Every year, schools invest immense sums of money in sports programs to cultivate the performance of students who show extraordinary athletic promise. In the 2024–2025 school year, more than 8 million students across the United States participated in high school sports programs that foster teamwork, leadership, and discipline, pushing young people to reach their highest potential. Yet schools regularly impede the development of students who show extraordinary academic promise.
In the United States, only about 1 percent of students skip a grade, even though between 15 percent and 45 percent of American students enter late-elementary classes performing at least one year ahead of standard academic expectations. This creates a fundamental mismatch between students and their academic environments that sets students back in life. And it’s not merely unfair to them—it also costs taxpayers unnecessary money.
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Keeping students back has significant downsides. When not challenged in the classroom, students grow bored and disengaged. By contrast, students allowed to accelerate tend, in the long run, to produce more innovations and earn higher incomes than their peers.
Whole-grade acceleration is not only better for student achievement but also more cost-effective. The marginal cost of educating a student for an entire year runs into the thousands of dollars. Grade-skipping frees up these funds for other uses.
Many who oppose whole-grade acceleration worry that accelerated students may struggle academically or fail to socialize with older peers. As they see it, standing pat is the safer option.
Yet many of their concerns have failed to materialize. No strong evidence confirms that students consistently struggle academically when allowed to accelerate. In addition, contrary to claims that grade-skipping harms students’ social lives, students seem to benefit socially. When students are placed in classrooms with peers as intellectually advanced as they are, regardless of age, they have an easier time relating.
In spite of the evidence of its benefits, most school districts don’t offer whole-grade acceleration options. An extensive survey of school districts across the country found that only 29 percent of elementary and middle schools offer grade-level acceleration as an advanced programming option.
One important reason for this is the lack of state legislation on acceleration policies. According to the Acceleration Institute, while no state currently bans acceleration, only 13 states have any acceleration policy in law or administrative rule. The rest of the states leave it to local agencies to determine their education policies.
Even in states that do have them, these policies are often merely permissive or encouraging rather than mandatory. For example, New York State says that “each child has the right to an education appropriate for his or her individual needs.” In the case of gifted children, this includes “a trained teacher, classmates with similar characteristics, and a curriculum that is appropriately challenging and adaptable to each pupil’s rate and style of learning.” But no laws expressly mandate academic acceleration for advanced students, so the statement rings hollow.
The absence of a formal policy that explicitly manages acceleration can invite inconsistent practices that discourage acceleration. Schools often default to blocking students from skipping grades, even if they are clearly exceeding academic expectations.
Some school districts also have financial incentives to reject whole-grade acceleration. If enough students graduate early by a year or more, schools can see a significant lessening of administrative requirements, thus reducing staffing needs—and budgets.
Fortunately, some states have the right idea. For example, Washington state law mandates that every school district offer whole-grade acceleration in high school. Texas goes a step further, requiring whole-grade acceleration for all grades, K–12. Other states should follow their lead.
Students who prove they can thrive above their current grade level should have the opportunity to move ahead. Whole-grade acceleration is academically and socially beneficial for students, cost-effective for schools, and beneficial for society. States should mandate that school districts offer it as an option for advanced students, prioritizing excellence and opportunity over uniformity.
Photo: Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images