City Neighbors High School Explained

City Neighbors High School
Motto:Known. Loved. Inspired.[1]
Streetaddress:5609 Sefton Avenue
City:Baltimore
State:Maryland
District:Baltimore City Public Schools
Zipcode:21214
Country:United States
Coordinates:39.3505°N -76.5548°W
Schoolnumber:376
Us Nces School Id:240009001690
Affiliation:City Neighbors Foundation
Principal:Cheyanne Zahrt[2]
Schooltype:Public charter
Grades:912
Campus Type:Urban
Campus Size:5.4 acres[3]
Mascot:Lions
Founded:2010[4]
Enrollment:417
Enrollment As Of:2019

City Neighbors High School is a public charter high school located in the Glenham-Benhar neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Opened in 2010, City Neighbors High was the third school launched by the larger City Neighbors Foundation program, a Baltimore-based charter organization.[4] The school operates as a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation under the name "City Neighbors High School Inc."[5]

Identifying as a progressive model school, City Neighbors High incorporates arts integration, project-based learning and the Reggio Emilia approach in a small school context.[6]

History

The school located at corner of Bayonne and Sefton Avenues was originally Public School No. 41 - Hamilton Junior High School.[7] Built in 1931, Hamilton Junior High opened for students in the spring of 1932.[8] [9] By 2007, plans were proposed to close the aging school building in the face of declining enrollment and the potential to save City Schools $6 million in maintenance and capital expenses.[10] The school was also among five Baltimore schools that were identified as "persistently dangerous" under standards set by the No Child Left Behind Act.[11] The school board approved a plan to close Hamilton Junior High in the summer of 2009 by a phase out plan where it would not admit new 6th graders.[12] [13]

City Neighbors first opened an elementary/middle school in the former Hamilton Junior High building under the name City Neighbors Hamilton in 2009, and plans were made to add a high school in another part of the building the following year.[14] [15] The high school's initial Freshmen class of 90 students entered in 2010.[4] At the same time, City Neighbors Hamilton & High schools undertook a 6-year $8.9 million renovation of the school buildings.[3] The project was financed by a bond issue by the Maryland Health and Higher Educational Facilities Authority, who in turn loaned the funds to the two school corporations.[16] The school's first class of 86 students graduated in 2014 with a 95% graduation rate.[17] In 2018, City Neighbors High received a 3 out of 5 star rating by the Maryland State Department of Education.[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: City Neighbors High School. 2019-08-02.
  2. Web site: City Neighbors High School. Baltimore City Public Schools.
  3. Web site: City Neighbors Hamilton & City Neighbors High School. Maryland Architecture Excellence in Design Awards 2019. 2019-08-02.
  4. News: 2. Green. Erica. New city high school offers 'home away from home'. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-05-16. 2010-10-30.
  5. Web site: CITY NEIGHBORS HIGH SCHOOL INC. Open990. 2019-08-02.
  6. Web site: City Neighbors Foundation. The IDEA Library. 2019-08-02.
  7. Book: Baltimore (Md.) Dept. of Education. Department of Education. Directory of the public schools of Baltimore, Md., 1934-1935. 2019-08-02. 1934.
  8. News: 3. City High Schools To Be Reorganized. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 1931-12-28.
  9. News: 3. City's Children To Go Back To School Monday. The Baltimore Evening Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 1932-01-02.
  10. News: Barnhardt. Laura. School closure strategy assailed. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2007-02-11.
  11. News: –1. Bowie. Liz. 'Dangerous' schools. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2008-07-16.
  12. News: –3. Neufeld. Sara. $1.2 billion schools budget OK'd. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2007-03-28.
  13. News: –10. Neufeld. Sara. Board considers school closings. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2008-04-09.
  14. News: Neufeld. Sara. Alonso proposes massive school reorganization. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2009-03-10.
  15. News: –3. Bowie. Liz. Charter school growth urged. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2009-09-06.
  16. News: –7. Notice of Public Hearing Concerning Issuance of Bonds. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2012-10-17.
  17. Web site: Tooten. Tim. Charter school honors first graduating class. WBAL. 2019-08-02. 2014-05-30.
  18. News: Pate. Caroline. Star ratings for Maryland elementary, middle and high schools. The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2019-08-02. 2018-12-04.