Detroit Public Schools Community District students once posted some of the lowest math scores in the history of the National Assessment of Educational Progress. In 2026, the district is no longer governed by the same emergency management structure described in the original article, but test scores, graduation rates, and academic recovery remain central concerns for parents, educators, and policymakers.
To further complicate the issue, Detroit Public Schools historically fought an internal battle with Emergency Finance Manager Robert Bobb. Detroit public school teachers, administrators, parents, and school board members were upset about Bobb’s directive, outlining that all students in the district take an additional standardized test that year.
The issue of whether students should have to take that test, on top of the STARS, MEAP, PSAT, SAT, and ACT tests that they already took, was part of a larger battle for control of academic decisions between the Detroit school board and Bobb. Today, Michigan’s testing system has changed. The MEAP has been replaced by the Michigan Department of Education M-STEP, and Michigan students also participate in other state assessments, including PSAT, SAT, and MI-Access testing.
Parents who want a broader context about the district can also read Public School Review’s Detroit Schools: An Overview.
Why Did Detroit Schoolchildren Need a New Standardized Test?
Steve Wasko, DPS Executive Director of Public Relations, said that the standardized test Bobb ordered, the Quarterly Benchmark Assessment, or QBA, would be used to
