Ultra MAGA Dan
User ID: 84652028 United States 02/04/2024 07:50 AM
Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | You can’t make this up. A California elementary school spent $250k on a program called “Woke Kindergarten” to try to raise test scor Just what kind of "test" scores were they trying to improve? And of course, wouldn't ya know, this is in the Bay (Gay) area. A Bay Area Elementary School has spent $250,000 on a 'Woke Kindergarten' program only to see its student's literacy and numeracy rates plunge. The 'Woke Kindergarten' program states its mission as an 'abolitionist early learning ecosystem' that trains teachers to uproot white supremacy, disrupt racism and oppression which are barriers to learning. After spending the federal money on the program Glassbrook Elementary in Hayward saw numeracy among its 474 students fall to a new low of just 4 percent and literacy just 12 percent. The scores, recorded last Spring two years into Woke Kindergarten's three-year contract, represent a 4 percentage decline in each category. The school also remains on the state's lowest-performing level on the Comprehensive School Improvement list and has a lower rate of attendance than before the program was introduced. [ link to www.dailymail.co.uk (secure)] MAGA! |
Zalinsky
User ID: 31579382 United States 02/04/2024 07:54 AM
Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: You can’t make this up. A California elementary school spent $250k on a program called “Woke Kindergarten” to try to raise test scor Yes, but the kids learned the reason for their low test scores isn't their lack of effort, it's whitey. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77091287 United States 02/04/2024 07:55 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: You can’t make this up. A California elementary school spent $250k on a program called “Woke Kindergarten” to try to raise test scor They learned nothing from sesame street. 3-5 year olds who watched sesame street in the 70's and 80's had a marked increase in their abilities as they entered Kindergarten and first grade. However, any gains brought on and any kid's improvements mostly reverted back to the mean by the time they were 10. |