The only reason this was noticed is because it was in Baltimore.
I've heard of horrifying schools in middle-of-nowhere towns that will never get his kind of attention.
Hopefully all-star teachers and principals, specialized in improving student performance in rough and poverty-stricken areas can come to this school with plenty of money and help this area succeed.
Improvement is hard, incredibly time consuming and expensive. It will take *years* to bring up thriving students once more.
This news article is a blessing of notoriety to help save this school. I hope we hear positive things in 7 or 8 years.
> I've heard of horrifying schools in middle-of-nowhere towns that will never get his kind of attention.
The fact that practically all rural public schools are bad is what keeps us from living the remote-work dream of moving out to a quaint little town or cheap country house. If you're not rich enough for (good) private schools (bad private schools are more common than one might expect, though), and not daring enough to hope to luck into a good urban charter school, then you're basically stuck living in the 'burbs, even if you'd prefer either the city or the country/small-town to that.
I've heard of horrifying schools in middle-of-nowhere towns that will never get his kind of attention.
Hopefully all-star teachers and principals, specialized in improving student performance in rough and poverty-stricken areas can come to this school with plenty of money and help this area succeed.
Improvement is hard, incredibly time consuming and expensive. It will take *years* to bring up thriving students once more.
This news article is a blessing of notoriety to help save this school. I hope we hear positive things in 7 or 8 years.