You can't talk about these things without bringing in some of these people that will defend the private school system in Mississippi tooth and nail. No one can deny that most every private school in this state started for segregation reasons. Most of them no longer exist for that reason, but its arguable that some of them do.
We're talking college preparedness, not college success. I went to a small, redneck, middle of no where high school, for instance. We had a great math teacher and a good history teacher - the rest of the upper level classes were taught by morons. I was top of my class in math at this high school. When I got to state, I nearly had to change my major from Engineering because Calculus I was so difficult for me.
Did my high school provide an inadequate education? No, but I was not prepared for college. I would have been prepared for College Algebra at the local junior college, but not Calculus. I would have checked "I felt my high school did not adequately prepare me" for Calculus.
My work ethic kicked in and I finally got it. I overcame the fact that my high school wasn't on par in that area.
Its a touchy subject, because many people on both sides are passionate about it. The truth is, my numbers are saying that the majority of graduates of non-accredited private schools had trouble adjusting to college academically. Not all, but a significant majority. 28 percent said that they felt adequately prepared, that's usually a good number of the top tier students.
The numbers for accredited private schools and Level 4/5 schools are nearly flipped from this. The point of my thesis is that accreditation matters. The original point of this thread was if the MHSAA extended invites to the 38 SACS accredited MPSA members, it would better the education at the non-accredited member institutions.
I did not mean to imply that if you went to North Delta you got a horrible education. Yes, there are places that I would not ever send my children to the public schools. NEVER. But there are places that the private schools are delivering a lower breed of education than their public counterparts - that's where the concern is. There are places with good private schools are on par with the school district - the motivation in talking with parents are things like "thugs, drugs, fights, etc." even when the public school in question has little or no major disciplinary record. I question those moves as racially motivates - I'm sorry.