Tag: leadership

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

President
Lisa Bleich

Vice President
Tammie Szafran

Treasurer
Chaundra Parker

Secretary
Jamyla Bennu

Board Members
Marisa Canino, ex officio
Elana Ehrlich
Michael Klima
April Mongan
Peter Murrell
Patrice Shelton
Craig Spilman, ex officio
Jonelle Whitlock

BOARD OF DIRECTORS BIO

Lisa Bleich is a lead trainer, facilitator, and mediator with Resolution Works. She brings 15 years of experience in community mediation and organizational development in the Baltimore metropolitan area. Her many clients have included Baltimore City Public Schools, Baltimore County Public Schools, the University of Maryland’s Department of Planning, and the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City.

Tammie Szafran is a Legal Services Program Specialist with the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia (PDS). In her ten years with PDS, she has been responsible for training development and delivery, providing direct client services, and supporting litigation on systemic criminal justice issues affecting low income minority groups. She also currently works as a volunteer attorney with both Catholic Charities and World Relief, providing pro bono legal services to low income and indigent immigrants. Tammie earned her B.A. in psychology with a minor in visual arts from Boston University and her J.D. from the University of Maryland School of Law. She is a member of both the Maryland and District of Columbia bars.

Chaundra R. Parker, M.Ed., is an educator, curriculum developer and diversity consultant. With 20 years of classroom experience, Chaundra has worked with a variety of learners in both the public and private sectors. In public schools she has experience as a classroom teacher, Lead Teacher, Mentor and Advanced Learner Support Teacher. During her ten years tenure in independent schools, Chaundra was both a classroom educator and Diversity Coordinator at a progressive school. At this institution, Chaundra led a team of stakeholders on a Board-Appointed Diversity Committee in changing the school’s culture to a more inclusive environment through carefully outlined Board-supported initiatives designed to impact students, families, and faculty members. As Diversity Chairperson she managed and designed curricula for all student programs related to multicultural education and inclusivity. She also worked with faculty and staff in diversity training and curriculum development for the classrooms. At the board level, Chaundra worked on the development of the school’s strategic plan which for the first time included diversity initiatives as first priority for the school moving forward. Chaundra earned her B.S. in Elementary Education from Coppin State University, her M.Ed. from Notre Dame of Maryland University and is currently working on her Ph.D. in Instructional Leadership in Changing Populations, also at Notre Dame.

Jamyla Brewton-Bennu: “I have an independent arts background and two small children. I have made my living as a creative entrepreneur for more than ten years, which gives me experience in problem-solving and relationship management. My eldest son’s speech delay and gift for math have taught me the value and humility and flexibility in education, and to honor the multiple intelligences in which our children may shine. I am a proud product of public/magnet schools in New York State and relish the opportunity to participate in Creative City’s mission and bring arts integration, small classes, and child-led, progressive education to the children.”

Marisa Canino has shown her commitment to the Baltimore community for 15 years through her professional and volunteer work with nonprofits serving Baltimore families. In her 11 years at Habitat for Humanity of the Chesapeake, she progressively served as Development Director, Deputy Director, and Chief Operations Officer, garnering resources of up to $12 million annually, and managing programs that enabled more than 100 low-income families to purchase safe, decent, affordable homes of their own. Her volunteer experience includes her oversight of the community effort to rebuild the playground at Stadium Place from the ground up with hundreds of volunteers after an act of arson in 2008. Marisa holds a Bachelor’s Degree from Franklin & Marshall College, and a certificate in fundraising management from Indiana University. Her passion for education and the opportunity for parents to be able to choose the school that is best for their child led her to become a parent-founder at Creative City for two years before being hired in the role of Executive Director after a broad search.

Peter C. Murrell, Jr., is currently Professor of Urban Education at Loyola University Maryland, where he was the Founding Dean of the School of Education. He is also co-founder and Senior Research Associate for the Alliance of Community Teachers and Schools. He has long been a community organizer and developer of community schools and teachers. Peter’s research focuses on the relationships among social identity, academic performance, and scholastic achievement, and investigates the development of academic identity and racial/cultural identity in the varied social contexts existing in urban schools and communities. He has authored numerous articles and book chapters on building culturally centered learning communities for teachers and students, including his most recent monograph Race, Culture and Schooling: Identities of Achievement in Multicultural Urban Schools (Lawrence Erlbaum). He is a member of the American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education TEAM-C (Teacher Education as a Moral Community).

Patrice Shelton: “Growing up in Baltimore City, I observed first-hand the many strengths and weaknesses in the current state of our school system. I believe in a progressive approach that enables our children to express themselves creatively as well as actively molding them into well-rounded individuals. It would delight me to serve such a purpose at Creative City.”

 



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.



