So what happens when they go to Stanford, or Harvard, or Brown and they’re swallowed up by the curriculum because they were unprepared due to the lack of education at this school? Setting them up for failure.
they literally dont. the video is saying that they fake the results but the childs never know till they done with the school so they r way unlevel for any highschool how u gonna get accepted without basic classes.
Harvard sucks, all those school sucks, every school in this country is useless. No one is educated now except for homeschoolers and Christians. Everyone else is brainwashed.
not to mention the lack of proper desks or chairs smh. Wonder how the students admitted to the IV leagues performed on their ACT/SATs. Those results couldn't possibly be falsified, could they?
@@aniyahsmith121 teachers have access to copies of old tests. There is a lot of work that goes into making these tests effective, but they're not perfect. Not to mention the possibility of forged documents or a corrupt proctor. There's a non-trivial amount of money involved in this scam, I wouldn't rule anything out.
PrimeTF That won’t happen. They will be sued and lose their school and everything they own probably. But no way they’ll get life when child molesters and kidnapping get only a handful of years. I hope some kids will prosecute criminally and not just civilly.
Alexis Armstrong I know a school that has a 100% college acceptance rate, (it’s pretty believable the school is one of the best in the state), and it costs 50,000k to go there....
I went to a school similar to this for three years when I was young. When I finally got out and went to a real school, I was put in high level classes because of my grades, and then promptly failed everything. I caught up eventually because I was young, but it took something from me. This school is far from the only one
Gabbi Durham No It’s A Empty Storage Unit That Some Couple Rented And Started A Fake School to Steal Family’s Money And Get kids to Go to University’s Only to Drop our because they do not know a Thing Because they went to a fake school
When something looks good on paper you don't questionit, especially when your own options are limited. These people saw a demand and took advantage of it
A private school targeting black kids in a big garage with classes with no teachers and a 100% college acceptance rate and a pastor-like guy running the place; how could you possibly not realize something is up.
@@ommo Seriously! That's all I could think when they showed their "school" was just an empty warehouse! Charging that much for students and you can't even buy some drywall!? Nah, It just adds to the "we do it diffrint here" appeal I guess. You know every penny went to Mr. Mike himself... Certified teachers require a salary. So no certified teachers. Or no teachers at all!
When people say "failure is not an option" it gets on my nerves. Without failure, you will never succeed. When you fail, you learn so that you can avoid it. Everytime you hit the bottom, you're able to get back up stronger than before. You may go through something that you thought you couldn't possibly survive. But then you do, and you realize you're so much stronger than you could even imagine. The failures we go through shape us and give us the wisdom to succeed.
Failure teaches us things that we won't learn in a curriculum. Persistence, perserverance, grit, ability to handle failure and learn from it. Failure is a lesson in itself, and failure should always be encouraged
Whether you're learning chemical engineering, jazz piano or plumbing, you're going to fail in the beginning. You'll screw up and make mistakes, because that's how the process works. "Failure is not an option" is a slogan for getting people out of a burning building alive, not education!
but that’s not what schools teach overall…there is no room for failure in schools. you fail you don’t go to a good college; You don’t get a good job etc. i understand it’s other ways to be successful and that failure is apart of life but school is not a safe environment for that.
This is so horrible - they cheated an entire generation of students out of an education. They ought to be sent to prison and forced to pay for each of these child's education and tutoring
Touting a 100% college acceptance rate is NOT education, it’s prepping kids for standerdized tests and entrance exams. This schooled is not accredited and therefore has no academic standards. College acceptance is the only standard.
I get immediately suspicious of any place that refers to the members, employees, students, etc. of their organization as a family. Naw bro, I got a real family and we ain't even tight like that, I'm good.
In 2017, I was in an intro biology class at my college and had a lab partner who really struggled in the class. I always wondered why they seemed so unprepared compared with other students in the class. When news reports about this school came out and I realized that they went to this high school, I finally understood what was going on. I feel so sorry for all the students and families who had to go through this. I know two students at my college who went to this high school. Both of them struggled a lot but were able to graduate. I wish them all the best in their future endeavors.
Carly Crays Bruh if you’re paying $800/mo to drive your kid to an empty warehouse without books or teachers, and the founders have no educational experience wouldn’t you think something was fishy? Their principal was a freakin salesman and you might as well call him a con artist. Their tuition and donations brought up $250k a year with nothing to show for it because he 100% pocketed that money with no repercussions because this wasn’t even an accredited school to begin with. There are a million red flags here and the parents did not notice. Not saying its their fault, but Mr Landry took advantage of them bc he knew they were desperate AND ignorant.
Keenan Thomas Personally, I think it is important to fully explore such a claim. Idk, for me, I much rather have something like this explained in FULL. Because, it allows multiple different perspectives. It’s important. Not everything over an hour is entertainment. Is raw footage of war entertainment? No, it’s FOOTAGE. But I mean, even if it WAS entertainment, that is what a documentary is! I don’t see your point. Documentaries are an important genre of film and personally want to see more of it.
Keenan Thomas Lol, yes, ALLLLL was explained. No it was not man, the BIGGEST details are talked about, but you know for a fact more could be expanded on. There’s tons more you could go into with this. How they did it? The abuse? Etc etc etc.
They won't be doing any full documentary, because they would have to reveal the students standardized exam scores and the drop out rates. What the times won't report is, the students did very well on the standardized tests and very few of the students dropped out of the Ivy League.
@@linaandrews5228 You need to read the accompanying article with the full investigation, most of these students are grade levels behind, and the school is not accredited so their diplomas aren't recognized by their state and most public colleges. Several graduates dropped out of their colleges because they were not prepared.
@@ccv994 I have to employ critical thinking. All of the students who apply to Ivy League schools must take standardized exams to gain admission. Many of the students did well. Should I believe that these students scored well on standardized tests, but are grade levels behind? This makes no sense. You do realize that in order to apply to those Ivy League schools and gain admission, those students had to at least meet the minimum ACT or SAT score required by the university. Anyone who has applied to the Ivy League knows this. The issue is, the NY Times only has the testimony of a disgruntled girl who couldn't pass the prep school exam and was therefore put out of the school. There was one sentence about a student attending Brown, who is now a junior. Try employing a little critical thinking. Read between the lines. The school has been open since 2005 and we are approaching 2019. They have successfully sent students to the ivy league. If those students were flunking out, why would the Ivy league continue to admit (in record numbers), students from that prep school? The answer is, many of those former students did well and graduated from Yale, Brown, Harvard, Columbia, etc.
No teachers at all? Teachers without certifications? Empty classrooms? But it was almost $800 a month to attend? I’m so confused how no one fact checked anything and just sent their kid there???
I can relate to this so much, having gone through an elite high school in China. Classmates were enemies, but we did have a lot of very strict, almost sadistic teachers, and no holidays. I still have nightmares of that time.
Exactly as an Indian, the quote "Failure is not an option", " Go big or go home" are all too relatable and normalized in our education system and although corporal punishment was not a thing in institutions my mother spitting on me for not being able to get good grades, it's just traumatizing. Never thought this could happen in America as well
foxguy 30 they make the students act their part of becoming a 100% Ivy League student, but the people who are running the school just want them to act there part of doing that
I got accepted in my dream university but then i realized that i can't afford to go there even with scholarships. So i got my degree in a community college instead, I'm still an RN.
@@wiztiny9910 its not, this could have easily happened to a school filled with white kids or a school with diversity. You americans love to make every single thing about race
I'd like to see a full investigation. There are plenty of schools that are adopting new "unconventional" tactics to teach students but this does feel odd. Students teaching themselves? In a warehouse???
@@ninjapoodle22 That's nice but a private, elite school like this one claims it is shouldn't be utilizing an empty warehouse as a classroom. They're charging people but can't even afford a rug?
The DOE has to open a investigation on this school. Something is not right. The school officials may be pocketing millions cheating the young out of a education.
It's funny how people are more worried about the race of these kids than the fact that they were physically abused, threatened, and cheated out of a true education. They were victims. If anyone, be mad at the owner of the school.
I don't see anyone who is more worried about their race than the fact that they suffered abuse--if anything, the fact that they are black & black kids are more likely to receive subpar k-12 educations just makes the abuse they suffered worse. These parents really, really had their hopes up for a good education. Just awful.
@@TheOrangeneck Right, it's absolutely awful. However, I went to another youtube video to learn more about this issue, and the comments were filled with racist jokes and complaints of affirmative action letting the kids get into ivy leagues in the first place. It's truly disheartening that so many people in that comment section weren't talking about the real issue.
I find both upsetting. These kids were abused and set up to fail. Affirmative action played a part in their acceptances, as did the falsified records. Several who started at these universities experienced suffering when they realized they were no where near qualified to keep up because of this awful sham of a school. Both are upsetting and the fact that universities didn’t have due diligence when it came to reviewing applications is part of the problem and part of what kept this school going- the acceptance rates.
I've literally never watched a video on this channel, but I'm glad this one's the first. Gotta agree with everyone saying that it deserves to be a feature length doc on its own
@@sameenamin4645, can you also do a story investigating the recent Asian scandal where the SAT answers were leaked for months? There are also past Asian scandals at international Asian schools - research those. Also, please investigate the story about the elite prep academy - where the young man took the SAT for other students - and how very little ramifications there were from that whole scandal. Maybe that will help dispel some other stereotypes, too. Thanks.
@@xmuta that is such a stupid take, there was almost nothing about race, the girl specifically said she felt intimidated to speak out because they had the reputation of being successful.
Der Schwindel this is not the case....at all...I honestly don’t even know what your citing or referencing because I found absolutely no evidence of this anywhere. It’s almost as if you made this up....because you did (edit: der Schwindel deleted their comment, but the original comment was about “private colleges inflate their grades and use an inflated scale”)
@@TheGamingSlate just take a look at "advanced classes" which "merit" giving out a grade higher than a 4.0. That's grade inflation in a nutshell, take a class that claims to be advanced and get a better grade regardless.
