Dem Smart in Duh Citay

Watching NY1 per usual to catch the “In the Papers” section where they read the top headlines and stories for us non-paper subscribers… when I caught a quick story on the Nation’s city High School Graduation rates and more specifically that New York City is among the worst large cities in the country: .45 percent of all New York City high school students graduate within four years. That ranks New York 43rd among the top 50 cities.

Less thank half the kids in New York City graduate high school in 4 years (if at all)! That’s incredible!

What does the NY Dept of Ed have to day about this? Uh well that this is an IMPROVEMENT! “Department of Education said that the city’s graduation rate has risen six points since the study was conducted”

In the America’s Promise Alliance study Mesa, Arizona, faired the best where 77 percent of students earned a diploma. The worst was Detroit, where just a quarter finished high school.

Some other interesting stats: Asians more than any other ethnicity graduate more (80.2%), females more than men (73.6%) and kids from the suburbs graduate more than those from rural, towns, and urban districts.

My hometown areas faired well: San Jose was ranked #2 (Mesa beating only by 0.1%), San Francisco ranked #5, Sacramento ranked #9 but Oakland edged just above LA and New York at #41.

Jeff Hunt: Profesional Dick to Kids

If you’re the director of an educational facility, a PhD authority on the Civil War and public reference specifically to the Last Battle of the Civil War: Palmetto Ranch, it only seems natural when a group of high school students who’ve created a 10- by 5-foot diorama (with materials worth $23,000, and taking 7,000 hours of labor worth between $60,000 and $130,000) of the battle which deemed by this “expert” to be not completely accurate, what’s your natural response?

Take your arm and back-swapped the whole thing, completely trashing the work and dismantling the piece before even displaying it to the public, of course!’

No attempt to have the kids correct the errors or even displaying with notation of inaccuracies.

Unprofessional, and unbecoming of a mentor in the field of public education.

AZ Central News Article
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