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Marlin HS Forced to Delay ‘23 Graduation Ceremony

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  • Marlin HS Forced to Delay ‘23 Graduation Ceremony

    Marlin High School delays its graduation, after only a handful met diploma requirements

    NPR.com article

    Students at Marlin High School in Texas were celebrating the end of classes on Wednesday — and preparing for graduation later in the week — when the school district announced a stunning change of plans: Graduation would be postponed until sometime in June.

    Of 33 seniors in the school's traditional program, only five met the requirements to get a diploma, Marlin ISD Superintendent Darryl Henson said, citing an initial internal audit of attendance, grades and credits that started last week. (The district's audit did not include seniors in the school's alternative education program, he said.)

    School officials worked with students over the weekend and this week to help an additional 12 students resolve missing credits and other issues as of Wednesday evening, Henson said. But the district opted to call off the ceremony until more than those 17 students can graduate.

    Students and parents air their frustrations

    "It's emotional" for all of the students affected, one parent said, at a meeting with administrators held on Wednesday evening in the school auditorium. "They get their hopes up: 'I'm graduating next week! I'm at Six Flags!'" she added, referring to a senior trip the previous Friday.

    Other parents spoke about their families' confusion and disappointment — including at least one instance where relatives were flying in from Mexico to see their grandchild get their diploma. Some said the setback came after their students had made up classes in summer school.

    "The support was there" for students from teachers, said Jesse Bustamante, Marlin's director of human resources who also taught at the high school this year.

    But students at the meeting vehemently disagreed, airing their frustrations over a litany of issues. They called out teachers who, the students said, were frequently absent. They also said administrators delayed telling students about their remaining class-hour credits, only to relay different numbers later.

    One student said that when she was told she needed to do "credit recovery" for an online class earlier this year, it took three months — and repeated email requests — for the school to make the class available to her.

    School district cites state standards

    William Ealy, the school's dean of instruction, said the school attempted to warn parents that their senior students weren't on track to finish on time, holding an open meeting, calling parents, mailing a notice and offering to host meetings.

    "Let this be a lesson learned for all," superintendent Henson said via Twitter. "As we continue to go through our annual graduation audit, it's our obligation to ensure that all students have met all requirements."

    "Students in Marlin ISD will be held to the same high standard as any other student in Texas," he added.

    The school district announced the abrupt change in plans via Facebook, igniting a spirited debate in the community and online about how the school reached this point — parents dispute that the school made adequate efforts to warn them — and whether the delay is fair to students who fulfilled all their obligations and were ready to graduate.

    Marlin is a small town southeast of Waco, near the Brazos River. The most recent Texas Schools report card assigned Marlin High School a "B" rating — an assessment based on how it performs compared to other schools with student populations in similar economic conditions. The report said nearly 99% of Marlin High's 229 listed students are economically disadvantaged.

    As he absorbed criticisms and promised improvements at Wednesday's meeting, Henson apologized to parents. He also said it's important to support all of the school's students, and its teachers.

    "We will be confident educators in this district," Henson said, "because we have to come from so far behind."

    Marlin schools will see changes next year

    The school and others in the Marlin district will convert to a four-day school schedule next year, under a plan adopted last month. Nikisha Edwards, the district's chief academic officer, said the change should reduce absentee rates.

    The district also hopes the four-day week will make it easier to attract and retain high-quality teachers. Under the plan, students will attend class Monday through Thursday of most weeks. But they'll also go to school on the first Friday of every month, and every Friday in three months: August, January and May.

    Four-day schedules have been a growing trend in public education, particularly for rural and small districts coping with budget constraints, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

    Marlin High is also looking to hire new teachers, advertising starting salaries at $50,798 and commuter incentives up to $1,500, along with other incentives.

    Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit NPR.



  • #2
    Was reading up on this last night. Wow! What a cluster-you-know-what.

    Comment


    • #3
      Sounds like some heads may need to roll.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by mr. buddy garrity View Post
        Was reading up on this last night. Wow! What a cluster-you-know-what.
        I remember when things were much simpler. Enough said about those old days other than you knew, they knew, parents knew and almost everyone graduated then left home for college the military or to work. It worked!

        Sorry for the reminder.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by mojotrain View Post

          I remember when things were much simpler. Enough said about those old days other than you knew, they knew, parents knew and almost everyone graduated then left home for college the military or to work. It worked!

          Sorry for the reminder.


          When was that? The rate of HS graduation is the highest it's ever been, and close to triple from what it was in 1950.

          1950 - 34.3%
          1960 - 41.1%
          1970 - 55.2%
          1980 - 68.6%
          1990 - 77.6%
          2000 - 84.1%
          2010 - 87.1%
          2019 - 90.1%


          The primary purpose of the Digest of Education Statistics is to provide a compilation of statistical information covering the broad field of American education from prekindergarten through graduate school. The Digest includes a selection of data from many sources, both government and private, and draws especially on the results of surveys and activities carried out by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES).