As a former high school teacher, I wish we could stop measuring student success by college "readiness" and acceptance. I wish we could stop trying to get EVERY high school student into college, because college is not for everyone. I miss the days of having trade skills education in the schools, and I wish more people would realize that vocational-technical/trade work can be just as rewarding and lucrative as a college education (does anyone realize how much a plumber makes nowadays?!?!!?)
Agreed, I will always say that while we will always need teachers, doctors and those jobs that require four or more years of post high school education we also need plumbers, electricians, carpenters, mechanics and other jobs that, at most, only need one year of education after high school
We once had a kid who absolutely struggled to get his act together, but once we had a new cohort of teachers- they “turned him around” he graduated middle school to go to one of the better magnetic school in our area, even got the Most improved student of the year. He ended up going to juvie the next year because he threatened a kid with a gun...
I attended the school. Most people who graduated and went on to Ivy League schools were not prepared. I was in the 5th grade “preparing for the act and college.”
Teachers are what makes schools more annoying for children. And in today’s society the majority of stuff that we learn is most likely not going to be around when we become adults. You can’t just say you need to know how to write and read because it will still be around when you get older. Like no this generation is going to find a way where you do not need to learn to do math, reading, writing and not spend over 11 years of your life getting up just to do something you do not want to do. School was never apart of gods plan anyways. Anything that god did not give us is secondary and is not necessary. Meaning SCHOOL.
@@GollyFancies312 I'm not going to address everything you said in this comment except for the religious bit at the end. God might not have specifically stated that school or further education is an important or good thing--and indeed, many people don't work with the current modern systems of education. However, the Bible does have passages telling us to help and teach one another. Surely a teacher communicating information to a child is one form of this.
But you need to understand we are the next generation. Most of the stuff we learn in school is not gong to help us. The world is changing so fast and soon we are going to invent things were you do not have to know any of the dumb stuff there teacher you. And the bible also says anything that hold you slave is a sin. School is very unhealthy you stay for hours a day and become very tired with no rest. Then they shame you for not doing good on everything but the only perfect human that ever walked the earth is Jesus. So people just do not have the ability to learn things and they still force it on you. In the near future im sure all this stuff is going to be useless. Its a waste of life.
@@GollyFancies312 I can tell you are not over the age of 15. You will need writing and reading every where you go. I agree that some things that school teaches is useless but there is a few crucial things that you will need later in life. I dont know which religion you are but the bible literally says that you should teach and help each other navigate through this society. A place where you dont need reading or writing is false. Some teachers might not be the best but saying that every teacher is terrible has the same concept as ACAB, its subjective to a few minority. In this world there will always be terrible people disguised as a function member of society such as a teacher.
Tony L That’s literally what happened to a large percentage of the kids. The NYT wrote a huge article that delves deeper into the entire controversy and they bring up the fact that most of the kids who went to these Ivy League schools had their grades suffer horribly or even needing to drop out and go to a local or community college because they were basically at elementary and middle school levels
Maya Oh I’m so sorry that wasn’t my intention! What I meant was because of their underdevelopment in education, they had to drop out, and they didn’t exactly have the same opportunities afterwards that they had at the school so they went to what they could afford and what worked.
@Maya No, it doesn't mean that you have a middle school education. However, community colleges often offer a plethora of lower-level or remediation classes to help students fill in gaps in their high school education. These are often lacking at four-year colleges. So, while most students at community colleges probably don't need it, those colleges often have the resources and opportunities for students to succeed even without a strong high school experience.
I went to a college prep school and the culture is very toxic at times, going to a 4 year university is the only thing that matters, other options are not important or discussed. The education for me was great and the teachers were the best ever and genuinely cared for me and others but the culture between the students was so competitive
Trying (and failing) to present an image that he thought projected Ivy League values. Most often he looked like a clown. In that one look he looked like a McDonald's manager. Ridiculous.
I wonder how these students performed once they were in these Ivy league schools. Surely the schools must have noticed a pattern of underperformance? If so, why keep accepting them?
@@xanderpandre2092 do you really think you made some great point with that comment? schools keep records, data, stats, and perform analyses of these items. They should notice something.
@@tehcrazysoccergirl Any competent admissions department checks in on future outcomes of different student groups. There might not have been enough students from this school for them to recognize any significant pattern (versus a few outliers underperforming).
Omae wa Mo shinderu Those are not the only worthy decent colleges. There are plenty great schools out there that are not red brick or Ivy League household names. Any decent high school will be more concerned with finding kids the right fit for a college than one which they can brag about in promoting the school. Lots of factors come into this,money is obviously a big one, but so is a students family circumstances. Some kids have caring responsibilities for younger siblings or parents with disabilities, an out of state college thousands of miles away would probably be a bad fit.
That doesn’t constitute it being fake. Plenty of students are groomed to think that those schools are the only options because the people who teach them or parents never had those opportunities. The school is a sham, however this is not a point to that argument.
You also have to think about the hard working kids who were denied entry into their dream school because a spot was given to a student whose school falsified their applications. So sad. Education is invaluable and no shortcuts can be taken.
Exactly! And would the students, once accepted, even be able to keep up academically when they got to college? The video said that because of the unconventional teaching methods, students were actually falling behind academically. It’s terrible.
@@bethfitzmaurice1086 yep! it is a lose-lose for everyone involved. shame on the colleges for not catching this sooner and no one holding them accountable to teach these kids.
“Teachers without certifications” “No teachers at all” That’s ABSOLUTELY TERRIBLE! Teachers are important. Which is why they should have certifications. This video reveals that problem
They actually did . There is an article in the New York Times that goes into detail . Maybe the video was done before the article ? I was fortunate in that I read the article before I saw this video .
All, I read the article, but this is deeper than scamming the country. This isn't done, far from done, in my opinion. This will have long lasting affects on the system, including making it more difficult for those with genuine intentions to start a school geared to minorities who are neglected by the education system. TM Landry fooled Ivy League schools, this is all my opinion, but this will change the future of state and higher-education. Especially with Diploma Mills are becoming more prevelant, as well. With my comment, what I will add, is that I hope the NYT will return in a year, maybe half a decade, to see if this will impact growth for minority serving institutions, changes in transcript verification, and also even state accredited institutions. When I say full length documentary, I mean a full documentary and not six minutes. Simply because I believe the quality of journalism and investigating remind me of Spotlight in Boston, it is outstanding to the point I hope they return and give it more than six minutes.
My son was at a charter academy when he was very young. He has hearing loss on one side, which causes him to become bored, as use less of his mental faculties because the aren't engaged in the learning process. The school was provided equipment from the state to assist in his learning. They wouldn't use it and routinely sent him home in the middle of the day. My wife and I went to the school to figure out what was going on. They told us that he wasn't intelligent enough to learn what they were teaching. The problem is that our son had been tested at U of M on multiple occasions to see if it was an intelligence related issue. It wasn't. It was a hearing related issue. After doing this for a half of a year the school said they would have to fail him. And, they said this would probably be the case the following year. We where shocked. They were the ones that did this. They where the ones that sent him home. Then they were not only failing him for the current year, but the next year. I'd never even heard of a school doing this. We pulled him out of the school and went to our local public school. The principal said that he would struggle, as he was over a year behind his class! That it would take several years for him to catch up. But, he said it was up to us, that he would need our help, and that the school would create an IEP to assist at school. Time went by and one day I was at the school and the principle walked by. He said that he wanted to tell me something. He said, "I was wrong. Your son is nearly caught up. I can't believe the transition. He's the talk of the school!" Later he received a diploma for getting off academic probation. He's still young, so he doesn't get what he accomplished. It was an amazing achievement. He still has problems in school because he has some attention span issues, which may or may not be related to the hearing. But the school works with us. Its the reason we still live here. The school makes a big difference in how your children do. But you have to take part in it as well. I hope the best for all of the kids in this video.
What I find laughable is that all these universities ACCEPTED those kids with the falsified records, which basically proves the "IVY" application process is a great big fat joke and the private college/university admissions system is the game people always said it was. I mean seriously? How does your admissions team reviewing an application, NOT notice an "undergrad" with a birth date year, the same as her own mothers?
I am going to play devil's advocate here and say that at some instances it is not really possible for them to verify it (unless they conduct an own investigation after there is an initial suspicion). Stuff like the undergrad with the same birth date year as her mother is obviously something suspicious already (tho, there truly are people in their 30s or 40s who still graduate), but most of the falsified things will be almost impossible for the Universities to verify if we are realistic. For instance, if a school claims a student took a honors class in 'x' (let's say, Biology), they can't really know that the school itself is the one lying. Also keep in mind, the universities are pushed to accept minorities because of quotas. Not wanting to start a debate about affirmative action, but one of the results is that institutions such as colleges and universities are legally obliged to benefit minorities applicants by the state. So to a certain degree, they also 'have' to give preferential treatment when in doubt (and ironically, they end up discriminating against Asians, another minority, because they are actually overrepresented). So for them having minority students with actual competitive CV's is a blessing because then they don't have to benefit 'weaker' ones over whites with better grades. *TL:DR* : The Universities are actually put in quite a bad spot here, but to be fair they only have limited responsibility. It is not their responsibility to investigate claims of a school, but it is the state that sets up regulations for them to be allowed to run and the universities then have to assume they abide by the regulations. Furthermore, they are also pushed to accept minority students by the state, so if there is a situation where they are in doubt between a non-minority and a minority student, they'll most likely end up favoring the minority one due to the quotas imposed on them.
I don't think she was one of the students accepted to a fancy college with that transcript, but that could just be explained by the school saying it was a clerical error and fixing it. No, college applications don't protect against the schools falsifying transcripts. They require official transcripts from the high school administration to protect against the *students* falsifying grades and classes, but there is an assumption that accredited, diploma-granting high schools aren't committing straight-up fraud... I don't see how that makes the application process a joke. It's even suggested that the school wrote students' application essays or at least told them what lies to write about, so it's not like one part of the application would cast suspicion on another part. Teachers' recommendation letters obviously would be completely false as well. So, from any one application there would be no way of knowing that the information was false because the school administration are the ones lying, and there's no check for that in the application process (and I doubt you can make a convincing argument that there should be).
