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theyoungbloody t1_j7qadgd wrote

You asked for data, I provided it. Interpret it how you wish. I'm not here to argue with you.

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Matt3989 t1_j7qbzip wrote

You gave me some data, and tried to pass it off as the Data that Fox was using, but even given a cursory glance it's clearly not. For example, Baltimore School for the Arts isn't even in the set you linked, not even as an asterisk.

So you give me some edgey remark about how "books don't link their data hurr hurr hurr" then condescendingly try to show something that supports your case... and it doesn't.

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ConcreteThinking t1_j7qdask wrote

Not trolling I am genuinely interested in your point. Are you saying since it's a Fox news story there are really fewer than 23 schools that have no students proficient in math? If so how much do you think they are lying. Two schools, ten, all proficient?

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Matt3989 t1_j7qfpac wrote

I think that they are misrepresenting whatever data they have.

MCAP has Math testing for grades 1-8, Algebra 1, 2, and Geometry. The results are not broken down by age. What criteria are they using for "High School Proficiency"

Judging based on other "Project Baltimore" pieces, I would be very hesitant to trust anything from them. If their numbers are solid, why not include data and methodology?

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ConcreteThinking t1_j7qhrru wrote

Maybe so. The one chart from Md Board of Ed they include in the article shows that the average in the city is 7% proficient in math. I guess some schools could be at 0% and others higher since it is an average. Pretty bad. Even the highest scoring county in the state, Carroll, only managed to teach 38% of their students to a proficient level.

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theyoungbloody t1_j7qj8vv wrote

Dude, I agree with you its weird, I'm not trying to fight you on that.

You asked for the source, I gave it to you, then you started asking me questions about it, which I dont know.

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