Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove
Address
Map
1201 Cambria Street

,
21225
Coordinates39°13′56″N 76°35′40″W / 39.23222°N 76.59444°W / 39.23222; -76.59444
Information
School typePublic
School districtBaltimore City Public Schools
SuperintendentDr. Sonja Brookins Santelises [CEO][2]
School number239[1]
PrincipalChristopher Battaglia[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment532[1] (2018)
AreaUrban
Color(s)Green, Gold
Team nameBayhawks

Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove is a public high school in the Curtis Bay neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, USA. The school is part of the Baltimore City Public Schools (BCPSS).[1]



Rising temps outside and lack of resources inside keeping kids out of school [3]

“A Beautiful Struggle”: Coach Mack & Son Give Back to Balto. Inner City Through Coaching[4]


Once considered low performing, Benjamin Franklin High School is now a top choice high school. A network of 75 partners customizes responses to the needs presented by the school's students and families. Students posted 17,000 service learning hours, 60 families were prevented from becoming homeless, and students are calling friends who dropped out and urging them to return. [5]

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HIGH CELEBRATES RENOVATIONS [6]

Discharged in 1945, his decorations included the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with Three Oak Leaf Clusters. After the war, he worked as a reporter for Dun & Bradstreet and taught history at Benjamin Franklin Junior High School in Brooklyn. [7]

Other recommendations presented last night include transitioning Benjamin Franklin Middle to become a high school. The school would not admit a new sixth-grade class, and current eighth-graders could stay on for ninth grade. [8]

Benjamin Franklin Middle 55% utilization - 2000[9]

These schools in Baltimore failed to meet standards for several years in a row and will be forced to undergo a major overhaul: Benjamin Franklin Jr. Middle [10]

Thomas C. Nuzzi, to Benjamin Franklin Middle, from a principal post in Charlottesville, Va. [11]

High schools would open in Brooklyn and Cherry Hill under a proposal that is supported by Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke and is under study by city school officials. The idea, proposed more than a year ago, would expand to eighth grade the elementary schools in the two South Baltimore communities. Benjamin Franklin Middle School in Brooklyn and Arnett J. Brown Jr. Middle School in Cherry Hill then would become high schools.[12]

Wrap Around / Partnership

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City Schools Holds Hearings on School Closure, Other Changes[13]

Community schools serve families, neighborhoods[14]

Baltimore City principals to be honored at inaugural 'Heart of School' awards[15]

Battaglia heart [16]

New CSX Field opens in South Baltimore[17]

Rawlings-Blake vows to 'fight for' businesses wanting to grow [18]

United Way's On Track 4 Success program works to improve central Maryland graduation rates [19]

Weinberg Foundation Employees Given $500,000 to be Grantmakers for a Day [20]

Ripken Foundation breaks ground on ninth Baltimore-area park [21]

Ravens Player Supports Local High School [22]

Baltimore School Gets A Makeover [23]

Baltimore City Students Get Education From The Ground Up At Local Farm [24]

$1.6M Partnership To Boost Baltimore Schools, Teachers & Communities [25]

Baltimore school and partners kick off renovations and, they hope, a turnaround [26]

Activism

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Best Activism[27]

City College High School students push for change[28]

Trash Talk[29]

Just last year, a study found the Curtis Bay and Brooklyn neighborhoods to have the highest toxic air pollution in the state of Maryland. [30]

Program Aims To Boost Graduation Rate Of Md. Students [31]


converting Benjamin Franklin Junior High into a high school SCHOOL SUSPENSIONS DROP - CEO ALONSO URGED APPLYING PENALTY ONLY FOR VIOLENCE [32]


Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove would undergo an internal turnaround that includes implementing new career-preparation programs. It has seen declines in both its High School Assessment pass rates as well as its enrollment numbers, school officials said. The school, which recently transitioned to a high school, has struggled to serve its new population. [33]


"We are trying to overcome a major hurdle of just [student] lifestyle," Arthur Fitzhugh, of Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove, told board members. "We can do it" with this process. This year, Alonso proposed to close the Institute of Business and Entrepreneurship High School in 2012. Patterson High School, Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove and Moravia Park Elementary/Middle School would undergo internal overhauls. [34]


