Introducing Angela Bass, Mississippi First’s new Executive Director
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – June 9, 2025
JACKSON, Miss. – Angela Bass will rejoin Mississippi First as its new Executive Director, effective July 8, the organization announced today. Angela hails from Tunica, MS, and she was the Deputy Director of Policy for Mississippi First from 2014-2019, directing several research initiatives, co-authoring policy and research reports, and providing technical assistance to school districts and the Mississippi Department of Education alike.

Angela has long held a deep commitment to improving education. She graduated from Spelman College in 2008 and joined Teach For America in the Greater MS Delta, teaching secondary math at Arkansas’s Forrest City High School. During this time, she became interested in education policy after she served as the first summer intern for Mississippi First in 2009. After TFA, she went on to complete her Master’s Degree in Education Policy and Management at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Prior to joining Mississippi First’s staff in 2014, Angela taught in Mississippi at Tunica Middle School and Horn Lake High School, served as a Fulbright exchange teacher in Tanzania, and was on the founding staff of KIPP Memphis Collegiate High School as a Dean of Students.
All the while, Angela completed her Doctorate in Educational Leadership at the University of Mississippi.
For the past six years, Bass has been continuing to move the needle towards a Mississippi first in education, first as the founding Executive Director of the Mississippi Early Learning Alliance and then as the Mississippi Regional Executive Director of RePublic Schools. She also served on the Board of Education for the State of Mississippi from 2020 until 2022.
“We’re thrilled to welcome Angela Bass back to Mississippi First, where she will draw from her wealth of knowledge to not only build on our previous work but to reenvision the possibilities and lead us to an even brighter future,” said Tim Abram, Chair of the Board at Mississippi First. “Mississippi has improved markedly in the last two decades, and we’re excited to see how Angela and the whole team will accelerate these gains in the coming years.”
**
About Mississippi First
Mississippi First is a nonprofit organization committed to transforming education policy and practice to ensure every child in the state has access to high-quality early education, public charter schools, and highly effective teachers. Since 2008, Mississippi First has been a leading advocate for state-funded pre-K expansion and education reform. Learn more at mississippifirst.org.
Media Contact:
Brendan Lowe
brendan@eachdaycomms.org
856.904.1693
Related Posts
At Mississippi First, we believe that education has the power to change lives, so we have dedicated over ten years to driving our state’s educational progress. Starting in 2013, with our championship of the Early Learning Collaborative Act and the Charter Schools Act, as well as the technical assistance we provided to communities to ensure […]
Leveraging What Works for Mississippi Students Together By Angela Bass As I reflect on the first 90 days of my leadership at Mississippi First, I am humbled and energized by the opportunity to lead an organization so deeply aligned with my lifelong commitment to educational equity and opportunity. This commitment began when I was a […]
Dear friends, colleagues, and supporters, I was 19 when I decided that I would devote my life to what eventually became Mississippi First. It was the summer of 2002, and No Child Left Behind was set to go into effect that fall. I had spent the summer as an intern in the Mississippi Governor’s Office […]
Move comes after years of significant progress statewide in expanding, strengthening educational opportunities; Board search underway for successor Mississippi First founder and Executive Director Rachel Canter announced today that she will transition from the organization in 2025. The move comes after a transformational period for public education in Mississippi, with more and higher-quality educational opportunities […]
We are celebrating #GivingTuesday and the end of the year by raising $10,000 for Mississippi kids. Money raised supports our dedicated staff in achieving high-quality pre-K-12 public education in Mississippi. These dollars directly enable us to produce research, resources, and policy recommendations for children, families, teachers, and schools. In the last decade, Mississippi has improved dramatically. The pandemic has threatened […]
At Mississippi First, we often get calls or requests from students doing research, interested members of the public, and other advocates seeking to learn more about pre-K-12 public education in Mississippi by interviewing us in person or on the phone about what we do, what we believe, or what we think about an idea the caller may […]
Recently, Rachel was interviewed by Jennifer Schiess from Bellwether Education Partners. The interview was published on the Bellwether Education Partners’ blog Ahead of the Heard. During the interview, Rachel talked about the recent increase in NAEP scores and what they mean for Mississippi. She also discussed what Mississippi First has been focused on over the last decade, the […]
Jackson, MS—Today, Mississippi First officially launched the Raise the Rate campaign at the Capitol. During the 2020 legislative session, Mississippi First will be working with partners, collaboratives, and legislators to raise the pre-K funding rate from $4,300 to $5,000 per child for early learning collaborative students. Because the cost of the state-funded pre-K program is shared between the state […]
In January, we celebrated our 10-year anniversary with a breakfast at the State Capitol. Several legislators, education policy partners, and even a few former interns stopped by to congratulate us on our first decade. “For the last 10 years, Mississippi First has championed transformative policy solutions ensuring educational excellence for every Mississippi child. We are proud […]
EdBuild recommended eliminating the 27% rule as part of the funding re-write. Do you know what the 27% rule is, and who it benefits? You may be surprised. Watch the video below to learn about the 27% rule. [Editor’s note: This video looks at how the 27% rule affects school funding using EdBuild’s calculated totals […]

