• Sun highlights growth of community schools

    Last week, the Baltimore Sun wrote about the growing network of Baltimore City Community Schools. OSI-Baltimore grantee The Family League, acts as the operating manager for the City’s core of 52 Community Schools, who partner with dozens of organizations to provide enhanced and extended education opportunities, health and social services, extracurricular activities, nightly supper and food pantries, as […]

  • Why are kids missing so much school?

    Karen Webber, director of OSI-Baltimore’s education and youth development program, appeared Monday on WYPR’s Midday with Sheilah Kast to talk about chronic absenteeism in city schools. Webber, a former teacher and school principal, recently wrote  an essay called “The Importance of Student Attendance” on OSI-Baltimore’s website. Webber emphasized the importance of a positive school climate in encouraging […]

  • Naloxone is saving lives from Baltimore to Chicago

    During last week’s public safety forum, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake tweeted about police commissioner Kevin Davis’s news that in the past week, Baltimore police “saved 2 would-be overdose deaths w/ Naloxone treatments.” These interventions were possible thanks to OSI-funded police training with naloxone in recent months. OSI-Baltimore program associate Rachel Abdullahi explained OSI’s support for naloxone as a crucial […]

  • Baltimore settles another “rough ride” lawsuit

    Baltimore city’s Board of Estimates agreed to pay $95,000 to Christine Abbott, who filed a lawsuit alleging that, in 2012, she was arrested in Hampden and placed in a police van without restraints and given a “rough ride,” a practice that came under scrutiny after the death of Freddie Gray in police custody. A year […]

  • Teachers vs. Prisons

    Today, The Atlantic covered outgoing Education Secretary Arnie Duncan’s proposal to reallocate funds from corrections to education—specifically in the form of raises for teachers in underprivileged schools. He specifically mentioned Baltimore. “What’s the cumulative impact of such a massive disparity of opportunity over 13 years of a child’s education?” Duncan asked. “The linkage between education, […]

  • Listen to last week’s Talking About Race event about media bias and black communities

    Last Tuesday, OSI-Baltimore was proud to host an important conversation at the Enoch Pratt Free Library in our Talking About Race series. The topic was “Media Bias and Black Communities,” and the guests included journalist Stacey Patton and Rashad Robinson of ColorofChange.org, with moderator Joseph Torres of Free Press. It was a really great conversation. […]

  • Restorative practices in Baltimore City Schools

    In a Baltimore Sun op-ed today, Megan Feldman Bettencourt writes about restorative practices in City Springs Elementary/Middle School. “We can implement in our schools and communities the research-tested habits that foster the seeking and granting of forgiveness and prevent disagreements from escalating into violence,” she says. OSI-Baltimore helped to bring restorative practices to City Springs Schools and […]

  • PBS previews Anna Deavere Smith’s school-to-prison pipeline show

    On Tuesday, PBS Newshour aired a great 7-minute story about Anna Deavere Smith’s OSI-supported stage project on the school-to-prison pipeline, “Notes from the Field: Doing Time in Education.” In July, Smith, the veteran actor and activist whose credits include “Nurse Jackie,” came back to her native Baltimore to conduct interviews with locals, including Kevin Moore, […]

  • Bard Prison Initiative offers inmates hope—and a chance to debate

    The Wall Street Journal’s recent article, Prison vs. Harvard in an Unlikely Debate, covers the work of the Bard Prison Initiative and their inmate debate team. Leading up to a match with Harvard’s debate team, Bard team member Alex Hall said “If we win, it’s going to make a lot of people question what goes […]