Tag: students

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!)



CORE ELEMENTS OF CURRICULUM

What is place-based education?

Place-based education uses the local community and environment as a vehicle for learning core skills and exploring questions that are relevant to Baltimore and to students’ lives. Place-based education increases student motivation and performance, helps students develop stronger ties to their local environment, and allows the school to make positive change in the community. Place-based education is experience-based, and in kindergarten, play-based. Students learn about the built environment, infrastructure, residents, businesses, culture, resources, challenges and the history of the city around them.

Related articles:
Partners:

What is arts integration?

At Creative City we weave the visual, musical and performing arts into its curriculum as a way to foster student-centered learning, reflection, and personal expression, and a way to deepen conceptual learning, encourage creative thinking, promote collaboration, and strengthen the social environment within the school. Using the arts in all subjects is our way of delivering information and instruction, and is a method of assessing student mastery. Students observe art to stimulate discussion on pertinent themes and make art to explore problems and reflect on lessons learned.

Related articles and documents:
Success stories:
  • Second-grader Mehki Lee’s artwork was one of three pieces selected to represent Baltimore City Public Schools at the “Making Your Mark” juried youth art show at Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore Washington International Airport. The show will be on display from late May until November of this year.
  • Ms. Gordy’s class wrote a play, “Foxy Grandpa,” that was performed in May as part of the Young Playwright’s Festival. It was chosen from a field of 600 applicants, and a monologue by Greg Green in Ms. Brown’s class was also performed.
  • Amani McLean and Henry Walker (first grade) and Triniece Carter and Samantha Stanford (third grade) were featured in the regional “For Your Inspiration” exhibit at the Baltimore Museum of Art.
  • Amani McLean, in Ms. Mongan’s first grade class, and Celia Gieszl, in Ms. Carver’s third grade class, created two of only eight Baltimore City works selected for an exhibit at the State Treasury building in Annapolis, MD.
  • Third grade student Teneille Woodard’s artwork, a print mural created by Ms. Brown’s second grade students, and hand-bound books containing prints and monologues by Ms. Carver’s third grade students are all included in the Arts Everyday exhibit, “My Baltimore,” at the Walters Art Museum.
  • For the second time in a row, a Creative City student artist won the Mayor’s Holiday Card competition.  This year’s card featured Ben Klima’s snowman art work.
  • Watch second-grader Earl Lloyd give the weather on Fox 45 News on YouTube!

What is play-based Kindergarten?

At Creative City, we value student-directed play as an opportunity for learning, skill-building, and social development.  Our Kindergarten program includes a generous block of time for child-directed center play in each school day.  Teachers and other classroom helpers are engaged with students during this time to make links to curriculum, challenge thinking, and identify students’ own emerging interests that can later be woven into classroom lessons.  Adult engagement is kept in careful balance with giving students space to do their own problem-solving and negotiate their own social relationships. In addition to having a play-based Kindergarten, Creative City prioritizes play and daily recess for students in all grades.

Related articles:

What is cooperative community?

Creative City gives young people the opportunity to be active thinkers and leaders through decision-making about their school culture and classroom. Parents, teachers, and community members all have a role in creating and supporting the school’s climate and curriculum. Our Board of Directors is directly elected by all teachers and parents, and includes teachers, parents, and community member representatives. Students, teachers, and parents share the responsibility of choosing new teachers and administrators.

All of our teachers use the responsive-classroom method for managing classroom behavior.

Related articles:
Partners:

What is a community school?

Creative City is a strong community school. This means we know that families, schools, and community resources make children successful together. We keep the lights on during evenings and weekends, making Creative City a hub of learning and enrichment for adults and older kids in our community, as well as our students. We build upon partnerships with strong organizations in the neighborhood, bringing their knowledge and wisdom into the classroom and into our whole-family programming. The School Family Association coordinates these efforts alongside the Executive Director.  We build on our community’s assets and coordinate programs, services or resources for our students’ whole families, supporting their needs, dreams and aspirations.

Partners:

What are some more resources on progressive education in general?



GALLERY



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.



FOR CURRENT FAMILIES

Welcome to our school community! You are an important and integral part of the Creative City family. We hope you enjoy the resources and information on our web site – and encourage you to ask us if you find something missing!

Our updated Creative City Handbook will be available here shortly. Here are electronic copies of the information sent home in our 2016-17 Back to School Mailing:

Coming and Going from School 2016

FAQ 2016

Get Involved 2016

School Supplies 2016

After Care 2016

Don’t forget that Kindergarten students will begin with a staggered entry schedule.  Staggered entry means that Kindergarteners will attend ONLY an AM or PM session on one of the first two days of school. This gives our students and teachers a chance to start forming relationships with a smaller group of students at a time, and helps students slowly transition into their new school routines. Kindergarteners next day of school will be on Wednesday, August 31, and dismissal on that day will be at 12:45pm as it is on all Wednesdays. Specific staggered entry day & time were sent home in your Back to School Mailing.  Please contact us at 443-642-3600 if you are registered to begin Kindergarten and do not know your staggered entry assignment. (All other grades are full days from the first day of school.)



HOME

NOW ACCEPTING LOTTERY APPLICATIONS FOR THE 2017-18 SCHOOL YEAR! CLICK HERE.

Creative City Public Charter School is a progressive charter elementary school in northwest Baltimore City. With small classes and a focus on the arts, students connect with nature and their community through hands-on projects and exploration.  We are open to all students in Baltimore City. Students are chosen by lottery, not by grades or test scores.  For more information, click here.

CREATIVE CITY STUDENT ARTISTS ARE ALL OVER MARYLAND!

  • Second-grader Mehki L’s artwork was one of three pieces selected to represent Baltimore City Public Schools at the “Making Your Mark” juried youth art show at Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore Washington International Airport. The show will be on display from late May until November of this year.
  • Ms. Gordy’s class wrote a play, “Foxy Grandpa,” that was performed in May as part of the Young Playwright’s Festival. It was chosen from a field of 600 applicants, and a monologue by Gregg G. in Ms. Brown’s class was also performed.
  • Amani M. and Henry W. (first grade) and Triniece C. and Samantha S. (third grade) were featured in the regional “For Your Inspiration” exhibit at the Baltimore Museum of Art.
  • Amani M., in Ms. Mongan’s first grade class, and Celia G., in Ms. Carver’s third grade class, created two of only eight Baltimore City works selected for an exhibit at the State Treasury building in Annapolis, MD.
  • Third grade student Teneille W.’s artwork, a print mural created by Ms. Brown’s second grade students, and hand-bound books containing prints and monologues by Ms. Carver’s third grade students are all included in the Arts Everyday exhibit, “My Baltimore,” at the Walters Art Museum.
  • For the third time in a row, a Creative City student artist won the Mayor’s Holiday Card competition.  This year’s card featured Zephyr C.’s artwork featuring mittens.
  • Watch second-grader Earl L. give the weather on Fox 45 News on YouTube!  (You may think this is not art-related, but just wait for the dancing to start.)

DONATE

Tax-deductible contributions help us offer our students more — more field trips, more exposure to real live practicing artists, and more programs.  You can contribute online here.