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Despite Reduced Budgets, Many Students Will Return To New or Restored Facilities
Higher Test Scores Among Counties' Goals

By Jenna Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, August 17, 2008

Even with tighter public school budgets, Southern Maryland students and their parents can anticipate new initiatives, construction projects and curriculum changes when schools reopen this week and next.

Students in St. Mary's and Calvert counties return to class Wednesday; Charles County students start Aug. 25. School officials in the three counties say they are working to increase state standardized test scores, launch safe-driving initiatives in high schools and offer intense science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) classes.

Some students will arrive for their first day at new or renovated schools. Charles is opening its 21st elementary school, Mary B. Neal Elementary on Piney Church Road in Waldorf. Students decided in the spring that the school's mascot should be a blue crab, so on Wednesday they will be greeted by Pinch, the furry blue mascot of the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs baseball team.

"It's all ready to go," Charles School Superintendent James E. Richmond said of the new building, which can accommodate 760 students and will relieve crowding at other schools.

Charles is also building additions or renovating at four elementary schools that lost classroom space when the county implemented full-day kindergarten.

Calvert is finishing construction of Barstow Elementary School on Williams Road in Prince Frederick. The school's opening has been delayed until at least November, so Barstow students will temporarily attend classes in trailers at Calvert Elementary. Calvert is also starting construction of a Calvert Middle School building. Its students will not have to be relocated during the project because they'll continue to go to the existing school.

In St. Mary's County, Leonardtown Elementary School has reopened after two years of renovations that put students in trailers outside Benjamin Banneker Elementary School in Loveville. "If you didn't know it was renovated, you would think it's a brand-new school," Principal Denise M. Eichel said.

St. Mary's is also continuing construction on its first new school since 1980, Evergreen Elementary, in the Wildewood development in California. The $20 million "green" facility is expected to open for the 2009-10 school year.

Southern Maryland schools are also launching initiatives. Calvert received a nearly $100,000 grant from the Maryland Department of Education for STEM classes, in which teachers offer hands-on experiments, real-life examples and guest speakers who work in related fields.

Aspects of the program will be integrated into all classes, but Calvert officials will focus on Barstow and Calvert elementary schools, Calvert Middle, Calvert High and the Calvert Career Center. The county also plans to open a STEM Academy at Calvert School within a few years.

Charles and St. Mary's schools have STEM programs, and superintendents in the counties said they have gotten students interested in math and science at an early age. In Charles, middle school students learn about rocketry from experts at the Naval Surface Warfare Center. St. Mary's students go on tours of the Patuxent Naval Air Station in Lexington Park and learn about aerospace engineering.

St. Mary's has 270 students in STEM classes and plans to expand the program to Chesapeake Public Charter School and additional grade levels at the current schools offering the classes.

School leaders are also launching programs aimed at lowering dropout rates and helping students who have trouble passing courses. They plan to use data to target individual students who need special attention and coaching.

In St. Mary's, 60 freshmen will attend the new Fairlead Freshman Academy, which was created to reduce the county's high dropout rate. The students will take only the core academic classes -- English, math, social studies and science -- in addition to having a daily mentoring session.

"The ultimate goal is for them to get five credits to continue on to sophomore year and keep them from dropping out that first year," said St. Mary's School Superintendent Michael J. Martirano.

Charles plans to increase its extracurricular offerings for students, add athletic trainers to work with athletes and develop a lacrosse program at its six high schools in the spring.

"The more kids you have in some type of uniform, the more they will feel accepted and succeed in school," Richmond said.

Following car accidents that killed students in Calvert and Charles last school year, the three school systems are launching or continuing teenage driving initiatives at their high schools. Students in the three counties who violate driving laws can lose their parking privilege at school.

Students at La Plata High will be greeted on the first day by the superintendent, the county sheriff and sheriff's officers, who will pass out fliers outlining driving laws, particularly as they pertain to drivers younger than 18.

"We have to make sure students can get to school safely," Richmond said. "So if you violate the rules, you lose your permit."

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