The air in the school board auditorium crackled with a familiar tension. On the large screen, a consultant, armed with a sleek PowerPoint and an air of unquestionable authority, clicked to a slide dominated by a downward-sloping line. “Based on current third-grade reading proficiency levels,” he announced, his voice resonating with practiced gravity, “we project a 40% increase in dropout rates for this demographic subgroup within the next five years unless significant interventions are implemented.” A collective murmur rippled through the audience—parents, educators, community members. Some nodded grimly, the statistic confirming their deepest fears. Others shifted uneasily, a sense of inevitability settling in the room. The board would then debate budgets and propose interventions, all under the shadow of that stark, predictive line.

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