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The academy is run in concert with Baltimore City Public Schools by Youth Opportunity (YO!) Baltimore, a non-profit organization. YO! was founded in 2000 to provide workforce and education support services, mentoring and social services to young people (18-24) in Baltimore.
Open Works is a 34,000 square feet "incubator for Baltimore's creative economy." [1] [2] It houses shared wood, metal, and digital fabrication, textiles, and electronics workspaces, as well as 150 private studios. [3] They're also a Fab lab and have a mobile program. [4] The $10m project's establishment was funded by Baltimore Arts Realty Corps.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Thread (formerly known as Incentive Mentoring Program or IMP) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that was founded by Sarah and Ryan Hemminger as a partnership between students at Johns Hopkins University and two Baltimore City High Schools: Paul Laurence Dunbar High School (Baltimore, Maryland) and the Academy for College and Career Exploration.
The Healing Youth Alliance trains Baltimore City teens about mental health they take that training and teach others about trauma and how to cope. Groups work to provide healing-centered engagement ...
Starting in May, qualified young parents in Baltimore who have limited income can apply for the city's guaranteed income pilot program. The Baltimore Young Families Success Fund will provide ...
The Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth (CTY) is a gifted education program for school-age children founded in 1979 by psychologist Julian Stanley at Johns Hopkins University. It was established as a research study into how academically advanced children learn and became the first program to identify academically talented students through ...
The Thomas J. S. Waxter Center in Anne Arundel County provides a detention program for up to 50 girls; it previously had long-term secure confinement for up to ten girls, [13] but the secure program ended in December 2011. Waxter, originally named the Southern Maryland Children's Center, was renamed in 1963 after the Director of the State ...