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Missouri student scores show struggle with new state testing

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Education officials are blaming a drop in the academic performance of Missouri students last year on the state changing its standardized testing and the threshold for passing four times in five years.

The percentage of students passing English exams statewide dipped to 49 percent last year, down from 61 percent in 2017, according to state data. Math scores fell to 42 percent in 2018, down from 47 percent in 2017.

Missouri adopted national Common Core standards a few years ago, but lawmakers ditched the standards in 2016 following conservative backlash. The Legislature ordered new education benchmarks, and state officials scrambled to develop their own metrics and tests. Last year marked the first time the tests were given across the state.

Superintendents said the state changed how questions are asked on the tests and required higher scores to pass.

Pattonville Superintendent Tim Pecoraro said 85 percent or more of his high school students typically pass the Algebra II test, but roughly 56 percent passed last year.

“It’s not because this group can’t do Algebra II,” Pecoraro said. “The threshold changed. That’s why our message to staff is we’re not going to freak out.”

State law prohibits the education department from stripping a district of its accreditation based on the first year of a new test. The rule has led the department to adjust test scores.

Unlike many districts, the Kansas City School District recorded its highest test score in decades last year. The district lost its accreditation in 2011 and returned to a provisional range in 2014. Kansas City will need to score at least 70 percent on the test next year to regain full accreditation.

Missouri administrators have promised districts that the state test won’t change again.

Kevin Freeman, an education department official, said, “There is a sense of relief that we’re going to have stability moving forward.”

4-year-old Missouri boy killed in accident at school

POPLAR BLUFF, Mo. (AP) — A 4-year-old child is dead after an accident at the Poplar Bluff Early Childhood Center in southeast Missouri.

The accident happened Friday morning. The child’s name has not been released.

Schools Superintendent Scott Dill says students were participating in a physical education class with several adults providing supervision. The class was in a multipurpose room that doubles as the school’s cafeteria.

Police Lt. Josh Stewart says no criminal charges are expected for what he called a “tragic accident.”

AG files appeal to allow telemedicine abortion ban in Kansas

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is appealing a judge’s ruling that allows telemedicine abortions in the state even though legislators have enacted three laws against them within eight years.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt filed the appeal Friday with the Kansas Court of Appeals.

Schmidt hopes to overturn a Dec. 31 decision by Shawnee County District Judge Franklin Theis in a lawsuit filed by a Wichita clinic’s operators. Since October, clinic doctors have conferred with some patients through teleconferences when providing pregnancy-ending drugs.

Theis ruled that a 2018 law banning telemedicine abortions has no legal force because it contained no way to punish violators.

The judge also ruled that 2011 and 2015 laws are on hold indefinitely because they’re covered by an injunction in a separate lawsuit challenging abortion regulations that is still pending.

Senator Blunt slams NCAA penalties against Mizzou

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt is slamming the NCAA for sanctioning Missouri’s football, baseball and softball programs after an investigation revealed academic misconduct.

The Missouri Republican in a Friday statement urged the NCAA to take another look at the case, which involves a tutor who completed coursework for athletes. Blunt says upstanding athletes shouldn’t be punished for what he described as isolated violations.

The school must also vacate all games in which the 12 students whose work was completed by the tutor participated.

Prosecutors to seek death penalty in death of 2 Kan. deputies

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree plans to seek the death penalty against a man charged with killing two sheriff’s deputies.

Deputy King and Deputy Rohrer-photos Wyandotte Co. Sheriff

Dupree said Friday during a hearing for 30-year-old Antoine Fielder that he will pursue the death penalty.

Fielder is charged with capital murder in the deaths of Wyandotte County sheriff’s deputies Patrick Rohrer and Theresa King.

Fielder photo Wyandotte Co.

They were killed last June while they were transporting Fielder and another prisoner between the jail and a court hearing. Fielder allegedly disarmed them but details of the incident have not been released.

Fielder also was injured during the confrontation.

A judge on Friday ordered that Fiedler be taken to Larned State hospital for a mental evaluation. Court proceedings will be stayed until the evaluation is complete.

Kansas teen with unexplained lung condition returns home

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A teen who became the first patient at a Kansas City hospital to walk while on life support has recently returned home.

photos courtesy Children’s Mercy

Zei was the first Children’s Mercy patient to walk while on ECMO life support. This week she walked out of the front doors of the hospital after more than 450 days, just in time to be home for her birthday. Read more about her powerful journey back home.

