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Responding to the Dropout Crisis

by Tim Adams ~ September 13th, 2008

I’ll be getting back to blogging on a regular basis next week. Click on this link to read an article I wrote for today’s (Sat., Sept. 13) San Antonio Express-News.

2 Responses to Responding to the Dropout Crisis

  1. Ed Walton

    The problem is the parents. Too much cultural emphasis on leaving school after grade 9 (last year in Mexico provided free by the state) to give rent money to mom and dad. Even in families who want the kids to succeed, the kids are under too much peer pressure unless their school is majority gringo, and they end up dropping out. At least that’s the way it worked with my relatives. Congrats on the publishing credit, Tim.

  2. linda junco

    In 1989 I dropped out of school because I just didn’t care about school and my sophmore counselor told me I would never amount to anything, and the best thing for me to do was to drop out of school. So like a fool, I did. My best friend already dropped out of school, and I really didn’t have anyone else to talk to. My mother and father were pretty upset. They wanted me to go back to school to get an education. So, I don’t agree with that it’s the parent’s fault.

    One day I was sitting in my room and I made a decision to go back to school. I graduated the year I was suppose to, in 1989. With lots of night and summer school. Then I found out that my Junior Counselor loved me so much that she gave me the extra 1/2 credit that I needed. She told me this right before I was crossing the stage. This was totally God’s favor!!!

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