Tag: events

clip art kids playing

Back-to-School Playdate 8/27/16

Join us for a Back to School Pop-Up Play Date from 3:00 – 5:00pm on Saturday, August 27, 2016.  See old friends and make some new ones; all new and returning families welcome. We are meeting at Druid Hill Park, one of our great community gems in Park Heights, and we’ll post back with the specific meet-up location shortly (it will be one of the playgrounds). We can’t wait to see you!

(If you are planning on donating school supplies and this is a convenient time to bring them, we can receive them during the play date. However, no requirement, and you can just bring yourselves!)



Student Art Show Reception at The Walters

Celebrate with our student artists as their work is on display to the public at the beautiful Walters Art Museum.  Student performance, exhibit tours, and light refreshments.  Free and open to the public. Saturday, February, 8, 2014, 1-3 p.m.



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“Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.” — Malcolm X



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(Event) Meet and Greet 7/30/13

Meet & Greet with our Staff

Tuesday, July 30
6:00pm and 7:00pm (two sessions)
Towanda Community Center (next door to our school)
4100 Towanda Avenue, 21215
Have a chance to meet some of our staff and have questions answered
RSVP to outreach@creativecityschool.org



Announcing Creative City’s Location!

We are absolutely thrilled to announce Creative City Public Charter School’s official location: 2810 Shirley Avenue in Southern Park Heights, near Druid Hill Park. The facility, and the Park Heights neighborhood, will provide such an ideal environment for carrying out Creative City’s unique mission.

Creative City will be Baltimore’s first school dedicated to Place-Based Education: using Baltimore’s natural and built environment, history and culture to teach through group projects. This site is located in a fantastic green space, with fields on either side of the adjacent Towanda Rec Center, and an urban garden that can serve as the beginnings of Creative City Farm. We are within walking distance of Baltimore’s 750-acre, 150-year-old Druid Hill Park, so we will be able to do a lot of dynamic field work (without breaking the bank on transportation costs).

Park Heights is rich in history, so we won’t have to travel farther than Park Circle to teach our children about great achievements in the history of African American business, or about several waves of American immigration that have passed through Park Heights over the decades. As a Community School, Creative City will strive to create a mix of resources and services for the whole family, working in partnership with community groups, building on community assets, and filling gaps that students’ families are experiencing.

Park Heights is a community rich in community groups and nonprofits that we can reach out to for providing adult education or services on school grounds that every Creative City family can benefit from. We have been working to build partnerships with families in Park Heights and Park Heights Renaissance Development Corporation for the past several months, and are excited to get started with joint work. Our friends at Park Heights Renaissance also operate the Towanda Rec Center, and have let us know that we can have daytime access to the facility, which greatly expands the number of innovative activities teachers can incorporate into their projects. The facility has the exact number of classrooms we will need at full capacity. More excitingly, there is a large multipurpose space that is perfect for our arts integration work, and could be flexibly configured for theatre, visual arts, dance, and music. This was a must, due to our dedication to teaching through the arts. Several extra offices will allow for us to comfortably offer the high level of individualized special education services that we hope to create.

Creative City offers our enthusiastic thanks to those who have made this vision a reality, including the Baltimore City Department of General Services, the Baltimore City Office of Real Estate, Councilwoman Sharon Middleton, Julius Colon and Cheo Hurley at Park Heights Renaissance, the Office of Mayor Stephanie Rawlings Blake, and Walter Skayhan and Associates.