Mother blames School for her son only passing 3 classes in 4 years.

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BALTIMORE (WBFF) – A shocking discovery out of a Baltimore City high school, where Project Baltimore has found hundreds of students are failing. It’s a school where a student who passed three classes in four years, ranks near the top half of his class with a 0.13 grade point average

Tiffany France thought her son would receive his diploma this coming June. But after four years of high school, France just learned, her 17-year-old must start over. He’s been moved back to ninth grade.

“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,” France told Project Baltimore. “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.”

As we dig deeper into her son’s records, we can see in his first three years at Augusta Fells, he failed 22 classes and was late or absent 272 days. But in those three years, only one teacher requested a parent conference, which France says never happened. No one from the school told France her son was failing and not going to class.

“I feel like they never gave my son an opportunity, like if there was an issue with him, not advancing or not progressing, that they should have contacted me first, three years ago,” said France.

Tiffany France thought her son would receive his diploma this coming June. But after four years of high school, France just learned, her 17-year-old must start over (WBFF){br}
In his four years at Augusta Fells, France’s son earned a GPA of 0.13. He only passed three classes, but his transcripts show his class rank is 62 out of 120. This means, nearly half his classmates, 58 of them, have a 0.13 grade point average or lower.

“He's a good kid. He didn't deserve that. Where's the mentors? Where is the help for him? I hate that this is happening to my child,” said an emotional France.

Project Baltimore talked with a City Schools administrator, who works inside North Avenue, but asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation. That administrator says the school system absolutely failed France’s son.

The administrator told FOX45 News, City Schools failed because it has protocols and interventions set up to help students who are falling behind or have low attendance. In France’s son’s case, they didn’t happen.

“I get angry. There's nothing but frustration. We see on the news the crime that occurs, the murders, the shootings, we know that there are high levels of poverty in Baltimore. Things like this are adding to that. His transcript is not unusual to me. I've seen many transcripts, many report cards, like this particular student,” said the City Schools administrator.

Dr. Sonja Santelises was the City Schools CEO four years ago when France’s son was a freshman. But she will not interview with FOX45 News. Instead, we received a two-page statement, which explains what should happen when a student is chronically absent or failing.

The district says students received a letter about their academic status this past summer, and records can be accessed through the campus portal. When a student is absent, an automated call is placed to the number on file. The statement also said the school conducted recent home visits and the student’s parent visited the school. France says none of that happened.

What the statement does not address, is why France’s son was promoted despite failing classes. It doesn’t discuss his class rank, or the 58 other students with a GPA of 0.13 or lower. But it does say North Avenue is “reviewing actions that impacted student outcomes” at the school prior to this year.

“It took a lot for me to just build the courage to do this,” France told Project Baltimore.

Project Baltimore asked the City Schools administrator what they would say to France. The administrator replied, “I didn't have a hand on this student, but I worked for City Schools. So, he is one of my kids. I would hug her, and I would apologize profusely.”

“He feels embarrassed, he feels like a failure,” France said of her son. “I'm like, you can't feel like that. And you have to be strong and you got to keep fighting. Life is about fighting. Things happen, but you got to keep fighting. And he's willing, he's trying, but who would he turn to when the people that's supposed to help him is not? Who do he turn to?”

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France has pulled her son out of Augusta Fells. He’s now enrolled in an accelerated school program at Francis M. Wood in west Baltimore. If her son works hard, he could graduate by 2023.


A statement from Baltimore City Schools (WBFF)
The entire statement from Baltimore City Schools is below:

"Our goal is to provide resources and support to students and their families struggling with academic or attendance challenges. We hold schools and staff members accountable if that does not occur, including making appropriate staffing changes to improve outcomes. City Schools does not publicly discuss the individual academic or attendance records or data of its students. However, City Schools has taken multiple steps with the student's family to support the young man, including:

  • In summer 2020, students at Augusta Fells Savage Institute of Visual Arts received a letter explaining their academic status.
  • Per Board Policy, teachers will provide students and parents with information about student achievement by regularly updating grades using Campus Portal. All families have access to this tool. In many cases, the school or teacher will notify the student of a potential course failure and allow work to be made up to support the student. Schools also provide parents the option for a conference following each report card.
  • Anytime a student is absent from a class, the student's family receives an automated phone call at their listed number advising the missed time. If necessary, families may respond to the call by noting if the absence meets the criteria to be excused.
  • School staff also attempted to contact the student's family. The school later mailed a letter and conducted a home visit. Ultimately, the student's parent visited the school and met with its leadership.
  • The student's family has met with or talked recently with school and district level staff. regarding the student's progress.
ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

Communication is important. If a student has poor attendance or the school cannot contact the family and develop an intervention, the student may fail the course, which may alter their ability to graduate.

School leadership is also key to ensuring the appropriate interventions take place. City Schools requires leadership that will effectively address student academic performance and support. City Schools is reviewing actions that impacted student outcomes at the Augusta Fells Savage Institute of Visual Arts before the 2020-2021 school year. Additionally (and separately from recent events at Augusta Fells Savage Institute of Visual Arts), City Schools will take prudent steps to intervene, including school leadership changes, to ensure our standards for student achievement are uniformly and consistently achieved throughout the district.

ATTENDANCE INTERVENTIONS

Children between the ages of 5 and 18 must attend school — it's the law. If an absence occurs, the student's family receives a daily automated phone call advising of the absence. If necessary, families may respond to the call by noting if the absence meets the criteria to be excused. Otherwise, the absence is recorded as unexcused.

