Interesting. I pulled one of my father's school yearbooks from his shelf many years ago. I'm pretty sure it is the Brooklyn Tech yearbook (Tanager 1958), but I don't remember. He was 16 when he graduated from Brooklyn Tech (1961). Anyway, the classes were arranged according to academic level. The highest level was - 9-10sp (the highest). 9-8 was the lowest. So, it would start at 9-10, then 9-1, 9-2, 9-3 and so on...
From what I hear, B-Tech is not what it used to be - even before the No Child Left Behind Act.
Interesting. I pulled one of my father's school yearbooks from his shelf many years ago. I'm pretty sure it is the Brooklyn Tech yearbook (Tanager 1958), but I don't remember. He was 16 when he graduated from Brooklyn Tech (1961). Anyway, the classes were arranged according to academic level. The highest level was - 9-10sp (the highest). 9-8 was the lowest. So, it would start at 9-10, then 9-1, 9-2, 9-3 and so on...
ReplyDeleteFrom what I hear, B-Tech is not what it used to be - even before the No Child Left Behind Act.