"A stunning report released on Monday showed that a Baltimore teen with a grade point average of just 0.13 was ranked near the top half of his class, which is drawing some much-need scrutiny about failing public school systems.
... from WBFF-TV’s Project Baltimore:
A mother was excited to see her 17-year-old senior son nearing graduation when she abruptly learned that he was actually going to be sent back to the ninth grade after only passing three classes in four years at the Augusta Fells Savage Institute of Visual Arts on the city’s west side.
... “He's stressed and I am too.
I told him I'm probably going to start crying.
I don't know what to do for him,”
Tiffany France, the teen's mother, told the outlet.
“Why would he do three more years in school?
He didn't fail, the school failed him.
The school failed at their job.
They failed.
They failed, that's the problem here.
They failed.
They failed.
He didn't deserve that.”
Certainly, her son bears responsibility for his academic failings, as does France, who apparently never sought out a report card once in three and a half years.
But France is not wrong about blaming Baltimore schools -- at least when you see the rest of Project Baltimore’s stunning finds.
France’s son, a senior with only 2.5 credits who would start high school over again presumably at age 18, is almost in the top half of his class.
Per reporting from WBBF, hundreds of other students at Augusta Fells Savage are failing, and they’re being promoted to more advanced courses while everyone looks the other way.
No one is even telling these kids’ parents, and those parents don't seem to be asking.
The whole thing comes to a head when students hit a wall at the end of their academic careers and there's nowhere to go but back or out.
“I'm just assuming that if you are passing, that you have the proper things to go to the next grade and the right grades, you have the right credits,” France, who works multiple jobs, said of her lack of scrutinizing her son's performance at school.
... her son was continually advanced forward, despite failing almost every class.
He missed or was tardy to school 272 times throughout his first three years.
Not one administrator ever bothered to inform France.
... The shocking part about all of this is that her son is ranked 62 out of 120 -- meaning there are 58 kids in that class that have a GPA of 0.13 or lower.
France’s son has since withdrawn from the school and hopes to graduate via an alternative school program by 2023.
But many of these kids will probably drop out ...
... Why would a school report students as having dropped out if it’ll presumably hurt their bottom line with regard to funding?
Who knows how far this public school scandal goes through the rest of the city -- or other cities.
... How far do the failings of public schools go nationally, and now that schools are closed and classes conducted online?
We'd probably all be shocked if we knew the true scope of the catastrophic failure.
... Teachers unions, corrupt administrators, ideologue teachers, lazy parents and kids who don’t have any incentive to succeed or move on are all contributing to the failed system.
Now, it’s mostly on Zoom.
... conventional wisdom tells us the broad solution will probably be more money thrown at failing schools.
Schools such as the one France's son went to will probably keep failing, but they'll fail with new iPads."
Our nation became a circus with Covid in 2020. The news media became the public relations firm of a government that decides what you don't need to know, and how to slant what you do need to know. Blog motto: "Is that true, or did you read it in the New York Times?" ... “Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedies.” ... Groucho Marx
Friday, March 5, 2021
"Public school has failed American kids: Student with 0.13 GPA ranks near top half of class"
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