Thousands of the city’s struggling minority middle schoolers are in need of academic alternatives, according to a new report.

Only five middle schools in districts with a majority of black and Hispanic kids had at least 75 percent of their kids pass state English and math exams last year, according to study from Families for Excellent Schools.

The charter backer also found that 250 middle schools in these districts had less than 25 percent of their students hit those basic benchmarks last year.

“For every one student at a high performing middle school, there are 59 stuck in failing middle schools where fewer than a quarter of students can read or do math on grade level,” the report stated.

There are a total of 72,043 kids attending teetering middle schools in these districts compared to just 1,231 at high achieving ones, according to the report.

The study also noted that the five thriving schools are selective and consider past academic performance in weighing admission.

Citing these figures, sector leaders will call on Mayor de Blasio to accelerate approvals for new charter middle schools at a city hall rally Thursday.

Success Academy and Bronx Charter School for the Arts are among the operators seeking space – and both accuse city officials of dragging their feet.

“The dismal state of middle school education for New York City’s students of color is a test of the de Blasio administrations pledge to support ‘Equity and Excellence for All,'” according to the report.

Success Academy noted that their test scores far outperform comparable district middle schools and that their expansion should be encouraged rather than stymied.

“But the de Blasio administration continues to refuse to identify public spaces for these middle schools,” the report read.

De Blasio has rejected the notion that he’s purposefully curbing charter growth and that their requests for space are processed fairly.

The mayor has argued that his focus must remain on district schools because they still teach 90 percent of the city’s kids.