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Ngage NM and it’s “Success Partnership” just held a followup Education Summit at NMSU, five years after the first one.

“What is the story the data is telling us about how access, equity and opportunity are provided to our kids across that prenatal to career spectrum?” Martinez said.

 

Erica Surova, director of the Center for Community Analysis at NMSU, put together the first review of the education landscape in Doña Ana County in 2016 and updated it for the gathering.

 

She told conference-goers their work had expanded access to early childhood education for 3- and 4-year-olds, but she also sounded a note of caution about how students were doing in the classroom, when two-thirds of third-graders statewide still are not proficient in math.

[gview file=”https://publicservicesalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Education-summit-takes-stock-of-education-gains-goals-for-Doña-Ana-County.pdf”]