But if you paid for special tutoring program was promised to raise your likely D+ grade to an A+, and all you got was a C- would you then defend the Prep course as a "success"? I think not, I bet you'd ask for your money back.
But if you kept yelling to everyone what a success this prep course was, do you think that would inspire real reform? Of course not.
It seems odd to condemn a program that has improved outcomes across the country as a failure because it didn't hit an arbitrary target.
Has it improved outcomes across the country?