@@LacedWithOreos Not sure what you mean by test in. If you mean standardized scores like ACT and SAT, yes absolutely those are usually mandatory. The video suggests that the high school level students were intensely focused on these tests to produce believable scores (with their glowing transcripts). Especially with essays about false hardships and great transcripts, a lower range standardized score can be put down to a student maybe being a nervous test taker or not having the resources that other competitive applicants do to go to standardized test tutoring classes and take tests multiple times. If you're referring to testing into levels at their college, like to decide placement in language courses, math courses, etc., no that is generally not done until after you're accepted and you're registering for classes. It would be hugely unwieldy for each individual college to basically have their own SAT test. Imagine being an applicant and having to take 14 different SATs for different schools or whatever. The written version of this article did talk about how many of the students that went to Ivies and other dream schools after TM Landry were not able to keep up with the coursework and ended up dropping out.
Two of the schools in my town are in old grocery store buildings. It's not that surprising to strip empty buildings and keep the infrastructure. It's a lot cheaper than building an entirely new building.
I wonder if these kids had their admissions rescinded or ended up failing out of school? Because, if they never took demanding classes or got the grades their doctored transcript said,they are no better than Olivia Jade and her parents and the school administrators/administration need to be prosecuted and go to jail!
The terrible thing is, they are setting these kids up for failure. They will not be able to maintain their grades at those Ives becuase they did not have the proper education and training in highschool. Not only that but they are taking spots away from kids who have actually worked hard and have the skills to do well at an Ivy. This is just disastrous on so many levels smh
Society is so stupid that it has convinced people that a college education is the only way for their child the be successful, rather than it being a money sink that could have been better invested
I’m a Canadian teacher and this astounds me beyond belief. I had to stop the video after a few minutes because I was getting too emotional. This is an *atrocious* abuse of power.
@pouting emoji literally I don't need your permission to do anything. You must have a pretty empty existence to say something like this. I pray God blesses you in what you do,and that you find happiness and peace
My school has one of the highest college acceptance rates in the country among non-private schools. The school has a program intended to make sure that every single student, without exception, gets coaching on how to do a college application, and how to make sure that the student can find a good college, with an even better scholarship. The problem? The students who graduate our school graduate college at one of the single lowest rates in the country. My school is incredibly lenient on due dates, and will do everything in its power to make sure that the assignment you missed on the first day of the semester, gets graded. Even if you turn it in on the last day of the semester. While this helps with grades, it doesn't help students get prepared for college. The majority of those who get accepted to college were used to turning in assignments from January in May. These students weren't ready to turn in assignments from January 1st on January 2nd. Since I learned that, every time I see a school with a high college acceptance rate, it's an instant look away from me. I'm not looking to get to college, I'm looking to graduate.
This can be said of anything. We should attract more Immigrants because they are hard working, honest and bring innovation to the country. Sounds too good to be true. But if you question that you become a bigot
It's so typical that something like this would want to pray on desperate families. No one should promote the idea that they can have a 100% acceptance rate, that is simply impossible. Well-off educated families would know this and be suspicious of such a promise. The whole thing makes me sick.
That's not really relevant and a blatant strawman arguement. No one is promoting "attracting more immigrants" except for company that need certain skilled employees. The real debate is about allowing and processing immigrants who are coming to the counry. Both sides of the debate paint an exagerated picture of immigrants while in the end they are just people, good or bad.
Falsifying applications is definitely illegal/against the rules. And I have no question that guy is abusive. Be as "unconventional" as you want, but you don't get to break laws. These two scammers are a giant X on the Black community. Black kids can make it to these colleges on their own merits, but you've done it through lying & abuse. Not a good look.
Apparently many high schools falsify applications. Luckily many universities weed these people out once they're there but it's unfair to the student that goes from hero to zero.
Sisi that is blatantly rascist ,we do not need segregation ;with good education any one can graduate ,no race is smarter than the other and each person can be taught without segregation
Sisi what you’re saying is racist. You can’t claim that an entire race of people have a ‘spiteful nature’ and what’s worse, say things like they should be with their ‘own kind’. Our ‘own kind’ seeing as we’re human beings, is also human beings. The only difference between a white person and a black person is color of skin. When you say things like ‘white people are more .....’ or ‘black people are more.....’ it’s stereotyping that does more than just hurt the feelings of the people you’re stereotyping, but affects the growth of the world as a whole. I think you need to learn how to be a little more up to date in your thinking. If you need help, I’m here!
Uh oh.... oh no..... There's a high school, a public one, while has the best options for academic and bases around a "family", there are reports of some bullying not addressed, even with explicit requests, the administrations will not do anything about it. Then again, I can't assume in fear about every organization I go to.
These kids were abused and were not properly prepared for these schools, but you can't fake an SAT or ACT score, they had to get near perfect grades on that. I wish they would be talking about how that happened a bit more
So for the kids who went on to these ivy leagues school (if they could afford it), did they end up completely flunking out because they weren’t actually educated on the things he lied about on their applications?
And if they do, it makes it muuuuuuch harder for future students from that school to get into those unis, since admissions decisions take into account who else from your high school went to that uni and how well they did.
Yeah, they really didn’t explain everything especially what the girl at the very end meant by “I believed he could do no wrong, but obviously not because I’m sitting here”
This is so messed up for students all over the US. Imagine doing honest work through all 12 grades then getting rejected because of these liars... (Im talking about the founders not the students btw)
Not even that just imagine a kid who in no way was prepared to be able to succeed in college being funneled in to an Ivy League where they immediately know they don’t belong or have the resources to pass classes. Getting into college really is only less than half the battle, they were being sent in to only be kicked out or drop out due to lack of resources to succeed, and that’s very damaging.
The students and their families were the victims of basically a scam :’( It’s even sketchier because black students are already so underrepresented in universities and colleges, aside from native Americans, black Americans are the population with lowest college acceptances. So these kids were promised something remarkable while also being abused and victimised :’( And yeah, all the honest students who worked hard are then looked at in the same light. How else would a black student get into college? Though wealthy white students have been paying their ways into school with no preparation whatsoever forever (that celebrity college scandal...). Definitely a issue with the system :’)
@@wrinkleintime4257 have no idea what ur talking about blacks got accepted in to good college just because they r black while Asian kids have to literally study to death I order to get accepted into Ivy League. According to research from Princeton University, students who identify as Asian must score 140 points higher on the SAT than whites and 450 points higher than Blacks to have the same chance of admission to private colleges.
The girl who is speaking up against T.M. Landry deserves to get into a good college. For having the guts to do what she did, she could actually be someone that brings change.
Quote from the article: For yet other Landry students, particularly those who spent multiple years at the school, the results after graduation have been disappointing. Some have withdrawn from college, or transferred to less rigorous programs.
The ones that spent a longer time at the school dropped out because it was too hard. The ones that only spent a year or two there tended to do better, but probably because they already had a solid educational foundation.
@@witchplease9695 That's not true. Students who attended for more than a year or two are NOT doing well. Kids in primary school are testing years behind. One dad who liked the school when his older sons went there for a short time, now despises it because his younger child is testing years behind his public school peers. Young kids aren't even learning reading fundamentals, like phonics. Instead, one grandmother said her grandchild who tested behind, played legos all day. The kids who were successful in college, only went for a short time. Keep in mind, there were only 20 kids in last year's graduating class. The school gained popularity after the videos, so now there is a new crop of lower school students who are being set up for failure. It's a real shame. The article says the reporter interviewed 50 people, including alumni.
Louisiana is ranked 49th in education and they say the “school” has a 100% college acceptance rate. Not ringing any bells? Thanks for the likes too guys
People wanted to believe it was true. TM Landry was sending underprivileged black students off to Ivy League schools. No one wanted to rain on that parade.
@Mike Solar I don't think she is the only one. There are a lot of alumni that wanted their voice to be heard. Heck, there is even someone who put ~30 pages of their experience on that school in this comment section.
When you see "100%" that's already a red flag. In my country I never heard of schools having a "college/university acceptance rate" only University/Colleges has Employability rate.
4 ปีที่แล้ว +4
@@avourrito1819 that's the exact same thing just on the next level.
Sometimes the best for your child is just a loving mom and dad who push their children to go after jobs that interest them and look for schools that cater to the child's interests.
"Because they're kids." That's what hurts the most about it. You're glad that they are achieving their dreams. You want these kids to succeed at the end of the day. But then you realize the terrible truth about it.
Sad that schools and parents care more about the gratification of their children being “ivy league college bound” but fail to realize the hardships and long term debt their children end up facing. College is the biggest scam in America
tdot22 you don’t need to go to an ivy university though community is just fine it’s all about grad school especially if you want to be a doctor or lawyer
@tdot22 I think mint mint means taking as many credits from community college that can tranfer transfer, then the completeing the degree at the institution of your choice. Saves thousands of dollars and the quality of the education is nice too.
I feel bad for the students going to Stanford or MIT for chemistry or engineering from that school because theyre probably sorely unprepared. I hope they dont fail and that theyre able to do well!
I couldn’t help but notice that none of these kids were headed to MIT. Not only is it hard to get into MIT, it’s hard to *stay* in MIT. I don’t believe for a second that none of these kids were scientifically inclined and would have loved to attend a school like MIT. I feel like these kids were pushed to the Ivies because getting into a school like Harvard is harder than staying in.
I wonder how these students coped once they actually got to their Ivy League campus, after years of falsified education such a transition must've been overtly overwhelming. And for the kids that were currently enrolled in Ivys when the news broke out exposing their school, I hope they weren't asked to leave.
It would be a small mercy if they were asked to leave their Ivy League school because unless they are exceptionally gifted or intelligent, they would be drowning and flunking their classes all over the place due to the huge work load and pressure they are placed under.
The kids who went to Brown might have actually been fine. It’s one of those schools where students can create their own curriculum/major and they can do their own thing. I don’t think it’s an accident or a coincidence that a lot of these kids wanted to go to Brown, I’m sure this couple pushed that on these kids.
