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Desegregation of the Baltimore City Public Schools; List of Baltimore City Public Schools; A. Academy for College and Career Exploration; ... Code of Conduct; Developers;
From March 1, 2006 to March 4, 2006, City Schools students from high schools across Baltimore City held a three-day student strike to oppose an imminent plan to "consolidate" many area high schools into fewer buildings. The school system asserted that these buildings are underutilized.
ConneXions: A Community Based Arts School (formerly known as the ConneXions Community Leadership Academy) is a public secondary school located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Connexions open in 2002 and it now share building with Bard .
David E. Weglein (1876 – October 10, 1950) was an American educator, and superintendent of Baltimore City public schools. Biography ... Code of Conduct;
Excel Academy at Francis M. Wood High School is a public adult high school located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States, part of the Baltimore City Public Schools. The school is named for Francis M. Wood, Baltimore's Director of Negro Schools from 1925 to 1943. Francis M. Wood ROTC at the 2008 Morgan State University Homecoming Parade.
New Era Academy is a public secondary school serving grades 6 to 12, located in the Cherry Hill neighborhood of South Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It was operated as an "innovation high school" by Replications, Inc. for the Baltimore City Public School System. The school opened in 2003, serving students citywide.
Eastern Female High School, also known as Public School No. 116, is a historic female high school located on the southeast corner of the 200 block of North Aisquith Street and Orleans Street, in the old Jonestown / Old Town neighborhoods, east of Downtown Baltimore and now adjacent to the recently redeveloped Pleasant View Gardens housing project / neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, United ...
Baltimore Freedom Academy (BFA) was a Baltimore City middle-high school, located for most of its existence in the Washington Hill neighborhood. Founded in 2003 as a public "innovation school," [1] beginning in 2008 it operated as a charter school. [2] The school was open to students citywide through the Baltimore City Public Schools lottery