Tag: Education
Maryland’s teacher shortage: Will the Bluepr...
By Capital News Service | March 18, 2024 | News | 1 |
Blueprint or budget-breaker? No one knows how to p...
By Capital News Service | March 12, 2024 | News | 0 |
Maryland’s education ‘Blueprint’ struggles to expa...
By Capital News Service | March 11, 2024 | News | 0 |
The Equities of School Choice
By Trent Kittleman | January 18, 2024 | Commentary | 1 |
Distractions in the classroom: School districts su...
By Capital News Service | October 4, 2023 | News | 0 |
Maryland’s Blueprint to prepare students for college and careers – and counselors lead the way
by Capital News Service | March 25, 2024 | News | 0 |
A new emphasis on career counseling is just part of the Blueprint’s college and career readiness “pillar,” which starts with an ambitious goal: to make sure all high school students are prepared for their next steps after high school by the end of the 10th grade.
Read MoreMaryland’s teacher shortage: Will the Blueprint’s plan for better pay, training do enough?
by Capital News Service | March 18, 2024 | News | 1 |
The U.S. Department of Education keeps a Teacher Shortage Areas database — and it found that for the current school year, Maryland was short of teachers in 28 subjects, which the state defines as “areas of certification.” That’s up from 17 five years earlier. Some teacher certification areas — such as English as a second language, health science and special education — are short on teachers from pre-K through the 12th grade.
Read MoreBlueprint or budget-breaker? No one knows how to pay for Maryland’s massive education reform
by Capital News Service | March 12, 2024 | News | 0 |
Maryland’s Democratic-led legislature passed the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future in 2021, vowing to pour billions of dollars into the state’s public schools to offer universal pre-K, improve teaching and make sure students are ready for college or careers.
Read MoreMaryland’s education ‘Blueprint’ struggles to expand pre-K
by Capital News Service | March 11, 2024 | News | 0 |
As a group of 4-year-old boys worked to create a towering building block castle in their colorful Montgomery County Public Schools pre-K classroom, Head Start teacher Molly Scherf reminded them it is important to build a strong foundation.
Read MoreThe Equities of School Choice
by Trent Kittleman | January 18, 2024 | Commentary | 1 |
Possibly the most important issue facing the Maryland General Assembly this year and every year is how to improve the pervasive problems with our state system of education. It seems that each year we fall further and further behind and drift further and further away from doing what works.
Read MoreDistractions in the classroom: School districts sue social media giants over mental health crisis
by Capital News Service | October 4, 2023 | News | 0 |
The lawsuit accused several social media platforms of targeting and manipulating youth so they stay engaged for excessive amounts of time – and that’s exactly what educators see in Charles County classrooms.
Read MoreHealth care, construction, tech among biggest school expenses
by Capital News Service | August 21, 2023 | News | 0 |
With employee health care costs leading the way, Maryland’s public school districts spent $21.1 billion between fiscal years 2019 and 2022 not on teacher and staff salaries, but on everything else that keeps the schools running.
Read MoreEducation bills prioritize teacher shortages, Blueprint funding
by Capital News Service | April 21, 2023 | Governor | 0 |
When the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future school reform plan passed in 2021 by the Maryland General Assembly, it came on an override of former Gov. Larry Hogan’s veto of the bill. In contrast, Gov. Wes Moore allocated an extra $500 million on top of the required amount for funding the Blueprint and shifted some transportation funding into education, for a total of $900 million excess dollars.
Read MoreTwo Tragedies of Maryland Education
by AJ Swinson | March 20, 2023 | Commentary | 1 |
Twenty-three schools in Baltimore City had ZERO students who achieved proficiency in math at grade level. Further, in 20 schools, there were no more than TWO students who achieved proficiency in math at grade level. What this means is that in over 50 schools, there are less than two students PER SCHOOL who achieved proficiency in math.
Read MoreSupreme Court ruling could impact 800,000 Maryland student loan borrowers
by Capital News Service | March 1, 2023 | News | 0 |
A ruling from the Supreme Court against the White House’s student debt relief program could impact more than 800,000 Maryland student loan borrowers who are currently eligible for relief according to data from the federal Department of Education.
Read MoreHouse Republican Caucus introduces legislative package to reduce crime, improve education and restore the state’s economy
by House Republican Caucus | February 11, 2023 | Commentary | 0 |
The House Republican Caucus has introduced a legislative package of reasonable, common-sense solutions to help address these challenges. Our legislative package focuses on topics that matter most to Marylanders: reducing crime, improving education, and restoring our economy.
Read MoreMoore’s promise of free pre-K must balance cost, resources and quality learning
by Capital News Service | November 30, 2022 | News | 0 |
Gov-elect Wes Moore, D, has a laundry list of plans for Maryland.
Moore wants to give students an option to complete a year of service after high school, raise the minimum wage to $15 this year instead of the scheduled increase in 2025 and support small businesses through modernizing the regulation process.
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