CURRENT STAFF

LEADERSHIP

PRINCIPAL

TJM

Traci Johnson Mathena joined Creative City as its Principal on July 20th, 2015. Prior to joining our school, she served as an assistant principal at Towson Law and Public Policy High School in Baltimore County (2009-2015). During her tenure, she supervised various academic departments as well as the school’s Student Support services, Special Education Department, Student Activities programs and the Testing Program. She also developed the Academic Commitment Creates Empowered Successful Students (ACCESS) Program, an afterschool academic intervention where teachers, peer tutors and university students worked with struggling learners.

Traci has been an urban educator for 20 years. She started as a teacher in 1994 after working as a metropolitan reporter for the Baltimore Sun for six years. In Baltimore City, she worked at her alma mater Western High School (Class of ‘88) and Canton Middle School. She was a teacher and Language Arts Department Chairman at Dumbarton Middle School in Baltimore County for eight years before joining the Towson High School administrative team. Her appointment to Creative City returns Traci to the Park Heights area where she was raised.

Since 1995, Traci has written curriculum for both Baltimore City and Baltimore County public school systems, mentored teachers, led professional development seminars about Differentiated Instruction, and taught graduate courses in education for Towson University and, most recently, the Johns Hopkins School of Education.

Traci is a National Board Certified Teacher of English Language Arts/Early Adolescence and earned her master’s degree in Leadership in Teaching from Notre Dame University of Maryland. She is the proud alumna of University of Maryland College Park and the even more proud parent of a current Terrapin, a Linguistics and Psychology major who will graduate in 2017. 

ACADEMIC DIRECTOR

Spilman

Dr. Craig Spilman is the Academic Director of Creative City for the 2015-16 school year.  Prior to joining our school, he most recently served as the Executive Director of the CollegeBound Foundation (1999-2013). Under his leadership, the foundation grew to become one of the nation’s largest and most successful college access programs, serving 25,000 urban high school students in the City of Baltimore. Craig’s development efforts resulted in CollegeBound’s annual budget increasing from $800,000 to nearly $3.5 million.

Craig was an urban principal in Baltimore for 28 years, during which he led the transformation of three urban middle schools. His work in the field of urban education reform drew national recognition and was featured in Time Magazine. Craig served as Baltimore City Schools Associate Superintendent for Instruction and Curriculum for three years, led the Maryland State Middle School Association as its Executive Director for twelve years, and for fifteen years was the Education Director for Baltimore’s Sister Cities International Programs. He also lectures at the Maryland Institute College of Art.

Craig has led over 200 seminars and presentations on school reform issues for organizations such as the National Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, the National Middle School Association, the Maryland Department of Education, the Carnegie Corporation, and the Southern Regional Council. Dozens of newspapers and journals as well as national media (CNN, CBS, Fox, and NPR) have chronicled his school reform accomplishments.

Craig earned his Ph.D. in educational leadership from the University of Maryland College Park.  He is a graduate of the Greater Baltimore Committee (GBC) Leadership program and a Weinberg Foundation fellow. 

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Marisa Canino photo

Marisa Canino has a passion for service, a commitment to seeing Baltimore City and its residents thrive, and a demonstrated track record in fundraising and nonprofit management. She has shown her commitment to the Baltimore community for 15 years through her professional and volunteer work with nonprofits serving Baltimore families.  In her 11 years at Habitat for Humanity of the Chesapeake, she progressively served as Development Director, Deputy Director, and Chief Operation Officer, garnering resources of up to $12 million annually, and managing programs that enabled more than 100 low-income families to purchase safe, decent, affordable homes of their own.

Her volunteer experience, most notably, includes her oversight of the community effort to rebuild the playground at Stadium Place from the ground up with hundreds of volunteers after an act of arson in 2008. Most recently, she has worked as a fundraising consultant.

Marisa holds a Bachelor’s Degree from Franklin & Marshall College, and a certificate in fundraising management from Indiana University.

A mother of three, Marisa is also passionate about education and the opportunity for parents to be able to choose the school that is best for their child. She was a parent-founder at Creative City for two years before a broad search led to her being hired in the role of Executive Director. 

TEACHERS AND STAFF Fall 2015

Student Support Director/Special Educator/ IEP Chair – Mr. Peterson

Arts Integration Specialist – Ms. Bradford

Reading Specialist – Ms. Lewis

Community School Coordinator – Latrice Brown

Kindergarten – Ms. Rooney, Mr. Appel, Ms. Hawkins

1st Grade – Ms. Birkmaier, Ms. Smith, Ms. Ross

2nd Grade  Ms. Gordy, Ms. Meyer-Seymour, Ms. Mongan

3rd Grade  Ms. Carver, Ms. S. Brown

Physical Education – Mr. Smith

Music – Mr. Soto

Student Support Staff – Ms. F. Brown, Ms. Nowlin, Ms. Crisp, Ms. Whitlock, Ms. Matthews

MICA Community Arts Collaborative Resident Artist – Abby Bennett

Community School VISTA – Sam Rudy

Office Manager – Mrs. Worrell