Zei Uwadia left Children’s Mercy Hospital on Thursday after being hospitalized for more than a year for unexplained lung failure. Zei will continue to recover at home in Wichita, Kansas.

The now 17-year-old inspired hundreds of thousands of people who watched videos of her walking down the hospital’s halls while on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), an invasive form of life support.

Doctors still don’t know what caused Zei’s lungs to fail, but she’s no longer on ECMO and instead uses a tracheostomy, a tube in her neck that helps her breathe.

Zei says she’s looking forward to having more freedom.

FSA Deadline Updates

The staff at FSA offices across the nation have been back in action taking applications and issuing payments. Because of the furlough, national headquarters has extended some deadlines we want to make you aware of:

February 14–final date to opt-in on the Market Facilitation Program (MFP)
February 18-Office Closed for President’s Day
February 28-final date to enroll in the 2018 Livestock Forage Program (LFP)

Please note that you must “opt-in” to the MFP by the new revised deadline of 2/14/18, even if your harvest is not complete. Producers who are not completed with harvest will have until 5/1/2019 to certify their 2018 production. Please be aware of the need of landowners to apply for their share of the 2018 production. The deadlines are the same for them and we don’t want anyone to miss getting their payment on this program.

Please contact your local FSA office if you have any questions.

Outlook Seminar Expects Changing Weather, Strong Beef Prices

The first half of 2019 should see a shift away from current El Nino conditions. That prediction came from Dr. Art Douglas of Creighton University, who spoke during the CattleFax Outlook Seminar at the NCBA Cattle Industry Convention and Trade Show. Douglas says as the trend develops, it should allow the eastern third of the country to remain drier as the jet stream pushes Gulf moisture across the southern parts of the U.S.

“After a cooler February, the U.S. will enjoy a relatively mild spring with a reduced threat of delayed planting,” Douglas told the crowd. As far as the markets go, CattleFax analyst Kevin Good says he is expecting prices to remain strong. “We’ve been on a good run for the past few years and I expect that to keep going in 2019,” Good says. “However, I do expect margins will begin to compress and leverage to shift from the cow-calf and stocker sectors over to the feeders as we expand the supply of cattle.”

Price risk will remain in place over the next few years thanks to five years of expanding herds. “Cattle producers, on average, will receive a smaller percentage of the retail beef dollar as larger cattle supplies increase price pressure across all segments of the industry,” he says. “Retail beef prices will likely see some inflation in the year ahead.”

USDA Backlog Delays Census of Agriculture Release

Politico says the month-plus government shutdown has left U.S. Department of Agriculture officials with quite the backlog of commodity reports. They also have a lot of other numbers waiting to be crunched for future reports. Those numbers include the 2017 Census of Agriculture, which is a major survey taken every five years and includes every state and county which shapes a lot of future national policy and rural programs.

The National Ag Statistics Service announced this week that the survey results won’t be released on February 21st as originally scheduled. However, the agency didn’t announce a new release date. The first of many delayed reports came out on Thursday, which covered agricultural prices. Reports covering peanut stocks and poultry slaughter will come out on Friday.

The Foreign Agricultural Service also laid out a new release schedule for its backlog of weekly export sales announcements. The FAS reports got a lot of attention in December as China began to once again make large purchases of U.S. soybeans after Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping reached a temporary truce at the G-20 summit in Buenos Aires.

NE Kan. woman admits mistake leaving toddlers in car on cold night

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 26-year-old Kansas woman accused of leaving her two toddlers in a car while she was in a bar pleaded with a judge to not take her children away from her while acknowledging that she made a mistake.

Photo courtesy Players Sports Bar

Tiara Dillon of Lawrence was charged Thursday with two felony counts of aggravated child endangerment and a misdemeanor count of operating a vehicle under the influence.

Judge James George ordered Dillon to have no contact with her children, who are 2 and 3.

Before judge George issued the no-contact order Dillon repeatedly asked him not to take her children and said she never meant to hurt her children.

Dillon was arrested early Wednesday after allegedly leaving her two children unattended in a vehicle at the Playerz Sports Bar in Lawrence bar on a dangerously cold night.

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