Education Nightmare: Baltimore & Chicago Public Schools Spend, Spend, Spend As Test Scores Drop
Baltimore City and Chicago Public Schools are spending taxpayer monies like there’s no tomorrow, yet math and reading test scores are shockingly low. Radical leftists, who are embedded in these school systems, along with the officials in City Halls in these respective imploding metro areas, have ideals and beliefs not rooted in reality. Their progressive agendas have failed the youth and also unleashed a tidal wave of crime and chaos.
These are not new problems for crime-ridden Baltimore City and Chicago. The school systems in these metro areas have been failing the nation’s future generations for years. Still, it’s only now becoming absolutely insane that woke leftists are continuing to run these education systems into the ground.
Take, for instance, Chicago. Data from the non-profit Illinois Policy shows education spending has surged 97% since 2012, but student proficiency in reading has declined by 63% and by 78% in math for grades 3-8.
Since 2012, spending has increased by 97%, but student proficiency in reading has declined by 63% and by 78% in math for grades 3-8. With the costs of the demands outlined above – which represents only a fraction of CTU’s latest demands – annual spending is set to triple compared to 2012 levels. -Illinois Policy
“Chicagoans rightfully concerned about the futures of their children – and their wallets – should sign up to make their voices heard,” Illinois Policy wrote in a report.
In Baltimore, investigative journalist Chris Papst of Fox45 News’ Project Baltimore has been uncovering massive fraud in the school system, from grade rigging to other corruption that extends to the Maryland State Superintendent of Schools.
Papst’s latest report reveals a trend strikingly similar to that of Chicago’s:
Baltimore City Schools continues to get more funding, but new numbers show student achievement is going in the wrong direction.
Project Baltimore looked at the most recent numbers, which show less than half of last year’s ninth graders were on track to graduate in four years.
The report continued:
According to recently released City Schools data, analyzed by Project Baltimore, just 40.8% of last year’s ninth graders, or less than half, are on track to graduate in four years. That means, nearly 60% of all ninth graders in Baltimore City last year were not on track to graduate high school on time.
That is a significant drop from the 2021-2022 school year, when according to projections, 56.5% of City Schools ninth graders were on track to graduate in four years, which was the lowest in the state.
City Schools has a $1.7 billion budget, all of it coming from taxpayers. And while the funding has increased, enrollment has decreased by nearly 9,000 students since 2014. In other words, City Schools is getting more money to educate fewer students.
BREAKING: New numbers show 40.8% of ninth graders in Baltimore City are on track to graduate in four years. Meaning, nearly 60% of nine graders are NOT on track to graduate. These numbers are the lowest in the state and getting worse. https://t.co/jZ8dIiIC5P
— Chris Papst (@chrispapst) June 11, 2024
Here’s what users on X had to say in response to Papst’s post:
Isn’t it ironic that as more money is poured into these schools the outcomes seem to become worse.
— TechDaddy (@TechDaddy) June 13, 2024
RIDICULOUS
— Darlene Rossi (@DarleneRossi5) June 13, 2024
But they will all “graduate”.
— Esteban Ramón (@realdonesteban) June 12, 2024
And the 60% that won’t graduate, will be magically installed at some of the highest positions in the country setting the rules and regulations for all of us to follow. DEI
— ItsTomorrow (@ItsTomorroww) June 11, 2024
The nation desperately needs major education reforms from former President Trump should he return to the White House. After Democratic cities failed generations of poor students, some have argued for more drastic solutions, including state intervention.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 06/16/2024 – 09:55
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/pnusB1J Tyler Durden