Half Of Tarrant County Kindergartners Start School Behind The Curve

Tarrant County’s latest look at kindergarten readiness lands like a wake up call. About half of the county’s kindergartners are showing up ready to learn, and the rest are already trying to catch up before they have even settled into their new classrooms. The gap between well resourced suburbs and neighborhoods facing higher poverty levels is just as stark, with Fort Worth ISD, the county’s largest district, lagging many of its suburban neighbors. Local educators and county leaders point to familiar pressure points: spotty access to public pre K, uneven early literacy support and inconsistent in classroom intervention.

According to Fort Worth Star‑Telegram, the county’s overall kindergarten readiness rate for the 2024–25 school year was roughly 52 percent. The paper reports that Fort Worth ISD’s readiness rate sat at about 38.8 percent, while Mansfield at 69 percent, Grapevine‑Colleyville at 68 percent and Carroll at 67 percent landed near the top of the pack. On the low end, Burleson at 33 percent and Azle at 34 percent started the year far behind higher scoring peers, although some of those low starting groups posted measurable growth by the middle of the year.

Pre‑K attendance drives early gains

Both research and new state data are pointing in the same direction: consistent pre K attendance is one of the quickest ways to move the needle. As outlined by Commit Partnership, Texas children who attend public pre K are substantially more likely to be identified as kindergarten ready. The group notes that participation can roughly double a child’s odds of starting school prepared. Advocates say this is why expanding high quality early learning sits at the top of the to do list for both school districts and major funders.

Statewide trends and a new task force

The problem is not unique to Tarrant County. Recent Texas Academic Performance Report data put the statewide kindergarten readiness rate at about 51 percent, a drop from earlier years that has educators worried about what comes next in third grade reading and beyond. The Dallas Morning News reports that those figures helped prompt the creation of a Governor’s Task Force on early childhood governance. The panel is charged with reviewing existing programs and must deliver budget and policy recommendations to the Legislature by Dec. 1. Local leaders say they are hoping that clearer governance and more targeted funding will make it easier to scale pre K models that are already showing strong results.

District examples: what’s working

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