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		<title>Students given diplomas despite failing grades and ...</title>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Students given diplomas despite failing grades and ...</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/8/students-given-diplomas-despite-failing-grade.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Sun, 08 Aug 2010 02:23:20 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><br /><br />&#x27;F&#x27; student graduates<br /><br />B&#x27;klyn diploma outrage<br /><br />SUSAN EDELMAN and CYNTHIA R. FAGEN<br /><br />NY Post<br /><br />Last Updated: 8:17 AM, July 4, 2010<br /><br />Posted: 2:59 AM, July 4, 2010<br /><br />GRAD TOWORSE: Brooklyn student Tatiana Reina, 21, graduated high school in June despite never showing up.<br /><br />But that didn&#x27;t stop the principal, Jacqueline Boswell, from granting Reina a diploma.<br /><br />In June, Reina showed up for the last five days and was given some health and chemistry assignments in the guidance office, school staffers said. She sat at a computer and Googled her answers, a worker said.<br /><br />Finally, teachers were pressured into giving Reina -- and a half-dozen other failing students -- minimally passing grades of 65, the equivalent of a D, to get the credits needed to graduate, sources told The Post.<br /><br />They&#x27;re giving out diplomas like it&#x27;s a lemonade stand, one disgusted staffer said.<br /><br />The city Department of Education referred The Post&#x27;s findings to its Office of Special Investigation, said spokesman Danny Kanner.<br /><br />What happened at Lafayette HS, one of five city high schools that closed their doors for the last time last week, is not a fluke, critics say.<br /><br />This is happening all over the city, especially at closing schools, said Leonie Haimson, executive director of Class Size Matters. If you&#x27;re a principal or a teacher and your chances of getting another job depend on how many kids you successfully graduate, the vast majority will give these kids credit, whether they deserve it not,<br /><br />That&#x27;s exactly what a Lafayette teacher did, describing coercion by an assistant principal.<br /><br />I was told to consider raising a failing grade because the principal might not give me a favorable recommendation, said the distraught teacher, who admitted changing a final grade of 55 to 65.<br /><br />The teacher also said Principal Boswell brought the student&#x27;s mother into the classroom and then asked if the kid&#x27;s grade would be changed. Boswell refused to speak to The Post.<br /><br />Reina first entered Lafayette in June 2004. Four years later, her credits fell short. But she bought a cap and gown and snuck into the line to walk on stage. A staffer noticed, but told the announcer to call out her name so as not to make a scene. Reina, like the others, was handed a piece of paper with instructions to pick up her diploma later.<br /><br />Still enrolled at Lafayette in 2008, Reina flunked everything but Spanish, earning a single credit and then another in summer school, records show. She then enrolled in Borough of Manhattan Community College, a CUNY campus, but got kicked out when officials finally got her high-school transcript.<br /><br />So she returned to Lafayette last year. On Jan. 12, a school day, she was arrested for buying goods at Bloomingdale&#x27;s at Roosevelt Field, LI, with $400 in fake traveler&#x27;s checks; the felony charge is pending.<br /><br />She failed everything until the second term, when she snagged the last two required credits.<br /><br />I got my diploma! she said last week, but didn&#x27;t want to comment further.<br /><br />Asked about her atrocious attendance, she explained, There wasn&#x27;t no problem. I just didn&#x27;t go.<br /><br />LINK TO PHOTO: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/brooklyn/student_graduates_qKSEek0SoPXTJBjV1Scc0M#ixzz0vyZekkL8<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/8/students-given-diplomas-despite-failing-grade.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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