Under federal law, the state must require schools to take actions that will improve performance when schools' test scores are in the lowest 5 percent in the state. Some members of the state school board had suggested more drastic measures than have been taken before. For instance, they could recommend the troubled schools be turned into charters or placed in separate school districts that require more significant changes than have been tried over the years. The state legislature reacted swiftly to those suggestions and passed a law during the legislative session this year that forbids such action by the state. The schools are Academy for College and Career Exploration, Arundel Elementary/Middle, Augusta Fells Savage Institution of Visual Arts, Benjamin Franklin High, Booker T. Washington Middle, Brehms Lane Public Charter, Eutaw-Marshburn Elementary, Frederick Douglass High, Frederick Elementary, Friendship Academy of Engineering and Technology, Furman Templeton Preparatory Academy, Gilmor Elementary, Harford Heights Elementary, Harlem Park Elementary/Middle, Hazelwood Elementary/Middle, James McHenry Elementary/Middle, Knowledge and Success Academy, Mary E. Rodman Elementary, New Era Academy and Samuel Coleridge Taylor Elementary. [35]


United Way Family Center The day care at Benjamin Franklin has room for 18 children ages 6 weeks to 4 years old. All of the seniors enrolled in the program since it started in 2014 have finished high school. The turnaround team created a community center at the high school that opened in June 2014, a few months before the day care center. The community center, working with 75 community partners, provides mental health services, workforce development and job placement, a food bank, GED courses, prom dresses and help with transportation. The center has an operating budget of $485,000, and receives some administrative support from the high school. It receives funding from the United Way, the state Department of Education and other sources. Day care helps teen parents build a future - In-school program ensures girls graduate, learn to raise their babies [36]


Baltimore City Public Schools' $130 million budget shortfall is forcing the roughly 180 principals district-wide to plan on doing without. Under the cuts, Benjamin Franklin High School would lose more than $900,000 and 11 teachers. [37]


roof repair or replacement at Hampstead Hill Academy, Brehms Lane Elementary, Lakewood Early Learning Center, Benjamin Franklin High School [38]


Mary L. Booker From 1998 to 2000, she was principal of Benjamin Franklin Junior High School. [39]

Curtis Bay is a food desert, meaning its residents don't have easy access to fresh, healthy and affordable food, Reed said. To ameliorate the situation, students from Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove run "Tri-Veggie," a tricycle carrying fruits and vegetables grown at Filbert Street Garden, to places throughout Curtis Bay. [40]


trash incinerator protest [41]

Greg Sawtell of United Workers, a group that worked with project opponents, said Wednesday's vote was a significant win for the community, particularly students at Benjamin Franklin High School and Curtis Bay Elementary School. "This shows that when communities organize, our voices can be heard," he said. [42]



