Maryland is one of the best states for education
[QUOTE=Chris P;2791336]Are you denying that there are 23 schools in Baltimore city without a single student who is at age-level proficiency in math? Or that the spending per public school student in Baltimore is the third highest in the entire country?
That is the truth. Strangely, leftists have been unable to suggest any reasons for this state of affairs. Perhaps you'd like to give it a try?[/QUOTE]
[b]The truth is[/b], when you take a more comprehensive and complete understanding (and not a cherry picked one), the state of Maryland, which Baltimore resides in, is one of the top 10 states for education and has some of the best public schools and has the fourth-highest education attainment in the U.S. in 2023.
[URL]https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/best-states-for-education[/URL]
[b]The truth is[/b], the state of Maryland, which Baltimore resides in, was the 2nd best educated state, 2018 and continues to be in the top ten states.
[URL]https://www.cnbc.com/2018/01/23/the-10-most-and-least-educated-states-in-2018.html[/URL]
When you examine education at the state level, you'll see that Maryland is one of the best states to get an education. Sure you'll get pockets of areas that aren't up to par, but that's analogous to most of the country.
What I propose to you is that the funding (which doesn't seem to be a problem, as you put it) for the state of Maryland, leads me to believe, that the funding needs to be better distributed to address the educational resource needs of schools, in areas of lower-income families.
[b]The truth is[/b], I think, what your post/example, is most emblematic of, is an unfair competition, allocation and/or [b]misappropriation of funds[/b] for schools with low-income families, in lower-income areas. This is very problematic throughout the country, especially in the red states of Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama that overwhelmingly show up as the "worst", "lowest" or "least" educated/illiterate states in the country.