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by pied View Post



            When was that? The rate of HS graduation is the highest it's ever been, and close to triple from what it was in 1950.

            1950 - 34.3%
            1960 - 41.1%
            1970 - 55.2%
            1980 - 68.6%
            1990 - 77.6%
            2000 - 84.1%
            2010 - 87.1%
            2019 - 90.1%

            I graduated in 1972 from a “third-class” high school. If I remember correctly, there were approximately 160 students in my senior class. Of that number, well over 97% walked the stage for graduation 🤓. FWIW, the racial makeup of my class was 65% Hispanic, 25% Black, 10% White.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by pied View Post



              When was that? The rate of HS graduation is the highest it's ever been, and close to triple from what it was in 1950.

              1950 - 34.3%
              1960 - 41.1%
              1970 - 55.2%
              1980 - 68.6%
              1990 - 77.6%
              2000 - 84.1%
              2010 - 87.1%
              2019 - 90.1%


              https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/...t19_104.10.asp
              These are government #s. Of course they are gonna fudge the numbers to make their polices look great. Where are the real life #s? The #s that take into account things like mandatory attendance, opting out, etc. I know there's been more than a few old folks who attended school through like 8th grade and then got jobs. Many of which are much smarter than the kids I see graduating today. This public school business has become a business to try and graduate as many as possible. It's good for business.
              Þetta reddast!

              Prejudice is a great time-saver. You can form opinions without having to get the facts.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Big Daddy Cool View Post
                Sounds like some heads may need to roll.
                Exactly!

                Comment


                • #9

                  I am the youngest of nine children, born-to, and raised by my parents. When I graduated in 1972, I was the first one in my immediate family to graduate high school! All of my older brothers and sisters quit school for one reason or another.

                  My mom only went to the 8th grade. Not sure about my dad. He passed away when I was around six years old, but I think he didn’t attend school at all.

                  Pardon me if this sounds like an Eminem song 😳.
                  Last edited by BipSkayless; 05-27-2023, 10:02 AM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by pied View Post



                    When was that? The rate of HS graduation is the highest it's ever been, and close to triple from what it was in 1950.

                    1950 - 34.3%
                    1960 - 41.1%
                    1970 - 55.2%
                    1980 - 68.6%
                    1990 - 77.6%
                    2000 - 84.1%
                    2010 - 87.1%
                    2019 - 90.1%


                    https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/...t19_104.10.asp
                    Not going to debate your numbers. My class of 1957 graduated 156 out of 163. There were no uh-ohs on graduation eve. The generation of the 40s, 50s and 60s have made there marks, In the books, documented history. The negative effects of education created by WW2, Korea conflict and Viet Man cannot be over stated. Today's education system is bought and paid for by American blood from those generations,,,was it worth it? The last couple of educated generations,,,their history isn't written yet so today's comparison, your numbers are of no value. Look at Marlin.
                    Last edited by mojotrain; 05-26-2023, 09:47 PM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by pied View Post



                      When was that? The rate of HS graduation is the highest it's ever been, and close to triple from what it was in 1950.

                      1950 - 34.3%
                      1960 - 41.1%
                      1970 - 55.2%
                      1980 - 68.6%
                      1990 - 77.6%
                      2000 - 84.1%
                      2010 - 87.1%
                      2019 - 90.1%


                      https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/...t19_104.10.asp
                      Well it's easier to have higher numbers when there is more people, no? If you compare populations from back then to now, what is the difference? I don't think it was that those in the 50's, 60's or 70's were a bunch of dumbass's or even before that, lol.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by mojotrain View Post

                        Not going to debate your numbers. My class of 1957 graduated 156 out of 163. There were no uh-ohs on graduation eve. The generation of the 40s, 50s and 60s have made there marks, In the books, documented history. The negative effects of education created by WW2, Korea conflict and Viet Man cannot be over stated. Today's education system is bought and paid for by American blood from those generations,,,was it worth it? The last couple of educated generations,,,their history isn't written yet so today's comparison, your numbers are of no value. Look at Arlington Martin.
                        What does Arlington Martin have to do with this?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Trojanbacker2 View Post

                          What does Arlington Martin have to do with this?
                          Ah-ha,,,Excuse me Arliington Martin and forum followers. The L and the T blurred.
                          Last edited by mojotrain; 05-26-2023, 09:46 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by mojotrain View Post

                            Ah-ha,,,Excuse me Arliington Martin and forum followers. The L and the T blurred.
                            lol. I thought I'd misread everything. I'm old and that happens a lot.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Kinda related to this topic and kinda not but worth the couple minute read regardless.



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