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Problematic Women

National Report Card: Reminder of Why DC Needs to Change

Problematic Women

The Daily Signal

News Commentary, News, Entertainment News, Politics

4.6530 Ratings

🗓️ 30 January 2025

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The policies coming out of Washington, D.C. have the potential to affect Americans who have not even been born yet, whether for good or bad.    The latest National Report Card from the National Assessment of Educational Progress pains an abysmal picture of education across the U.S.   The report card is published every two years and assesses the average reading and math scores for fourth and eighth graders. The report showed significant declines for students when it was published in 2022, but the decline was somewhat expected in the wake of school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic. But the assessment completed in 2024 and published Wednesday show little to no improvement for student’s math and reading proficiency.  In 2024, 39% percent of fourth grade students performed at or above the proficient math level that is set by the National Assessment of Educational Progress. This is 3% higher compared to 2022, but 2 percentage points lower than in 2019.  Eighth grade math scores are at 28% proficiency, which is about the same as 2022 scores, but eight points lower compared to 2019.  Reading scores showed an even greater decline than math.    In 2024, 31% of fourth grade students performed at or above the proficient level on the reading assessment. This is a 2 percentage point decline compared to 2022 and 4 percentage points lower than 2019, according to the report card.    And 30% of eighth grade students performed at or above the proficient level in 2024, which was not significantly different from 2022, but lower compared to 2019.   But not all the news coming out of the government is negative for our kids right now. Take the confirmation hearing of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.   Kennedy, who President Donald Trump has tapped to head the Department of Health and Human Services, testified before the Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday. He argued that the U.S. healthcare and food system needs to do a better job of keeping American’s healthy, and this can begin by taking practical steps to remove processed foods from school lunch programs.    Or take the executive order Trump signed Tuesday to ban the use of federal dollars to fund or support irreversible transgender medical interventions for children.    On this week’s edition of "Problematic Women," Madison Marino Doan, co-author of "Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation," joins the show as we breakdown the ways the biggest pieces of news coming out of Washington could affect the next generation for years to come.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

There once was a woman who lived in a shoe.

0:03.0

A size too snug, but what could she do?

0:06.0

But that's not where her story ends.

0:08.0

Thanks to a little help from her Experian friends,

0:11.0

she got her score into much better shape

0:13.0

and relocated to a box fresh new place,

0:16.0

with room to grow and a mortgage to suit.

0:19.0

Now, she lives in a spacious four-bedroom cowboy boots. Better your

0:23.7

Experian credit score to help get mortgage ready. Experian. Better your score. Better your story.

0:30.6

Indeed presents. Hires, you can't afford to get wrong. Like payroll manager. Hi, I was just checking

0:36.5

my pay slip and it's all in Japanese yen. Yes, you're welcome. Sorry. Given the exchange rate between the pound and the yen, you're technically a millionaire now. Don't spend it all in one place. I can't really spend it anywhere. This is a job for sponsored jobs. This is what happens when you don't sponsor your job on Indeed. So the next time you need someone to get the job done right, get matched with quality candidates with an Indeed sponsored job.

0:56.8

Visit Indeed.com slash next hire and sponsor your job today.

0:59.9

We're back. And so is Melania Trump. my gosh so back so back her yeah her white house

1:18.1

portrait i love the side by sides yes i was going to say like when you see the previous one

1:23.6

compared to this one first one was great obviously but this is just stunning. Like, you can't,

1:29.0

there's so much power and she's just so fierce. Yeah. Like, I can't. I'm obsessed. It's such a statement.

1:36.8

I mean, the contrast starts with the color, right? We're all seeing, we have it up on the screen,

1:41.4

black and white versus colored. I think a huge other piece of this is her body posture, super strong like you said, but also

1:49.7

in her last photo, she had her arms crossed.

1:52.1

You could see her wedding ring very pronounced, and I almost feel like it was intentional

1:56.0

that this time her wedding ring, it's still there, you can see it if you look very closely,

1:59.6

but she's kind of making a statement like, this is my time too. I am the first lady. I'm doing a lot. And we've seen her make statements like this with the media in the past. I mean, when she went to Africa back in 2018, people tried to, you know, bring up drama. And she's like, I'm going to talk about my trip. Like I will talk to you about this, but don't bring the drama in. And I just love she's kind of day one.

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