Wednesday, November 27, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Commentary

Baltimore County Council needs to grow from 7 to 11 members

Baltimore County is famous for a number of things. It’s the state’s third most populous county as well as its third largest county geographically, with more than 200 miles of waterfront. It is home to multiple universities, hospitals and historic sites, along with breweries, vineyards, the Maryland State Fair and the Maryland Hunt Cup, with its century-and-a-quarter-old steeplechase traditions.

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Dan Rodricks: Taking stock of Maryland’s big horse love at state fair time

If the many parties involved can ever reach full agreement, and if enough money can be found, Baltimore could end up with an all-new Pimlico Race Course in four or five years. Pimlico, and not Laurel Park, would end up being Maryland’s best and last year-round thoroughbred track, and the Preakness would forever be held there.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Home schooling during lockdown, boy working on school work with laptop and headphones during coronavirus covid 19 lock down. Remote learning through home schooling due to school closures has become commonplace in the UK in 2021.
Online learning a poor choice to punish Baltimore County students

Across Maryland, schools are coming back in session, and it won’t be long before the excitement and goodwill of a new academic year fades as educators confront the harsh reality that effective teaching is one of the hardest jobs around. The challenges of classroom instruction are only the starting point. At the core of running a K-12 school is not just the lofty business of inspiring young minds but the often less personally fulfilling mission of getting young people to behave around each other so they can learn.

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Baltimore needs ‘built leaders’ now more than ever before

I do not believe there is such a thing as a “born leader.” The phrase is often used to describe someone people want to follow. It does not mean that as the leader evolves, they will possess the skills to identify and unlock human potential in service of a shared goal, something a great leader does. Instead, I believe that great leaders are not born, but built. Their greatness is supported by the building blocks laid through a lifelong journey of continuous improvement.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Retailers line their pockets with taxpayer dollars in Anne Arundel County

At a time when prices remain sky-high and local families are scrounging to make ends meet, we should all come together in a sense of common good to deliver relief. Instead, the Anne Arundel County Council took the bait, raising costs on struggling residents in the name of green policy that lines retailers’ pockets. The recently passed ban on plastic retail bags also creates a new tax on paper bags, the latest in a curious trend of Maryland’s retailers linking arms with the activists at the Sierra Club.

On anniversary of March on Washington, Anne Arundel County honors its own trailblazer

The day Sarah E. Carter broke the color barrier in Anne Arundel County nearly a half-century ago, she said she recognized the significance of her achievement. “I had a lot of people helping me and it’s amazing to win,” she told Michael Wentzel, a reporter for The Evening Sun newspaper. “We didn’t do it alone. People told me that I’m with white people too much. They’d tell me they wouldn’t vote for me when the time came. This proves that racism isn’t good from any angle.”

Math exam
A renewed focus on tutoring and a rethinking of homework

Education does not end when the dismissal bell rings. Learning can and must continue when children are at home. Frederick County Public Schools students in grades three through eight improved on math exams last year, and performed among the best school systems in the state — though still below pre-pandemic levels. On the Algebra I test for the Maryland Comprehensive Assessment Program (MCAP), 26% of FCPS students earned a proficiency score, which is the fifth highest in the state and significantly better than the statewide average of 17%.

With each first day of school, my kid is growing away from me

“So do you think that some time this school year, you’ll want to walk by yourself?” I asked my kid. We were unpacking Amazon boxes of notebook paper and No. 2 pencils, and as I envisioned hauling them down to the school building where he’s going to be starting fourth grade today, I suddenly thought, “What if he doesn’t need me to walk him with him anymore?” Then: “What if he doesn’t need me anymore?”

Kalman Hettleman: A futuristic future of our public schools: Can AI and R&D save them?

The word futuristic is defined as an “imagined” future. Which is an upbeat way, as schools get ready to reopen, to view the nationwide future of public education. The alternative to an imagined future is the somber present. Public schools are widely viewed as facing a bleak future. Learning loss from the pandemic is getting worse not better; even before the pandemic, nearly 70 percent of schoolchildren were below proficiency in literacy. There’s a growing loss of faith in the political possibility of true education reform.

 

Opinion: Without project labor agreements, Prince George’s school construction projects will continue to rob hardworking local residents

Over the past year, 12 construction workers have come forward alleging they have not been fully compensated for work performed on new school buildings in Prince George’s County. Wage theft is a crime. The number of lawsuits filed against the lead developer, as well as several subcontractors, is growing as wage theft allegations — including failure to pay overtime, misclassifying employees as 1099 contractors, and failure to pay wages entirely — continue to surface on Prince George’s County Public Schools (PGCPS).

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