Say no as loud as you can to failure, it'll happen sometime in the future, oh but you can try rolling around the ground breaking into a sea of tears, snot, and sweat, it happens. Failure happens. Get a grip.
To everyone insulting the parents for not realizing what was happening. HINDSIGHT IS 20/20. Sure, when you watch this video you may go “I would of realized this was bad,” but you weren’t in their situation. It is despicable to judge people in this awful situation and call them dumb.
Nearly $800 and no desks, no teachers, no books, and nobody was questioning this?
Serena Ruvalcaba nah this is America and with Jesus anything is possible!
mrblackalchemist lmao you’re joking right
Jaely ya
800?
@@jordanjj6996 a month
Looks like a cult warehouse
all schools are warehouses... with walls
Wait, isn't *all* school like prison like teachers tell you what to do when.
it literally used to be a machine warehouse lol
Faxxxxxx
@@Danyymao that's prison. this, looks like a cult
Moral of the story: if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
lmaooo
I literally just watch an Elizabeth Holmes documentary before this
They could still be operating this operation if they didn’t have 100% college acceptance rates.
When the kids say they teach themselves, that should have been a red flag. Adults don’t study to become teachers for nothing.
Andrew Bryson 💯
So what happens when they go to Stanford, or Harvard, or Brown and they’re swallowed up by the curriculum because they were unprepared due to the lack of education at this school? Setting them up for failure.
@Sara A well it did not end well.
@@mnkwazi Why did everyone in that area recommend this school?
Not so fun fact: That's also a side effect of Affirmative Action
they literally dont. the video is saying that they fake the results but the childs never know till they done with the school so they r way unlevel for any highschool how u gonna get accepted without basic classes.
Harvard sucks, all those school sucks, every school in this country is useless. No one is educated now except for homeschoolers and Christians. Everyone else is brainwashed.
No one questions that the school is in a warehouse.
not to mention the lack of proper desks or chairs smh. Wonder how the students admitted to the IV leagues performed on their ACT/SATs. Those results couldn't possibly be falsified, could they?
@@TruthSeeker310 students were only taught enough to pass the sat/act. They practiced for it.
D0NtPh34rTh3R34p3R that does not make sense cause they take the act in Baton Rouge they can not practice it dumb people fr
Sailtothemoon mine your business
@@aniyahsmith121 teachers have access to copies of old tests. There is a lot of work that goes into making these tests effective, but they're not perfect. Not to mention the possibility of forged documents or a corrupt proctor. There's a non-trivial amount of money involved in this scam, I wouldn't rule anything out.
They both need prison time. That's absolutely pathetic what they were doing to those kids
I won't be satisfied unless they're given life sentence or death sentence.
You're telling me you're a kid you're dumb as f*** you but want to get into Harvard like how?
PrimeTF That won’t happen. They will be sued and lose their school and everything they own probably. But no way they’ll get life when child molesters and kidnapping get only a handful of years. I hope some kids will prosecute criminally and not just civilly.
Exactly! They messed those kids up. Those kids deserve justice.
Hey they acheive results
How is the school for a “working class community” if it cost $800 a month to attend??
Alexis Armstrong I know a school that has a 100% college acceptance rate, (it’s pretty believable the school is one of the best in the state), and it costs 50,000k to go there....
alek lmaooo isnt that the one Connecticut
$800/month for a private school is peanuts
Lmao right?
Blurb this a school
In the hood though
I went to a school similar to this for three years when I was young. When I finally got out and went to a real school, I was put in high level classes because of my grades, and then promptly failed everything. I caught up eventually because I was young, but it took something from me. This school is far from the only one
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
If I may be so bold as to guess... A Sudbury school?
Sorry to hear that, hope you got into good schools after that
@@thatonekid9400 no, but I have heard about Sudbury schools and always wondered about their long-term prospects…I’m assuming it’s not good?
@Crow why are the teachers in these schools always abusive? I was straight up scared of our teachers and had nightmares about them
I hate when people say “failure is not an option” when it comes to academics. That’s not what learning is like at all.
This school lies and cheats. Transcript Fraud etc
In our school we say you need to fail because First Attempt Is Learning.
Alisasi Precisely 😌
I’ve never failed to learn something.
Eyes Wide Shut aight so you’ve been scoring 1600’s on your SAT and 100’s on all your tests since you were born? lmao
It’s literally a warehouse with chairs why are they surprised
Gabbi Durham No It’s A Empty Storage Unit That Some Couple Rented And Started A Fake School to Steal Family’s Money And Get kids to Go to University’s Only to Drop our because they do not know a Thing Because they went to a fake school
When something looks good on paper you don't questionit, especially when your own options are limited. These people saw a demand and took advantage of it
They're not surprised. They're exposing them.
yeah the idea of an open communal space isn’t bad but usually they would still have comfortable furniture, study areas and decor. screams scam.
Sorry but you gotta be dumb to send your kid there
A private school targeting black kids in a big garage with classes with no teachers and a 100% college acceptance rate and a pastor-like guy running the place; how could you possibly not realize something is up.
UnitSe7en I agree with this fella.
Desperation and stress can break down any strong and intelligent person to fall for anything
White people on TV are stupid?
$875 a month.
@@ommo Seriously! That's all I could think when they showed their "school" was just an empty warehouse! Charging that much for students and you can't even buy some drywall!? Nah, It just adds to the "we do it diffrint here" appeal I guess. You know every penny went to Mr. Mike himself... Certified teachers require a salary. So no certified teachers. Or no teachers at all!
When people say "failure is not an option" it gets on my nerves. Without failure, you will never succeed. When you fail, you learn so that you can avoid it. Everytime you hit the bottom, you're able to get back up stronger than before. You may go through something that you thought you couldn't possibly survive. But then you do, and you realize you're so much stronger than you could even imagine. The failures we go through shape us and give us the wisdom to succeed.
Failure teaches us things that we won't learn in a curriculum. Persistence, perserverance, grit, ability to handle failure and learn from it. Failure is a lesson in itself, and failure should always be encouraged
Whether you're learning chemical engineering, jazz piano or plumbing, you're going to fail in the beginning. You'll screw up and make mistakes, because that's how the process works. "Failure is not an option" is a slogan for getting people out of a burning building alive, not education!
but that’s not what schools teach overall…there is no room for failure in schools. you fail you don’t go to a good college; You don’t get a good job etc. i understand it’s other ways to be successful and that failure is apart of life but school is not a safe environment for that.
Failure is not an option in school because modern school is not about learning.
@@paegr facts. it feels like slavery half of the time and manipulation the other
They robbed those students of time, something you can NEVER get back.
Issa Rae's Body Double think of how much more productive they could have been on Snapchat.
Issa Rae's Body Double And a real education. As well as respect. Physically abusing them certainly had an impact.
Especially at those young developmental stages where you can learn so much
Issa Rae's Body Double In louisiana the education system is very bad anyway.
It’s at least 25% of their lives at that time!!
I wanna go to school in an empty Costco too. Yep. Totally.
Yeah, and pay thousands of dollars to teach myself the work
I would like to go to a empty Toys R Us
You'd probably get a better education at Costco.
It’s Isa empty Sams Club
thefluffybunbun _ thousands? Kid it was 600 dollars a month
This is so horrible - they cheated an entire generation of students out of an education. They ought to be sent to prison and forced to pay for each of these child's education and tutoring
Touting a 100% college acceptance rate is NOT education, it’s prepping kids for standerdized tests and entrance exams.
This schooled is not accredited and therefore has no academic standards. College acceptance is the only standard.
They dont even do that tho, they fake the scores
epocs white women benefit the best from affirmative action. Go back under your rock troll.
AssasinArsenal47 Sorry you that you feel like that’s how it is way. If you mean more privileged than they did in the 1900s. I mean I hope they do.
@@fogg0 where you getting that stat🤣
“no trained teachers” “100% acceptance rate” ive never heard of this school but people really just accepted that as true?
Im your 100th liker here & bye.
I get immediately suspicious of any place that refers to the members, employees, students, etc. of their organization as a family. Naw bro, I got a real family and we ain't even tight like that, I'm good.
I'm suspicious of schools that hit their students, thought that tradition died out
@S. M. Odion-Smith Hey *fam*
@@mrduckling1995 it’s still apparently legal in 19 states which is just awful.
right?..so weird.
So true.
This sounds more like a cult than a school.
@i hol’ up
fr this is so disgusting the founders should go to jail
It is
Or some sort of a concentration camp.
@@highkit lmao what??
"No class rooms
No walls
No books"
*w a r e h o u s e*
harrystyles equals cutiepie I k n o w r i g h t
Lol a high school near my house used to be a warehouse
@@invared but did it have walls, desks, books?
Anhhhhhhhhhh hahahhahhahahahahhahahahahaaaaa
harrystyles equals cutiepie Lmaooo and ain't no way that many black people getting into IVY Leagues
In 2017, I was in an intro biology class at my college and had a lab partner who really struggled in the class. I always wondered why they seemed so unprepared compared with other students in the class. When news reports about this school came out and I realized that they went to this high school, I finally understood what was going on. I feel so sorry for all the students and families who had to go through this. I know two students at my college who went to this high school. Both of them struggled a lot but were able to graduate. I wish them all the best in their future endeavors.
In one sense, I hope this is a takeaway. These kids can succeed, they just need a just and thorough preparation.
Kids teaching each other from books without a teacher? Why didn’t parents question this? What was the $800/month tuition paying for?
Godhelpus Please only parents who never have gone to school before or dropped out of HS.
That’s big problem for them.
Lol I had a teacher like that for 2 years.... The entire class didn't even know what we had to study
Because the parents are dumb and ignorant. Most likely didn’t have an education either
@@m0ldy_cupcake I don't think they're dumb. They're just desperate and wanted to believe that there was some secret formula that could help their kid.
Carly Crays Bruh if you’re paying $800/mo to drive your kid to an empty warehouse without books or teachers, and the founders have no educational experience wouldn’t you think something was fishy?
