COVID has changed the world, and one of the roots of its revolution is in the field of school education.
How was that transition?
In Baltimore, not too good.
Fox 45 Recently, as part of its “Baltimore Plan”-an inspection of public schools in the area, this is very clear.
It turns out that academic excellence is not widespread in the United States Charming city.
According to information reportedly compiled by Baltimore Public Schools and obtained by Fox, the results were not good.
A chart Means Only 21% of the students in the system achieved an average grade of B or higher.
That is nearly 20,600 children.
On the other hand, the grouping is large.
According to the data, Nearly half Of students have an average grade below D: 41% of high school students have a GPA below 1.0.
Dr. Sonja Santelises, CEO of City Schools, World Wildlife Fund Said that in January “the first time the alarm was sounded”.
Sonja announced, “During the COVID closure period, student class failure rates have almost doubled.”
Match the ultra-low GPA with school cutting corners:
A few months later, in May, North Avenue announced that students would not be rejected for failing the course. This latest GPA data can show the reasons for this decision by city schools.
To be clear, Baltimore did not completely tear it up before.
In the second quarter of the 2019/2020 school year, just before the COVID hit, 24% of high school students had a GPA below 1.0…
Nevertheless, the worse is worse.
Giovanni Patterson didn’t seem surprised.
He ran for chairman of the city council last year, but he lost the election.
In the 2020 campaign ad, Giovanni description The thing is like this:
“They take it. They take it. They take it. However, despite how much money they received. We haven’t seen much change. Our school’s expenditure exceeds 97% of other major school districts.”
Regarding recent statistics, he told the Baltimore Project, “This is terrible. This will only further perpetuate the cycle of poverty and despair.”
Patterson posed a powerful question:
“If almost half of our children fail, what choice do they have after graduating from high school?”
School is at General Substantial changes have taken place.
Just like me cover Earlier, the “Washington Post” reprinted questions from the 1912 eighth grade exam.
Here are ten:
- Write the following in text: 5764; .000003; .123416; 653.0965; 43.37.
- The calculated cost is 12 1/2 cents per square yard. Excavate a 20-foot-long, 16-foot-wide, and 9-foot-high room wall, minus one door measuring 8 feet x 4 feet 6 inches and two windows measuring 5 feet x 3 feet 6 inches.
- How much does a rope cost $1.62 1/2 and a pile of wood that is 24 feet long, 4 feet wide, and 6 feet 3 inches high?
- “William hit James.” Change the tone of the verb. How many comparative levels are there for adjectives? Better; wise; beautiful.
- Parse all the words in the following sentence: John runs across the bridge. Helen’s parents love her.
- Name and give the boundaries of the five areas.
- How does the liver compare to the size of other glands in the body? Where is it located? What does it secrete?
- Define the following forms of government: democracy, limited monarchy, absolute monarchy, republic. Give examples respectively.
- Name the three rights granted to Congress by the Constitution and the two rights that Congress vetoed.
- A brief overview of Sir Walter Raleigh and Peter Stuvincent.
Have eighth grade students in Maryland faced such a difficult challenge?
Either way, according to the results, Republican State Representative Nino Mangione is Make a call The school administrator was fired.
“We have an obligation to prepare and protect these students and provide them with the best opportunities in the future. How can you expect change when their own leaders are not even angry.… [W]We should look at some leaders in the government and think, let us evaluate, let us start firing people. Because this cannot continue. “
On the other hand, committee member John Bullock didn’t seem to be too ashamed.
He called COVID:
“One of the reality of our response to the pandemic in the past year is that many young people are struggling, and many families are struggling. On the one hand, we talk about this unique situation because many young people are facing some challenges and fail to study. Succeeded.”
Well, they may not get high marks in academic subjects, but students have the opportunity to understand society Oppressor and victim.
Maybe some people cannot learn because of too much pressure.
After all, this is the situation at Goldsmiths, University of London:
University allows non-white students who self-report “racial trauma” to extend deadline https://t.co/K2t2AdexD0
— Red State (@RedState) June 28, 2021
Back to Baltimore, I hope they can solve their problems.
They have many:
Baltimore City students passed 3 courses in four years, approaching the first half of the class with a 0.13 GPA https://t.co/UY9CV7Mkm9
— Peter J. Hasson (@peterjhasson) March 4, 2021
because:
In Baltimore, students who fail will still pass https://t.co/pS88a3Ipb2
— Red State (@RedState) May 29, 2021
Let us not forget the riots in 2015…
Even so, in the past few years, not everyone has given up the young people in this city:
Back to 2015:
When an angry mother disciplined her son for joining the Baltimore riots. She is a role model everyone should follow.#George Floyd #Minneapolis #riot #Minneapolisriots #Minneapolis Riots pic.twitter.com/PhlMyyeVNS
-Kiryu Coco’s man 🥛🐉👌 (@Prototype_No_07) May 28, 2020
-Alex
Check out more of my works:
Elite Academy announced that it will help white churches to get rid of systemic racism
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