Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt did tell a reporter he was "thinking about" making it a requirement that high school students have an acceptance offer for a college, trade school or the military in order to graduate. However, a spokesperson for Stitt later clarified his comments by saying it was "an idea he threw out there" and that the governor's office has no plans to make it mandatory for high school students to have a college, trade school or military offer in order to graduate. The proposal is not currently a part of Oklahoma law. In late December 2024, social media users shared a rumor that Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt had announced a new program that would require the state's high school students to have an acceptance offer for a college, trade school or the military in order to graduate. BREAKING: Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt announces a program that would require High School students to do 1 of 3 things to graduate. - Get accepted into a college. - Get accepted into a trade school. - if the student can't do either college or trade school, they must join the army to graduate. Other examples of the rumor appeared on Reddit ( archived ) and TikTok ( archived ), the latter of which had amassed more than 434,000 likes as of this writing. The TikTok post was amplified by MSNBC correspondent Joy Ann Reid, whose Instagram post ( archived ) featuring the same video had garnered more than 28,000 likes at the time of this writing. In short, Stitt did make such comments during an interview; however, his spokesperson later clarified that this was just an idea and that there were no plans to only allow high school students to graduate if they had an acceptance offer for a college, trade school or the military. Therefore, we have rated this claim as a mixture of true and false information.
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