Their principal was a freakin salesman and you might as well call him a con artist. Their tuition and donations brought up $250k a year with nothing to show for it because he 100% pocketed that money with no repercussions because this wasn’t even an accredited school to begin with. There are a million red flags here and the parents did not notice. Not saying its their fault, but Mr Landry took advantage of them bc he knew they were desperate AND ignorant.
This needs to be longer than a 6 minute video, I need like a 1 hour documentary
On Netflix with 4 to 8 episodes
Keenan Thomas Um no, sorry that’s just wrong. Are you saying everything over an hour should just be seen as entertainment? Lol, wat.
Keenan Thomas Personally, I think it is important to fully explore such a claim. Idk, for me, I much rather have something like this explained in FULL. Because, it allows multiple different perspectives. It’s important. Not everything over an hour is entertainment. Is raw footage of war entertainment? No, it’s FOOTAGE. But I mean, even if it WAS entertainment, that is what a documentary is! I don’t see your point. Documentaries are an important genre of film and personally want to see more of it.
Keenan Thomas Lol, yes, ALLLLL was explained. No it was not man, the BIGGEST details are talked about, but you know for a fact more could be expanded on. There’s tons more you could go into with this. How they did it? The abuse? Etc etc etc.
Keenan Thomas What is wrong with wanting to know a full story? There’s a reason I rather watch a podcast than a 10 minute interview talk shows.
This is why we need more journalists to expose the truth
I'm surprised Julian Assange wasn't behind the exposure.
@@capsman09 wasn't he already in jail?
Yes, I agree. But unfortunately it isn’t that simple.
true journalists are absolutely hated
@k x . . . Try international news outlets. Several work in English. France 24, Deutsche Welle, NHK, for example.
big respect for the girl who stepped up and took action to talk about her former school.
This is seriously troubling and deserves a full, documentary-length investigation.
No it needs a police investigation
They won't be doing any full documentary, because they would have to reveal the students standardized exam scores and the drop out rates. What the times won't report is, the students did very well on the standardized tests and very few of the students dropped out of the Ivy League.
@@linaandrews5228 You need to read the accompanying article with the full investigation, most of these students are grade levels behind, and the school is not accredited so their diplomas aren't recognized by their state and most public colleges. Several graduates dropped out of their colleges because they were not prepared.
@@ccv994 I have to employ critical thinking. All of the students who apply to Ivy League schools must take standardized exams to gain admission. Many of the students did well. Should I believe that these students scored well on standardized tests, but are grade levels behind? This makes no sense.
You do realize that in order to apply to those Ivy League schools and gain admission, those students had to at least meet the minimum ACT or SAT score required by the university. Anyone who has applied to the Ivy League knows this. The issue is, the NY Times only has the testimony of a disgruntled girl who couldn't pass the prep school exam and was therefore put out of the school. There was one sentence about a student attending Brown, who is now a junior. Try employing a little critical thinking. Read between the lines.
The school has been open since 2005 and we are approaching 2019. They have successfully sent students to the ivy league. If those students were flunking out, why would the Ivy league continue to admit (in record numbers), students from that prep school? The answer is, many of those former students did well and graduated from Yale, Brown, Harvard, Columbia, etc.
@@bluelimered the two aren't mutually exclusive :)
This is an educational cult
That's an oxymoron :)
It’s just a cult.
I wouldn't say educational. I'd be surprised if that guy could comprehend high school courses.
education is a cult
MATH MATH MATH MATH MATH
No teachers at all? Teachers without certifications? Empty classrooms? But it was almost $800 a month to attend? I’m so confused how no one fact checked anything and just sent their kid there???
Same
@@danheboy absolutely
How are they even learning?
@@alexmartinez3412 they werent
stupidity on behalf of the parents that's why
I can relate to this so much, having gone through an elite high school in China. Classmates were enemies, but we did have a lot of very strict, almost sadistic teachers, and no holidays. I still have nightmares of that time.
That sounds awful, I'm sorry
Exactly as an Indian, the quote "Failure is not an option", " Go big or go home" are all too relatable and normalized in our education system and although corporal punishment was not a thing in institutions my mother spitting on me for not being able to get good grades, it's just traumatizing. Never thought this could happen in America as well
You were actually learning something though. These kids were just doing coloring books and twerking lessons
this school is producing top notch actors, not students
How
foxguy 30 they make the students act their part of becoming a 100% Ivy League student, but the people who are running the school just want them to act there part of doing that
bend over 😂 true
@BobsAndVagene truth. They taught them how to take the tests, but failed to teach them how to succeed and prosper.
You mean top notch PTSD victims.
I got accepted in my dream university but then i realized that i can't afford to go there even with scholarships.
So i got my degree in a community college instead, I'm still an RN.
Fringes Same
Gabriel Jean-Batiste ah ha ha
@Gabriel Jean-Batiste probably not i see that picture all the time
Rn is a nurse right? You have you to college for that?
adiksadiatabs you serious?
Why does the school look like an empty factory or garage
Because it is
Because it's a charter school
Cause it is 🤣
@@The_Poro_King yeah no, most charter schools have a decent building
@@The_Poro_King Private/charter schools are generally very nice in terms of facilities
Parents didn’t question the lack of facilities and teaching taking place in an aircraft hanger 🤦🏾♀️
This really needs to be a documentary.. I want to know more!
it is now..and it is crap they made it about race and not a system that is broken
@@Nassit-Gnuoy thanks
@@alalducente gotta love the media
@@alalducente it is certainly also about race. don’t play dumb now
@@wiztiny9910 its not, this could have easily happened to a school filled with white kids or a school with diversity. You americans love to make every single thing about race
I'd like to see a full investigation. There are plenty of schools that are adopting new "unconventional" tactics to teach students but this does feel odd. Students teaching themselves? In a warehouse???
Yeah the warehouse bit also surprised me
A building is a building until you call it something else. Learning can be done anywhere.
@@ninjapoodle22 That's nice but a private, elite school like this one claims it is shouldn't be utilizing an empty warehouse as a classroom. They're charging people but can't even afford a rug?
The DOE has to open a investigation on this school. Something is not right. The school officials may be pocketing millions cheating the young out of a education.
No windows...can't see what's going on inside...coincidence?
It's funny how people are more worried about the race of these kids than the fact that they were physically abused, threatened, and cheated out of a true education. They were victims. If anyone, be mad at the owner of the school.
I agree. People are more concerned about affirmative action and the race of the kids than the actual problem itself.
I don't see anyone who is more worried about their race than the fact that they suffered abuse--if anything, the fact that they are black & black kids are more likely to receive subpar k-12 educations just makes the abuse they suffered worse. These parents really, really had their hopes up for a good education. Just awful.
@@TheOrangeneck Right, it's absolutely awful. However, I went to another youtube video to learn more about this issue, and the comments were filled with racist jokes and complaints of affirmative action letting the kids get into ivy leagues in the first place. It's truly disheartening that so many people in that comment section weren't talking about the real issue.
@@Kiasace Affirmative action is racist, it is literally the only form of systemic racial oppression in the US.
I find both upsetting. These kids were abused and set up to fail. Affirmative action played a part in their acceptances, as did the falsified records. Several who started at these universities experienced suffering when they realized they were no where near qualified to keep up because of this awful sham of a school. Both are upsetting and the fact that universities didn’t have due diligence when it came to reviewing applications is part of the problem and part of what kept this school going- the acceptance rates.
Props to NYT for digging a little deeper and not getting lost in the sauce.
I've literally never watched a video on this channel, but I'm glad this one's the first. Gotta agree with everyone saying that it deserves to be a feature length doc on its own
same!
They've been producing news since 1851!
I hope the New York Times guys find some success. They're no Philly D but they'll get there.
SAME! i thought this WAS a full-length doc.
i'm still tryna figure how they knew it was fake!
@@sameenamin4645, can you also do a story investigating the recent Asian scandal where the SAT answers were leaked for months? There are also past Asian scandals at international Asian schools - research those. Also, please investigate the story about the elite prep academy - where the young man took the SAT for other students - and how very little ramifications there were from that whole scandal. Maybe that will help dispel some other stereotypes, too. Thanks.
5:02 “we have this trig book, which is, like, from MIT, and we basically teach each other” how did this alone not raise multiple different red flags
People are afraid to otherwise they will be labeled a racist.
@@xmuta that is such a stupid take, there was almost nothing about race, the girl specifically said she felt intimidated to speak out because they had the reputation of being successful.
@@-jore7581 - I’m referring to the reporters who covered this school.
@@xmuta the reporters who blew the cover of the school??? Yeah they're so afraid.... stop making things weird.
“ ummm…like…we teach ourselves with a book from MIT…umm…because we are all geniuses and we don’t need teachers ….ummm…like…yeah””
Wait: these kids are not even performing at their grade level? How can they succeed at college
Corie Lake an Ivy League at that
They don't
They set those kids up to fail.
Der Schwindel this is not the case....at all...I honestly don’t even know what your citing or referencing because I found absolutely no evidence of this anywhere. It’s almost as if you made this up....because you did (edit: der Schwindel deleted their comment, but the original comment was about “private colleges inflate their grades and use an inflated scale”)
@@TheGamingSlate just take a look at "advanced classes" which "merit" giving out a grade higher than a 4.0. That's grade inflation in a nutshell, take a class that claims to be advanced and get a better grade regardless.
As a former high school teacher, I wish we could stop measuring student success by college "readiness" and acceptance. I wish we could stop trying to get EVERY high school student into college, because college is not for everyone. I miss the days of having trade skills education in the schools, and I wish more people would realize that vocational-technical/trade work can be just as rewarding and lucrative as a college education (does anyone realize how much a plumber makes nowadays?!?!!?)
Agreed, I will always say that while we will always need teachers, doctors and those jobs that require four or more years of post high school education we also need plumbers, electricians, carpenters, mechanics and other jobs that, at most, only need one year of education after high school
The worst thing is that once they get into these schools, they probably can’t handle the work that’s thrown at them.
True
We once had a kid who absolutely struggled to get his act together, but once we had a new cohort of teachers- they “turned him around” he graduated middle school to go to one of the better magnetic school in our area, even got the Most improved student of the year. He ended up going to juvie the next year because he threatened a kid with a gun...
