The First Rule Of Elementary School Yoof Fight Club: Don’t Video Elementary School Yoof Fight Club
This is both funny and ominous.
Just weeks into the school year, a 7-year-old Indianapolis Public Schools student told his mother his teacher allowed other students to physically abuse him in class.
The same report shows a wide disparity on testing between the 25% of students that are White and the 68% that are black or mestizo, especially the mestizo kids who I assume are both dumb and don’t speak the English so good. In other words, the smaller population of Whites makes the rest of the school look a little better on the state tests. Pretty much a standard “American” urban school where the majority of students are not American. I guess that “Montessori” learning isn’t helping much when your students are sub 70 IQ and/or can’t speak English.
He looks like a combination child molester and Rain Man minus the intelligence. As Exhibit B for the lack of intelligence, Exhibit A being that he is black, we have this:
Notice that the actual real jobs, like Chief Operations Officer and Chief Financial Officer, are held by White guys while the “Chief Learning Officer”, whatever the hell that is, is Lele Simmons, a homely chick or Shelby Roby-Terry, the “Chief Communications & Engagement Officer” which sounds like a completely made-up job responsible for ass covering for the district. While “Dr. Aleesia Johnson” is the Superintendent, a Didn’t Earn It DEI hire if ever I saw one, I suspect that Deputy Superintendent Andrew Strope probably does the actual work. “Dr.” Johnson has a less than stellar academic CV…
She has a little mixed race son named Oziah, which certainly could be the O in the O.D. initials and he looks about the right age.
She has approximately a million pictures of herself on her Faceberg page, lots with her son. None as far as I can tell with the father of her son. Weird. On the bright side, she is about to cash in with an enormous lawsuit against the school.
The number of students in special education in the United States has doubled over the past four decades, creating a rising share of public school kids who need special education services.That’s according to the Pew Research Center, which collected data from the The total number of students in special education went from 3.6 million in the 1976-77 school year, to almost 7.3 million in 2021-22. These students now make up 15 percent of the K-12 student population across the country, nearly double what it was in the late 1970s.
God help us please tell there is a bright side..!