Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan is putting pressure on Baltimore City Public Schools following allegations of students' grades being fixed.

District officials have admitted to the discovery of at least five cases of improper grade changes.

This has been an ongoing concern over a number of years. The governor said Thursday that the public deserves answers.

"I don't know what the facts are, but I know we have to be open and transparent, and I'm going to push (district CEO) Dr. (Sonja) Santelesis and the chairman of the school board to release all of this information so that we can get to the bottom of it," Hogan told 11 News after appearing on the "C-4 Show" on WBAL NewsRadio 1090 AM.

District officials said its in-house investigation has turned up disturbing results connected to grade-fixing. In a statement on June 4, district officials said, "In sum, in nine years across more than 170 schools, allegations of improper grade-changing have been substantiated in five cases. While this is five too many, it clearly does not indicate widespread, systemic abuse or improper activity."

Hogan said he and the public are anxious to see what else turns up.

"I'm telling you, we are going to want to see the results of that investigation, and we are going to be pushing that the state board sees the results of that investigation," Hogan said.

District officials said in a statement sent to 11 News late Thursday afternoon, saying, "We have released a summary of all of the investigations to Gov. Hogan's office and offered to provide him with the investigative reports."

The district had also said, "We take the integrity of grades extremely seriously. If grades do not accurately reflect what students have achieved, teachers cannot provide the instruction and support each student needs to succeed."

District officials said besides its ongoing investigation into grade-fixing, the district has also updated its grading regulations to ensure consistency across the district.

School officials said anyone who suspects improper grade-changing or any improper activity should report it to the district's fraud hotline at 800-679-0185.