@@RehAdventures holy how often does that happen in ur country I’m so lucky to live in Singapore
I attended the school. Most people who graduated and went on to Ivy League schools were not prepared. I was in the 5th grade “preparing for the act and college.”
That's affirmative action for ya. Ivy leagues would be 90% asian if they were a meritocracy
They said no teachers, that’s a red flag. It’s supposed to be a school.
Teachers are what makes schools more annoying for children. And in today’s society the majority of stuff that we learn is most likely not going to be around when we become adults. You can’t just say you need to know how to write and read because it will still be around when you get older. Like no this generation is going to find a way where you do not need to learn to do math, reading, writing and not spend over 11 years of your life getting up just to do something you do not want to do. School was never apart of gods plan anyways. Anything that god did not give us is secondary and is not necessary. Meaning SCHOOL.
@@GollyFancies312 I'm not going to address everything you said in this comment except for the religious bit at the end. God might not have specifically stated that school or further education is an important or good thing--and indeed, many people don't work with the current modern systems of education. However, the Bible does have passages telling us to help and teach one another. Surely a teacher communicating information to a child is one form of this.
@&; When you die do not expect to go to a good place.
But you need to understand we are the next generation. Most of the stuff we learn in school is not gong to help us. The world is changing so fast and soon we are going to invent things were you do not have to know any of the dumb stuff there teacher you. And the bible also says anything that hold you slave is a sin. School is very unhealthy you stay for hours a day and become very tired with no rest. Then they shame you for not doing good on everything but the only perfect human that ever walked the earth is Jesus. So people just do not have the ability to learn things and they still force it on you. In the near future im sure all this stuff is going to be useless. Its a waste of life.
@@GollyFancies312 I can tell you are not over the age of 15. You will need writing and reading every where you go. I agree that some things that school teaches is useless but there is a few crucial things that you will need later in life. I dont know which religion you are but the bible literally says that you should teach and help each other navigate through this society. A place where you dont need reading or writing is false. Some teachers might not be the best but saying that every teacher is terrible has the same concept as ACAB, its subjective to a few minority. In this world there will always be terrible people disguised as a function member of society such as a teacher.
Lmao you can send these kids to Harvard and Yale but they're gonna end up dropping out if they're not prepared
Tony L - they are also not very smart.
Tony L That’s literally what happened to a large percentage of the kids.
The NYT wrote a huge article that delves deeper into the entire controversy and they bring up the fact that most of the kids who went to these Ivy League schools had their grades suffer horribly or even needing to drop out and go to a local or community college because they were basically at elementary and middle school levels
reshi p these children are not turds. The administrators are.
Maya Oh I’m so sorry that wasn’t my intention! What I meant was because of their underdevelopment in education, they had to drop out, and they didn’t exactly have the same opportunities afterwards that they had at the school so they went to what they could afford and what worked.
@Maya
No, it doesn't mean that you have a middle school education. However, community colleges often offer a plethora of lower-level or remediation classes to help students fill in gaps in their high school education. These are often lacking at four-year colleges. So, while most students at community colleges probably don't need it, those colleges often have the resources and opportunities for students to succeed even without a strong high school experience.
I went to a college prep school and the culture is very toxic at times, going to a 4 year university is the only thing that matters, other options are not important or discussed. The education for me was great and the teachers were the best ever and genuinely cared for me and others but the culture between the students was so competitive
The first red flag was that ridiculous bow tie. He LOOKS like a con artist! Come on!
Lol true tho
Trying (and failing) to present an image that he thought projected Ivy League values. Most often he looked like a clown. In that one look he looked like a McDonald's manager. Ridiculous.
What does a con artist even look like? I don't see any snake oil anywhere
He’s talking about the old “flim flam man” traveling salesman con artist look from old movies.
@@ML-xh6rd He looked like Ronald McDonald
I wonder how these students performed once they were in these Ivy league schools. Surely the schools must have noticed a pattern of underperformance? If so, why keep accepting them?
Do you know how many people are in college?
@@xanderpandre2092 do you really think you made some great point with that comment? schools keep records, data, stats, and perform analyses of these items. They should notice something.
+m.b no they don't
@@xanderpandre2092 lol. ok. no point in arguing with a dude that looks like he dropped out of high school.
@@tehcrazysoccergirl Any competent admissions department checks in on future outcomes of different student groups. There might not have been enough students from this school for them to recognize any significant pattern (versus a few outliers underperforming).
You know they're kinda fake when the only schools they want to go to are generic ivy league and top notch schools? like seriously?
Omae wa Mo shinderu
Those are not the only worthy decent colleges. There are plenty great schools out there that are not red brick or Ivy League household names.
Any decent high school will be more concerned with finding kids the right fit for a college than one which they can brag about in promoting the school.
Lots of factors come into this,money is obviously a big one, but so is a students family circumstances.
Some kids have caring responsibilities for younger siblings or parents with disabilities, an out of state college thousands of miles away would probably be a bad fit.
Exactly! Total publicity stunt. Shame.
@@rachelhart3531 Pretty much this. Any academic counseling department worth their weight will preach fit over prestige.
Exactly, schools in the patriot league are just as good if not better
That doesn’t constitute it being fake. Plenty of students are groomed to think that those schools are the only options because the people who teach them or parents never had those opportunities. The school is a sham, however this is not a point to that argument.
Imagine getting into college then flunking out immediately since you weren't actually taught anything in your high school.
You also have to think about the hard working kids who were denied entry into their dream school because a spot was given to a student whose school falsified their applications. So sad. Education is invaluable and no shortcuts can be taken.
Neil Mcinnis she said "falsified" dummy
Neil Mcinnis affirmative action is one of the many privileges given to minorities.
Neil Mcinnis so I take it you're for all affirmative action placements?
Exactly! And would the students, once accepted, even be able to keep up academically when they got to college? The video said that because of the unconventional teaching methods, students were actually falling behind academically. It’s terrible.
@@bethfitzmaurice1086 yep! it is a lose-lose for everyone involved. shame on the colleges for not catching this sooner and no one holding them accountable to teach these kids.
“Teachers without certifications” “No teachers at all” That’s ABSOLUTELY TERRIBLE! Teachers are important. Which is why they should have certifications. This video reveals that problem
Wow I pressed the like button and I was the 666 person to like this post
And I'm not proud of that lol
@@jeffhufana2389 lol
Most teachers with certification do not know how to teach at all
You don't need certification to be a professor, so why a teacher
So this is where lil pump went to get into Harvard
How dare you steal my picture.
@@War666 Don't make me come for you Craig
@woficnwoap ohyeayea nah fam
lmao
tea
"teachers with no certifications, classes with no teachers at all" - hello???
Hiiiiii
$720 A MONTH!?! For no teachers, and no working? hUh? 🤣
Justin Gatlin tbh that’s not that much for a private school. mines 60k+ for 4 years
$720/mo and college admission!!! Not a bad pay off. The abuse however is not acceptable.
Imagine how much income those awful people are making....
Lmao idk mines 20k close to 30k a year.
Skye123 that’s not that bad. high schools in my area are 21k+ a year
Please do a full-length investigation and documentary on this. I am shocked and disappointed.
They actually did . There is an article in the New York Times that goes into detail . Maybe the video was done before the article ? I was fortunate in that I read the article before I saw this video .
I’m not shock at all. This is common. I’m from Louisiana thou
They did; read the article.
All, I read the article, but this is deeper than scamming the country. This isn't done, far from done, in my opinion. This will have long lasting affects on the system, including making it more difficult for those with genuine intentions to start a school geared to minorities who are neglected by the education system. TM Landry fooled Ivy League schools, this is all my opinion, but this will change the future of state and higher-education. Especially with Diploma Mills are becoming more prevelant, as well. With my comment, what I will add, is that I hope the NYT will return in a year, maybe half a decade, to see if this will impact growth for minority serving institutions, changes in transcript verification, and also even state accredited institutions. When I say full length documentary, I mean a full documentary and not six minutes. Simply because I believe the quality of journalism and investigating remind me of Spotlight in Boston, it is outstanding to the point I hope they return and give it more than six minutes.
That’s literally a cult, made the kids believe that everything he did was no wrong
ikr, the people who ran this place just wanted money and wasted a lot of time for the kids and money
My son was at a charter academy when he was very young. He has hearing loss on one side, which causes him to become bored, as use less of his mental faculties because the aren't engaged in the learning process. The school was provided equipment from the state to assist in his learning. They wouldn't use it and routinely sent him home in the middle of the day. My wife and I went to the school to figure out what was going on. They told us that he wasn't intelligent enough to learn what they were teaching. The problem is that our son had been tested at U of M on multiple occasions to see if it was an intelligence related issue. It wasn't. It was a hearing related issue. After doing this for a half of a year the school said they would have to fail him. And, they said this would probably be the case the following year. We where shocked. They were the ones that did this. They where the ones that sent him home. Then they were not only failing him for the current year, but the next year. I'd never even heard of a school doing this. We pulled him out of the school and went to our local public school. The principal said that he would struggle, as he was over a year behind his class! That it would take several years for him to catch up. But, he said it was up to us, that he would need our help, and that the school would create an IEP to assist at school. Time went by and one day I was at the school and the principle walked by. He said that he wanted to tell me something. He said, "I was wrong. Your son is nearly caught up. I can't believe the transition. He's the talk of the school!" Later he received a diploma for getting off academic probation. He's still young, so he doesn't get what he accomplished. It was an amazing achievement. He still has problems in school because he has some attention span issues, which may or may not be related to the hearing. But the school works with us. Its the reason we still live here. The school makes a big difference in how your children do. But you have to take part in it as well. I hope the best for all of the kids in this video.
What I find laughable is that all these universities ACCEPTED those kids with the falsified records, which basically proves the "IVY" application process is a great big fat joke and the private college/university admissions system is the game people always said it was. I mean seriously? How does your admissions team reviewing an application, NOT notice an "undergrad" with a birth date year, the same as her own mothers?
