5,000 DUI tickets issued in first three days of crackdown
NORTH CAROLINA: Panel meets to create better state budget
SOUTH CAROLINA: Housing in the state to be boosted with $118 million in federal funds
TENNESSEE: Methanol fuel cells to be used by Nissan plant to haul parts
VIRGINIA: DUI bill introduced in Virginia
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Labels: budget, desegregation, DUI, environment, fuel, housing, SAT