References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Benjamin Franklin High School at Masonville Cove, Baltimore City Public Schools".
  2. ^ “Meet CEO Sonja Brookins Santelises”, Baltimore City Public Schools Website (retrieved February 2019)
  3. ^ Kadhim, Eddie (2018-09-04). "Rising temps outside and lack of resources inside keeping kids out of school". WMAR 2 News. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  4. ^ Cornish, Stephanie (2016-03-20). ""A Beautiful Struggle": Coach Mack & Son Give Back to Balto. Inner City Through Coaching". Baltimore Afro-American. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  5. ^ Rondeau, Jonathon (2015-07-30). "Connecting communities and schools". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  6. ^ Green, Erica (2011-06-15). "BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HIGH CELEBRATES RENOVATIONS". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  7. ^ Rasmussen, Frederick (2011-02-08). "CHARLES J. LEIMAN\ - SUPERVISOR OF BALTIMORE COUNTY SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS WAS A DECORATED WORLD WAR - II BOMBARDIER". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  8. ^ Neufeld, Sara (2008-03-12). "BOARD APPROVES CREATION OF 5 MIDDLE-HIGH SCHOOLS - CHARTER-LIKE FACILITIES ARE MAJOR STEP IN CITY'S RESTRUCTURING PLAN". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  9. ^ "Consultants likely to suggest closing some city schools Streamlining system could mean added money from state". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2000-08-22.
  10. ^ Bowie, Liz (2004-06-30). "Six schools off the failing list - one is added Homewood designated as a troubled facility U.S. standards are the benchmark Pair of middle schools are put on notice Howard County". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  11. ^ "12 failing schools get new leaders - Baltimore principals are first to be named in city overhaul effort". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 1996-05-17.
  12. ^ "High schools proposed for Brooklyn, Cherry Hill - Plan would keep students in home neighborhoods". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 1996-05-30.
  13. ^ Williams, Shernay (2010-12-15). "City Schools Holds Hearings on School Closure, Other Changes". Baltimore Afro-American. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  14. ^ Green, Erica (2015-10-09). "Community schools serve families, neighborhoods". City Paper. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  15. ^ Green, Erica (2016-05-23). "Baltimore City principals to be honored at inaugural 'Heart of School' awards". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  16. ^ "2016 Heart of the School Awards Winner - Chris Battaglia". Heart of the School Awards. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  17. ^ Stepner, Shawn (2018-06-05). "New CSX Field opens in South Baltimore". WMAR 2 News. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  18. ^ Sullivan, Joanna (2011-12-05). "Rawlings-Blake vows to 'fight for' businesses wanting to grow". Baltimore Business Journal. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  19. ^ "United Way's On Track 4 Success program works to improve central Maryland graduation rates". Baltimore Business Journal. Baltimore. 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  20. ^ "Weinberg Foundation Employees Given $500,000 to be Grantmakers for a Day". Baltimore Business Journal. Baltimore. 2017-12-05. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  21. ^ Yeager, Amanda (2017-09-27). "Ripken Foundation breaks ground on ninth Baltimore-area park". Baltimore Business Journal. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  22. ^ Washington, Marcus (2014-09-22). "Ravens Player Supports Local High School". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  23. ^ Bubala, Mary (2011-06-14). "Baltimore School Gets A Makeover". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  24. ^ Kartalija, Jessica (2013-05-01). "Baltimore City Students Get Education From The Ground Up At Local Farm". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  25. ^ Schuh, Mike (2016-01-07). "$1.6M Partnership To Boost Baltimore Schools, Teachers & Communities". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  26. ^ Shen, Fern (2011-06-15). "Baltimore school and partners kick off renovations and, they hope, a turnaround". Baltimore Brew. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  27. ^ "Best Activism". City Paper. Baltimore. 2014-09-16. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  28. ^ Doerr, Elizabeth (2016-05-25). "City College High School students push for change". City Paper. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  29. ^ Smith, Van (2014-07-22). "Trash Talk". City Paper. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  30. ^ McCorkell, Meghan (2013-12-18). "Marylanders Uneasy About Renewable Energy Plant In Curtis Bay". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  31. ^ "Program Aims To Boost Graduation Rate Of Md. Students". WJZ 13 CBS Baltimore. Baltimore. 2017-09-20. Retrieved 2019-02-15.
  32. ^ Neufeld, Sara (2008-08-05). "SCHOOL SUSPENSIONS DROP - CEO ALONSO URGED APPLYING PENALTY ONLY FOR VIOLENCE". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  33. ^ Green, Erica (2010-11-17). "PLAN TO REVAMP SCHOOLS\ - ALONSO'S BLUEPRINT RECOMMENDS CLOSING ONE THAT'S FAILING AND RESTRUCTURING - FOUR OTHERS". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  34. ^ Green, Erica (2010-12-09). "SCHOOLS EMBRACE REORGANIZATIONS AT FIRST OF TWO PUBLIC HEARINGS". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  35. ^ Bowie, Liz (2017-07-27). "State, city to join on school performance". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  36. ^ Wenger, Yvonne (2017-04-13). "Day care helps teen parents build a future - In-school program ensures girls graduate, learn to raise their babies". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  37. ^ Prudente, Tim (2017-03-04). "For school principals, set of painful choices - Each school must consider laying off staff and cutting programs". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  38. ^ "'Astonishing' - Our view: Hogan's and Franchot's unwise obsession with forcing local school districts to install window AC is now doing real damage to students". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. 2016-05-13.
  39. ^ Rasmussen, Frederick (2014-01-17). "Mary L. Booker \ - Her career in Baltimore's public schools as a teacher and principal spanned 35 years". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  40. ^ Eatough, Allison (2014-05-28). "Pedaling their wares \ - Vendors use bikes to sell healthy food and snacks". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  41. ^ Green, Erica (2014-06-17). "Trash facility protested \ - Calling power plant an incinerator, South Baltimore students ask school board to opt out of energy contract". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
  42. ^ Wheeler, Timothy (2015-03-26). "City cancels deal with trash-to-power plant \ - Rawlings-Blake cites lack of progress on construction; schools also end contract". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore.
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[[Category:Public schools in Baltimore]] [[Category:Public high schools in Maryland]] [[Category:Charter schools in Maryland]]