Well in her case, it said she was 16 so she hasn't even applied to colleges yet. She just said that it was her mother's birth date on her transcript.
I am going to play devil's advocate here and say that at some instances it is not really possible for them to verify it (unless they conduct an own investigation after there is an initial suspicion). Stuff like the undergrad with the same birth date year as her mother is obviously something suspicious already (tho, there truly are people in their 30s or 40s who still graduate), but most of the falsified things will be almost impossible for the Universities to verify if we are realistic. For instance, if a school claims a student took a honors class in 'x' (let's say, Biology), they can't really know that the school itself is the one lying.
Also keep in mind, the universities are pushed to accept minorities because of quotas. Not wanting to start a debate about affirmative action, but one of the results is that institutions such as colleges and universities are legally obliged to benefit minorities applicants by the state. So to a certain degree, they also 'have' to give preferential treatment when in doubt (and ironically, they end up discriminating against Asians, another minority, because they are actually overrepresented). So for them having minority students with actual competitive CV's is a blessing because then they don't have to benefit 'weaker' ones over whites with better grades.
*TL:DR* : The Universities are actually put in quite a bad spot here, but to be fair they only have limited responsibility. It is not their responsibility to investigate claims of a school, but it is the state that sets up regulations for them to be allowed to run and the universities then have to assume they abide by the regulations. Furthermore, they are also pushed to accept minority students by the state, so if there is a situation where they are in doubt between a non-minority and a minority student, they'll most likely end up favoring the minority one due to the quotas imposed on them.
Right? They don't need to test in, either???
I don't think she was one of the students accepted to a fancy college with that transcript, but that could just be explained by the school saying it was a clerical error and fixing it. No, college applications don't protect against the schools falsifying transcripts. They require official transcripts from the high school administration to protect against the *students* falsifying grades and classes, but there is an assumption that accredited, diploma-granting high schools aren't committing straight-up fraud... I don't see how that makes the application process a joke. It's even suggested that the school wrote students' application essays or at least told them what lies to write about, so it's not like one part of the application would cast suspicion on another part. Teachers' recommendation letters obviously would be completely false as well. So, from any one application there would be no way of knowing that the information was false because the school administration are the ones lying, and there's no check for that in the application process (and I doubt you can make a convincing argument that there should be).
@@LacedWithOreos Not sure what you mean by test in. If you mean standardized scores like ACT and SAT, yes absolutely those are usually mandatory. The video suggests that the high school level students were intensely focused on these tests to produce believable scores (with their glowing transcripts). Especially with essays about false hardships and great transcripts, a lower range standardized score can be put down to a student maybe being a nervous test taker or not having the resources that other competitive applicants do to go to standardized test tutoring classes and take tests multiple times.
If you're referring to testing into levels at their college, like to decide placement in language courses, math courses, etc., no that is generally not done until after you're accepted and you're registering for classes. It would be hugely unwieldy for each individual college to basically have their own SAT test. Imagine being an applicant and having to take 14 different SATs for different schools or whatever. The written version of this article did talk about how many of the students that went to Ivies and other dream schools after TM Landry were not able to keep up with the coursework and ended up dropping out.
Imagine *paying* to go to school in a literal *warehouse* without classrooms, walls, or books. Were the parents really that surprised?
Two of the schools in my town are in old grocery store buildings. It's not that surprising to strip empty buildings and keep the infrastructure. It's a lot cheaper than building an entirely new building.
Never heard of store front churches?
Or teachers..
To be fair, with so many positive results i find many would think that even so they're doing something right
A lot of schools in majority black areas are very underfunded. Some people will go to lengths to ensure their kids get to college
“Teachers with no certification.” Alrighty then.
Dee Dee Fleming yeah lmao, why would that be a selling point?
What about parents that home school ? Do they have certifications?
Probably not, but their kids also have to take standardized tests every year to prove that they're up to par with other students their age.
@@ArcticAlpaca275 if you're homeschooled you don't have to take standardized testing. That's sort of the point of homeschool.
@@jzk2020 Are those parents home schooling anyone but their kids?
I wonder if these kids had their admissions rescinded or ended up failing out of school? Because, if they never took demanding classes or got the grades their doctored transcript said,they are no better than Olivia Jade and her parents and the school administrators/administration need to be prosecuted and go to jail!
The terrible thing is, they are setting these kids up for failure. They will not be able to maintain their grades at those Ives becuase they did not have the proper education and training in highschool. Not only that but they are taking spots away from kids who have actually worked hard and have the skills to do well at an Ivy. This is just disastrous on so many levels smh
In my country the private schools give higher grades, this is not as bad as this but still
They don’t care they pockets are full
Don't you take a test to go to college???? How do you go to an Ivy league in America?
That's why I dont listen to much in the classes btw i live in louisisna
@@SieMiezekatze Ivy leagues don’t have admission test, it’s all about your grades extracurriculars letters of recommendation and essays.
The guy dresses like Ronald McDonald and had a 5th grade vocabulary, no one thought that was suspicious?
lol
His vocabulary is immaculate, where is his grammar or vocabulary off??
now as far as his look, you got that down to a T!
Go. Big. Or. Go. Home. Hey, there's a four letter word in there
No
:D
“Go big, or go home” IM GOING HOME 😭😂
Lmao
Yesss period sis
Jakayra Owens NO YALL ARE GOING TO JAILLL
watergod 83 I just realized it was cringe thanks for telling me
Idk why I was like that I never acted like this before until now
That's a daily mood
"treat them like family" "failure is not an option" ABORT MISSION.
The question is,why would a 7 year old kid entered college prep school?
Nabila Putri yea! it was so shady from the start
@@bobsburgers8497 to eventually get into an ivy league school...
Nabila Putri - Black excellence.
A lot of the time in Louisiana, it pretty common to start college prep when you start school.
Society is so stupid that it has convinced people that a college education is the only way for their child the be successful, rather than it being a money sink that could have been better invested
Wow just wow, imagine not getting excepted into your dream school because some other kid falsified their college application and took your spot.
People commit fraud in applications all the time or lie at interviews.
Imagine thinking you got into your dream school just to have it taken away due to things beyond your control or knowledge.
EVERYBODY IS A VICTIM.
@@upfulsoul826 how? it's practically impossible to lie on an application.
the kids didn’t do it; it was parents and the administration of the school. the kids with falsified applications are suffering from this as well.
Upful Soul that doesn't make it right.....lol. All of us study hard and work hard. Those kids were cheated and lied to.
I’m a Canadian teacher and this astounds me beyond belief. I had to stop the video after a few minutes because I was getting too emotional. This is an *atrocious* abuse of power.
Almost as if the racists were right
@@Carl_ATHF ?
@@Carl_ATHF riiight cause racists never abuse their power
I completely agree. I'm a music coordinator and it breaks my heart to see this. I still study but even then, this is so appalling to watch.
@pouting emoji literally I don't need your permission to do anything. You must have a pretty empty existence to say something like this. I pray God blesses you in what you do,and that you find happiness and peace
My school has one of the highest college acceptance rates in the country among non-private schools. The school has a program intended to make sure that every single student, without exception, gets coaching on how to do a college application, and how to make sure that the student can find a good college, with an even better scholarship. The problem? The students who graduate our school graduate college at one of the single lowest rates in the country. My school is incredibly lenient on due dates, and will do everything in its power to make sure that the assignment you missed on the first day of the semester, gets graded. Even if you turn it in on the last day of the semester. While this helps with grades, it doesn't help students get prepared for college. The majority of those who get accepted to college were used to turning in assignments from January in May. These students weren't ready to turn in assignments from January 1st on January 2nd. Since I learned that, every time I see a school with a high college acceptance rate, it's an instant look away from me. I'm not looking to get to college, I'm looking to graduate.
If it seems too good to be true then it probably is.
yeah tru that! Applicable in many different situations
This can be said of anything.
We should attract more Immigrants because they are hard working, honest and bring innovation to the country.
Sounds too good to be true. But if you question that you become a bigot
It's so typical that something like this would want to pray on desperate families. No one should promote the idea that they can have a 100% acceptance rate, that is simply impossible. Well-off educated families would know this and be suspicious of such a promise. The whole thing makes me sick.
That's not really relevant and a blatant strawman arguement. No one is promoting "attracting more immigrants" except for company that need certain skilled employees. The real debate is about allowing and processing immigrants who are coming to the counry. Both sides of the debate paint an exagerated picture of immigrants while in the end they are just people, good or bad.
@@chigeh ??? Strawman of what? I'm not arguing against anything, i simply support the statement of op
100% acceptance rate. Really that doesnt raise any red flags.
@kev " Meaning that 100% of the school's graduates are accepted to college."................With 100% Doctored / False credentials.
There's pretty much always a college willing to accept someone, especially with doctored transcripts. Just gotta apply to the right ones.
Why is that a red flag? There's a lot of schools with 100% acceptance rate. A lot.
Time to stop attacking these schools no matter the methods used.
I mean there are like only 12 students per graduating class. That's not very hard to work with.
Logic “Time to stop attacking these school no matter the methods used”? Do you support what’s going on?
Falsifying applications is definitely illegal/against the rules. And I have no question that guy is abusive. Be as "unconventional" as you want, but you don't get to break laws. These two scammers are a giant X on the Black community. Black kids can make it to these colleges on their own merits, but you've done it through lying & abuse. Not a good look.
Apparently many high schools falsify applications. Luckily many universities weed these people out once they're there but it's unfair to the student that goes from hero to zero.
Exactly. This puts a stain on The Black Community
Sisi that is blatantly rascist ,we do not need segregation ;with good education any one can graduate ,no race is smarter than the other and each person can be taught without segregation
Sisi what you’re saying is racist. You can’t claim that an entire race of people have a ‘spiteful nature’ and what’s worse, say things like they should be with their ‘own kind’. Our ‘own kind’ seeing as we’re human beings, is also human beings. The only difference between a white person and a black person is color of skin. When you say things like ‘white people are more .....’ or ‘black people are more.....’ it’s stereotyping that does more than just hurt the feelings of the people you’re stereotyping, but affects the growth of the world as a whole. I think you need to learn how to be a little more up to date in your thinking. If you need help, I’m here!
