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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
Note that any opinions expressed in legacy Jackson Free Press stories do not reflect a position of the Mississippi Free Press or necessarily of its staff and board members.

Zachary Yoder, Murrah student and 2009 MS Economics Student of the Year (center) with Carole Lynn Meadows, board chair, Mississippi Council on Economic Education (left) and State Treasurer Tate Reeves (right).

[Verbatim] Zachary Yoder from Murrah High School in Jackson was named the 2009 Economics Student of the Year, an honor given to the student with the highest individual scores on the Mississippi Council on Economicsโ€™ statewide Economic and Financial Literacy Challenge. Students compete on the topics of microeconomics, macroeconomics, international economics and current events.

Yoder received a $500 scholarship provided by BankPlus, Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mississippi and State Farm Insurance Companies. Murrah High School was one of nine Mississippi high schools to have teams to advance to the finals in the competitionโ€™s Adam Smith Division for Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate and honors students.

Sponsored by the Mississippi Council on Economic Education and now in its sixth year of competition, this yearโ€™s Challenge, for the first time, included an online first round. Competing in the first round were 101 teams, a total of 374 students, from high schools across Mississippi.

โ€œEarly results from the online first round showed that Mississippi students scored five and a half times higher than the national average of students taking the test in other states,โ€ said Dr. Pamela Smith, president of the Mississippi Council on Economic Education. โ€œThis yearโ€™s high participation rate and impressive student scores are a direct result of the economics and financial literacy training that more than 4,000 of our Mississippi K-12 teachers have received over the last three years.

โ€œThe students are able to succeed at this level because of the value their teachers and schools have placed on mastery of high level economics and financial literacy skills,โ€ Smith added.

The Mississippi Council on Economic Education provides teacher training and the Virtual Economics(r) CD-ROM curriculum at no charge to teachers, through funding from State Farm(r) Insurance Companies and the Council for Economic Education. More than 200 Mississippi teachers have committed to additional professional development and earned the Master Teacher of Economics endorsement established by the Mississippi Department of Education.

Previous Comments

Cool! It’s so wonderful to see the good things happen. Economics is HARD!


His AP Economics teacher is my husband. :>


cool. congratulations!!!


Great….Congrats to Yoder and to your hubby for doing such a great job….


Congratulations Zackery! I know that your parents are proud and so am I. My niece attends Murrah, also. Her name is Morgan. She thinks you are one “smart, ambitious, cool kid.” I am one of the first bloggers to complain here about our State and how we are at the bottom of most things. Your accomplishments in this competition give reason for a more hopeful future for our young. Hang in there and keep raising the bar!

Ronni Mott, award-winning writer, talented artist and peace-loving yogi, whose beautiful soul left us on February 2. She was 64.