Students who are absent for 10% or more of school days are considered chronically absent. If a student is chronically absent, the following interventions should occur:

  • The school calls the family to check in and understand what issues may be contributing to the absence so that appropriate supports may be provided. This outreach may also occur through emails, text messages, and sometimes social media when phone calls fail. Communication may break down if the family's contact information has changed or they cannot be contacted.
  • When making outreach efforts, a meeting will be scheduled with the family to develop a plan to provide support around attendance. Where appropriate, this may be a Student Support Team or IEP meeting.
  • If these outreach efforts fail, a home visit should be conducted to check on the student and arrange for a follow-up meeting with the school.
  • If the absences continue, then the school should send a letter to the family to notify the family of the number of school days missed and again attempt to set up a meeting with a school representative.
  • If the school is unsuccessful in their outreach efforts, the district's office may be contacted to assist in reaching out to the student or the family.
Truancy is a legal term used to identify students who have missed more than 20% of school days (about 3.5 days per month) without a lawful reason.

If a student has missed 15 days of school without a legal reason, the school may make a truancy referral to the district office. At that point, the district office issues a letter of concern to the family and conducts a case review to determine if due diligence has been done in trying to reach the family and support the student’s re-engagement in school. The district office also monitors the student’s data to determine if the letter of concern has an impact on the student’s attendance.

If the district determines that the school has made every effort to work with the family and offer support but that the student has continued accruing unexcused absences, charges will be filed against the parent or guardian in district court."

https://foxbaltimore.com/amp/news/p...ars-ranks-near-top-half-of-class-with-013-gpa
 
shit is just sad.
i know here in Dallas, if your child misses too many days of school, they take it out on the parents and the parents end up in truancy court.
Fines can be costly. i guess they figure, if they hurt your pockets and bank account enough, you'll make sure your child has their ass in school.
 
shit is just sad.
i know here in Dallas, if your child misses too many days of school, they take it out on the parents and the parents end up in truancy court.
Fines can be costly. i guess they figure, if they hurt your pockets and bank account enough, you'll make sure your child has their ass in school.
Our youngest went to KIPP PATH Academy, and if you missed more than three PTA meetings, your kid got bounced.
 
“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,” France told Project Baltimore. “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.”
As we dig deeper into her son’s records, we can see in his first three years at Augusta Fells, he failed 22 classes and was late or absent 272 days.
Naaaw lady you failed him and he failed himself by doing other shit and the only reason it's a problem is because he wants to get a diploma he doesn't deserve and you wanted something to place on your wall so he's bothered;He should of been bothered when he wasn't showing up,smoking weed,gambling,hanging out whatever else he chose to do besides go to school.

I bet you he wouldn't had even have to hand in no work just show up for the class and be counted as not being absent atleast 4 days out of a week for 4 weeks or 6,break,repeat,Chrismas break,....ect.You know how I know cause all the fuck I did was show up sit down for most of my classes and everything else worked itself out,them teachers don't give a fuck long as you're there and they can count students....my guidance counselor told me all of that shit and it worked.
 
Whole system fucked that kid over.

-Six-figure admins letting kids with a 0.13 and lower still be at that level, but I’m sure they took in the money to “educate

-Teachers who figured he probably wasn’t going to amount to shit anyway

-Single mother whose choices have her at a point she can’t monitor her kid

Quiet as kept though; shitty he has to stay in HS another 2 years, but it’s 2 years to get a life plan together or 2 years to stave off the inevitable.
 
Long story short, the Mom is a dumbass. Yes, she was getting his report cards and they all showed him failing classes and yet when he got passed along to the next grade she didn't bother to ask questions. School is PASS/FAIL lady, no in-between, kind of like you're either pregnant or not. As a mother of 3, she should know that. The only reason this is a story is because somehow her dumbass kid managed to get kicked back 3 grade levels and now she's making a stink.

Baltimore City has been doing this shit for a long time -- social promotion. For students who don't make the grades but keep their heads down and show up every once in a while, they'll just pass them along. As I said, it's been going on forever, but the No Child Left Behind crap really amped things up. I guess the schools figure that the minimum requirement for most manual labor jobs is a High School diploma or G.E.D, so they figure they'll give you a diploma whether you learned anything or not just to make you employable.
 
Anyone in the education fields can tell you stories about lazy ass parents. They think the school system is supposed to do every thing for their children.
I’m an educator and I co-sign the fugg outta that post.
He was “was late or absent 272 days” and that was the school’s fault? She wasn’t at all curious as to why she didn’t see the 4-6 report cards that happen every year? It’s true, some teachers are there to collect a check but it’s sometimes because they have to manage kids who don’t give a fuk and are there to kill a few hours before they do dumb shit in the afternoon.
She was not a partner in learning and her son is the result of her indifference and neglect.
 
Wait the fuck a minute! If he passed 3 classes in 4 years, how the fuck he didn't get kept back multiple times, and if he did, how the fuck did she not know?!

I have two cousins who are teachers and the way they talk about it, it's damn near impossible to fail a kid these days. There's no such thing as late assignments anymore, any missed test can be made up, one has to record his online teaching session so students who missed the class can watch it at a later time (even though everyone is remote :smh: )
 
Anyone in the education fields can tell you stories about lazy ass parents. They think the school system is supposed to do every thing for their children.
Just was talking about this the other day.

And she has NO SHAME about this. Proudly standing in front of the camera like it ain't HER fault. And guess what? She probably has an echo chamber of friends and family that will agree with her. Rinse. Repeat. Seen this shit too much in NE Ohio. :smh:
 
Damn shame. Like everybody else has said, now? After 4 years? My kids had to overcome their fear of giving me bad grades. They knew they had no choice because I was going to speak to their teachers anyway. Every one of their teachers had my phone number. If they so much as think about acting slick, just call me. I will whip that ass in front of BCW if I have to.
 
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