@Sisi why are you so racist? Smh
They taking advantage of their own...? Yikes.
Life Tip: Be wary of any organization that says "We are a *family.*"
Yeah
Very true!!! Only sketchy places say that
Uh oh.... oh no..... There's a high school, a public one, while has the best options for academic and bases around a "family", there are reports of some bullying not addressed, even with explicit requests, the administrations will not do anything about it. Then again, I can't assume in fear about every organization I go to.
yea thats why i dont eat at olive garden
Fiveleafclover180 but the vans shoe company says that we’re family...
I checked the school's website and it says that they only need a "$50 Walmart gift card" as a school supply. Like what the actual frick
Lmaoo
LMAO
😂
😂😂😂😂
💀💀💀
These kids were abused and were not properly prepared for these schools, but you can't fake an SAT or ACT score, they had to get near perfect grades on that. I wish they would be talking about how that happened a bit more
I doubt they got perfect scores on those. One kid showed he got a 29 on the act.
Doubt it
yes you can (lori loughlin scandal)
@@dawd1154 29 + perfect grades + bs activities + drug/abusive household = ivy league
Jason Lee no race is more “intelligent” than the other. Besides, the IQ test is not even effective for testing intelligence.
May those criminals be in jail for the rest of their lives.. I’m so sorry for those youth.
can you interview the students who are now college freshman?
soSTYLISTICglyni - Read the article... www.nytimes.com/2018/11/30/us/tm-landry-college-prep-black-students.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage
TL;DR: the less time students spent at Landry, the more successful they were at university.
Yeah they did and all of them dropped out. College was too tough for them.
Thanks for the link!
Diamond Williams thanks Love!
This is utterly sickening. You can't scam a child out of education to make money. I hope they are charged with something and must refund tuition.
I'm a Louisianian and it took a New York Times youtube video for me to find out about a Prep school issue going on in Louisiana.
Nice.
lol
...Dat’s LA for ya....if it ain’t Saints/LSU, or somethin’caught n’ fried, it ain’t important t’ ANYbody.../
Me too lmao, and I know my parents would’ve believed this crap
Same
Same dude 😂😂😂
if the fact that their school was just in an empty warehouse wasn’t a sign, idk what was
That bowtie alone had me on edge.
And those neon green pants 😭
Right? That was the first clue lol
ertert ewrtwert Steve Urkel wishes!
LMAOO
I don't trust anyone with a bowtie
So for the kids who went on to these ivy leagues school (if they could afford it), did they end up completely flunking out because they weren’t actually educated on the things he lied about on their applications?
I'm wondering the same thing
And if they do, it makes it muuuuuuch harder for future students from that school to get into those unis, since admissions decisions take into account who else from your high school went to that uni and how well they did.
Yeah, they really didn’t explain everything especially what the girl at the very end meant by “I believed he could do no wrong, but obviously not because I’m sitting here”
@@smhwang02 Exactly. The article was very disheartening. I can imagine how underprepared they felt.
Capgungoesbang probably not because you can’t flunk black kids it’s “racist”. You have to reward them no matter what. Ppfftt. Failures.
This is so messed up for students all over the US. Imagine doing honest work through all 12 grades then getting rejected because of these liars...
(Im talking about the founders not the students btw)
Facts
Not even that just imagine a kid who in no way was prepared to be able to succeed in college being funneled in to an Ivy League where they immediately know they don’t belong or have the resources to pass classes. Getting into college really is only less than half the battle, they were being sent in to only be kicked out or drop out due to lack of resources to succeed, and that’s very damaging.
🤣
The students and their families were the victims of basically a scam :’(
It’s even sketchier because black students are already so underrepresented in universities and colleges, aside from native Americans, black Americans are the population with lowest college acceptances. So these kids were promised something remarkable while also being abused and victimised :’(
And yeah, all the honest students who worked hard are then looked at in the same light. How else would a black student get into college? Though wealthy white students have been paying their ways into school with no preparation whatsoever forever (that celebrity college scandal...). Definitely a issue with the system :’)
@@wrinkleintime4257 have no idea what ur talking about blacks got accepted in to good college just because they r black while Asian kids have to literally study to death I order to get accepted into Ivy League. According to research from Princeton University, students who identify as Asian must score 140 points higher on the SAT than whites and 450 points higher than Blacks to have the same chance of admission to private colleges.
The girl who is speaking up against T.M. Landry deserves to get into a good college. For having the guts to do what she did, she could actually be someone that brings change.
I wonder how many dropped out of college because their education wasn't up to par because of TM Landry faking their transcripts
No. Most of then are doing well
witch, please what is the truth
Quote from the article:
For yet other Landry students, particularly those who spent multiple years at the school, the results after graduation have been disappointing. Some have withdrawn from college, or transferred to less rigorous programs.
The ones that spent a longer time at the school dropped out because it was too hard. The ones that only spent a year or two there tended to do better, but probably because they already had a solid educational foundation.
@@witchplease9695 That's not true. Students who attended for more than a year or two are NOT doing well. Kids in primary school are testing years behind. One dad who liked the school when his older sons went there for a short time, now despises it because his younger child is testing years behind his public school peers. Young kids aren't even learning reading fundamentals, like phonics. Instead, one grandmother said her grandchild who tested behind, played legos all day. The kids who were successful in college, only went for a short time. Keep in mind, there were only 20 kids in last year's graduating class. The school gained popularity after the videos, so now there is a new crop of lower school students who are being set up for failure. It's a real shame. The article says the reporter interviewed 50 people, including alumni.
Louisiana is ranked 49th in education and they say the “school” has a 100% college acceptance rate. Not ringing any bells?
Thanks for the likes too guys
People wanted to believe it was true. TM Landry was sending underprivileged black students off to Ivy League schools. No one wanted to rain on that parade.
@Mike Solar I don't think she is the only one. There are a lot of alumni that wanted their voice to be heard. Heck, there is even someone who put ~30 pages of their experience on that school in this comment section.
@Mike Solar Students there were abused and manipulated
When you see "100%" that's already a red flag. In my country I never heard of schools having a "college/university acceptance rate" only University/Colleges has Employability rate.
@@avourrito1819 that's the exact same thing just on the next level.
Gotta admit tho. Ever since going to TM Landry, I was able to get into Hogwarts
Henry L lol
Did you try to apply for any schools in Wakanda?
For Gryffindor!
Hogwarts is not a fuckibg college
@@evanmcguire5787 r/whoosh
Sometimes the best for your child is just a loving mom and dad who push their children to go after jobs that interest them and look for schools that cater to the child's interests.
"Because they're kids."
That's what hurts the most about it. You're glad that they are achieving their dreams. You want these kids to succeed at the end of the day. But then you realize the terrible truth about it.
It’s literally a warehouse and no one thought something was wrong?
Yo Momo To be fair, it’s quite common to reuse old buildings for their infrastructure because it’s cheaper, but yeah thats really sketchy of them
Maybe schools being held in a warehouse is okay. Its been done through history. But the inside shouldn't look like a warehouse.
Sad that schools and parents care more about the gratification of their children being “ivy league college bound” but fail to realize the hardships and long term debt their children end up facing. College is the biggest scam in America
alexangel OMG. 💯
not true, but the prestige of college is the biggest scam!
tdot22 true
tdot22 you don’t need to go to an ivy university though community is just fine it’s all about grad school especially if you want to be a doctor or lawyer
@tdot22 I think mint mint means taking as many credits from community college that can tranfer transfer, then the completeing the degree at the institution of your choice. Saves thousands of dollars and the quality of the education is nice too.
"We treat them like family"
You mean an abusing adoptive/foster family?
I’ll take public school over walking on hot rocks any day
Fr
I go to a public school
Mostly black school and yet nobody directed towards a hbcu
now why do you think that could be?
A shame smh
Direction to HBCU doesn’t come w publicity.
Because HBCUs give poor financial aid and have terrible graduation rates
THANK YOU!! My first thought. None of them want to go to Spelman or Morehouse? Tf?
I feel bad for the students going to Stanford or MIT for chemistry or engineering from that school because theyre probably sorely unprepared. I hope they dont fail and that theyre able to do well!
I couldn’t help but notice that none of these kids were headed to MIT. Not only is it hard to get into MIT, it’s hard to *stay* in MIT. I don’t believe for a second that none of these kids were scientifically inclined and would have loved to attend a school like MIT. I feel like these kids were pushed to the Ivies because getting into a school like Harvard is harder than staying in.
I hope that Landry couple is behind bars!!
That school looks like a car dealership RED FLAG
I wonder how these students coped once they actually got to their Ivy League campus, after years of falsified education such a transition must've been overtly overwhelming.
And for the kids that were currently enrolled in Ivys when the news broke out exposing their school, I hope they weren't asked to leave.
It would be a small mercy if they were asked to leave their Ivy League school because unless they are exceptionally gifted or intelligent, they would be drowning and flunking their classes all over the place due to the huge work load and pressure they are placed under.
The kids who went to Brown might have actually been fine. It’s one of those schools where students can create their own curriculum/major and they can do their own thing. I don’t think it’s an accident or a coincidence that a lot of these kids wanted to go to Brown, I’m sure this couple pushed that on these kids.
@@ebbiebean9385 most of these kids might be ok she said we teach each other so I bet the smartest kid was stuck teaching the rest
How did the Ivy League administrators not realize after a while that students from this school were underprepared during university studies?
@@thecaynuck4694 money pays for those schools not intelligence
“Failure is not an option.” It’s a requirement.
that’s so stupid tho
Failure is an option
Say no as loud as you can to failure, it'll happen sometime in the future, oh but you can try rolling around the ground breaking into a sea of tears, snot, and sweat, it happens. Failure happens. Get a grip.
Failure is a part of learning.
To everyone insulting the parents for not realizing what was happening. HINDSIGHT IS 20/20. Sure, when you watch this video you may go “I would of realized this was bad,” but you weren’t in their situation. It is despicable to judge people in this awful situation and call them dumb.