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Dropout persuasion

City schools are told to do more to reach and return students who have abandoned their high school education

September 19, 2008|By Sara Neufeld , sara.neufeld@baltsun.com

Brice said the system will work with the older students to find an appropriate placement, be it a GED program, a regular school or an alternative school. Any dropouts who return to a city school will be provided with an individualized re-entry plan outlining the support the student is to receive.

State Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick said yesterday that she applauds the initiative, but the system needs to be sensitive to the demands it places on its staff. Some city schools face a huge challenge this year to get all their seniors to pass the state's high school exit exams or complete a senior project as an equivalent. The schools with the highest dropout rates are also likely to be those with the most students who have yet to pass the exams.

"I just want to be sure it doesn't interfere with the students who are there and who do deserve as much attention as possible to ensure their graduation," Grasmick said.

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Still, she said, "The dropout rate in Baltimore City has been entirely too high. We know that dropping out without a high school diploma or a GED places a student at a huge disadvantage in terms of life opportunities."

Brice said the central office will provide support to the schools with the largest number of dropouts to track down. But in Alonso's letter to principals, he noted that high schools received an extra $11 million as a result of a budget reorganization this year, and the system nearly doubled the number of seats in its alternative schools.

The city schools have a financial incentive to get dropouts back because funding is determined by enrollment on Sept. 30 of each year. Baltimore's schools have been losing enrollment for four decades, and Alonso says the system must reverse that.

In September 2004, then-schools CEO Bonnie S. Copeland and her staff tried to find students who hadn't shown up at school. Gov. Martin O'Malley, who was mayor at the time, provided firefighters to knock on doors and city 311 operators to call students' homes. System officials said yesterday that they didn't know how many students re-enrolled as a result of that effort.

Michael Sarbanes, a spokesman for Alonso, said the system is putting the responsibility on principals this time to promote the mentality in schools that there are no throwaway kids. Nonetheless, officials are appealing to other public agencies and community groups to help with the work.

Brice said schools will be expected to review their data monthly all year to see whether any students have dropped out. He said schools will be expected to make a minimum of three phone calls and one home visit to each new dropout. Previously, a dropout in Baltimore received a letter from the school and sometimes a single phone call.

Alonso said that when a student in a small town drops out of school, "it becomes a community event." In Baltimore and other big cities, "thousands of kids drop out, and we're not batting an eye."

RESOURCE FAIRS

The Baltimore school system will hold resource fairs for dropouts from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday at Dunbar Middle School, 500 N. Caroline St., and Thursday at Frederick Douglass High School, 2301 Gwynns Falls Parkway.

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