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ED 438 302 TITLE INSTITUTION PUB DATE NOTE AVAILABLE FROM PUB TYPE EDRS PRICE DESCRIPTORS IDENTIFIERS ABSTRACT DOCUMENT RESUME TM 030 611 The Fact Book, 1998-1999. A Statistical Handbook. Maryland State Dept. of Education, Baltimore. 1999-00-00 60p.; For the 1997-1998 fact book, see ED 419 015. Maryland State Department of Education, 200 West Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201. Tel: 410-767-0100. Numerical/Quantitative Data (110) MF01/PC03 Plus Postage. Achievement Tests; Adult Education; American Indians; Ancillary School Services; Asian Americans; Black Students; College Bound Students; Dropouts; *Educational Finance; Elementary Secondary Education; *Enrollment; Expenditures; Hispanic Americans; Institutional Characteristics; Private Schools; Public Schools; *School Statistics; Special Education; Student Characteristics; Tables (Data); Teacher Characteristics; *Test Results; Whites *Maryland; Maryland School Performance Assessment Program This handbook presents statistics about the public and private schools of Maryland. In 1998 there were 841,671 public school students in Maryland and 175,622 nonpublic school students, representing a 9.1% increase in the public school enrollment over 5 years and a 15.9% increase in the nonpublic school enrollment over 5 years. There were 1,355 public schools in the state and 1,113 nonpublic schools. Of the state's 95,035 public school staff, 65,486 were in instructional positions. The majority of Maryland's public school students were White (55%), with the remainder being African American (36.6%), Hispanic American (4%), American Indian (0.3%), and Asian American (4%). Most of the state's teachers were White (77.2%), with 20.4% African American. The statewide average dropout rate was 4.05%, although in Baltimore City the dropout. rate was 10.22%. Most of the state's 45,033 high school graduates planned to go to college. Information is also provided about achievement test results for the Scholastic Aptitude Test and the Maryland School Performance Assessment, as well as information about teacher salaries, financial resources, special programs, correctional education, and vocational and adult education. Lists of state school information resources and local school systems are provided. (Contains 30 tables and 1 map.) (SLD) Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document.
Transcript
Page 1: Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be madeWorcester 14 6 1 4 2 1 4 NOTE: Includes non-home-based schools, e.g., vocational schools and other alternative setting schools

ED 438 302

TITLEINSTITUTIONPUB DATENOTEAVAILABLE FROM

PUB TYPEEDRS PRICEDESCRIPTORS

IDENTIFIERS

ABSTRACT

DOCUMENT RESUME

TM 030 611

The Fact Book, 1998-1999. A Statistical Handbook.Maryland State Dept. of Education, Baltimore.1999-00-0060p.; For the 1997-1998 fact book, see ED 419 015.Maryland State Department of Education, 200 West BaltimoreStreet, Baltimore, MD 21201. Tel: 410-767-0100.Numerical/Quantitative Data (110)MF01/PC03 Plus Postage.Achievement Tests; Adult Education; American Indians;Ancillary School Services; Asian Americans; Black Students;College Bound Students; Dropouts; *Educational Finance;Elementary Secondary Education; *Enrollment; Expenditures;Hispanic Americans; Institutional Characteristics; PrivateSchools; Public Schools; *School Statistics; SpecialEducation; Student Characteristics; Tables (Data); TeacherCharacteristics; *Test Results; Whites*Maryland; Maryland School Performance Assessment Program

This handbook presents statistics about the public andprivate schools of Maryland. In 1998 there were 841,671 public schoolstudents in Maryland and 175,622 nonpublic school students, representing a9.1% increase in the public school enrollment over 5 years and a 15.9%increase in the nonpublic school enrollment over 5 years. There were 1,355public schools in the state and 1,113 nonpublic schools. Of the state's95,035 public school staff, 65,486 were in instructional positions. Themajority of Maryland's public school students were White (55%), with theremainder being African American (36.6%), Hispanic American (4%), AmericanIndian (0.3%), and Asian American (4%). Most of the state's teachers wereWhite (77.2%), with 20.4% African American. The statewide average dropoutrate was 4.05%, although in Baltimore City the dropout. rate was 10.22%. Mostof the state's 45,033 high school graduates planned to go to college.Information is also provided about achievement test results for theScholastic Aptitude Test and the Maryland School Performance Assessment, aswell as information about teacher salaries, financial resources, specialprograms, correctional education, and vocational and adult education. Listsof state school information resources and local school systems are provided.(Contains 30 tables and 1 map.) (SLD)

Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be madefrom the original document.

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PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE AND

DISSEMINATE THIS MATERIAL HAS

BEEN GRANTED BY

.C(.Q,(\Sor

TO THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCESINFORMATION CENTER (ERIC)

U S DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONOffice of Educational Research and Improvement

EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATIONCENTER (ERIC)

El/his document has been reproduced asreceived from the person or organizationoriginating it

Minor changes have been made toimprove reproduction quality

Points of view or opinions stated in thisdocument do not necessarily representofficial OERI position or policy

(PYAVAILABLEJ

Ezza.Za2-1°

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Maryland State Board of Education

Member Residence Term Ends

Walter Sondheim, Jr Baltimore 1999

PresidentEdward Andrews College Park 2000

Vice President

Raymond V. Bartlett Columbia 2001

Jo Ann T. Bell Bowie 2002

George W. Fisher, Sr. Denton 2001

Morris Jones Stevensville 1999

Marilyn D. Maultsby Baltimore 2002

Judith A. Mc Hale Chevy Chase 2001

Adrienne L. Ottaviani Cumberland 1999

John Wisthoff Pasadena 2000

Rebecca Gifford Ellicott City 1999

Student Member

Maryland State Department of Education

Nancy S. GrasmickSecretary-Treasurer of the BoardState Superintendent of Schools

A. Skipp SandersDeputy State Superintendent for Administration

Richard J. SteinkeDeputy State Superintendent for School Improvement

Mark A. MoodyAssistant State SuperintendentDivision of Planning, Results, and Information Management

State of Maryland

Parris N. Glendening

Governor

The Maryland State Department of Education does not discriminate on the basis of

race, color, sex, age, national origin, religion, or disability in matters affecting employ-

ment or in providing access to programs. For inquiries related to departmental policy,

please contact the Equity Assurance and Compliance Branch, Maryland State Depart-

ment of Education, 200 West Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, (410)767 -0425-

Voice, (410) 333-6442 - TTY/TDD, (410) 333-2226 - Fax.

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BO

A Statistical Handbook

Maryland State Department of Education

200 West Baltimore Street

Baltimore, Maryland 21201

(410) 767-0100

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Selected Statistics 1

Fall Enrollment 2

Number of Schools 5

Number of Staff Employed 6

Racial Statistics 8

Dropouts and Retentions 12

GED Testing 13

Graduates and Post Graduation Plans 14

Scholastic Aptitute Test Results 16

MSPAP Results 18

Teacher Salaries 19

Financial Resources 21

Per Pupil Costs 22

Major State Aid Programs 24

Special Education Child Counts 28

Title 1 Program 32

Extended Elementary Education Program 33

Language Minority Student Populations 34

Adult Education Programs 35

Food Services Programs 36

Pupil Transportation Programs 40

School Library Media Centers 42

Public Library Statistics 44

Career and Technology Education 46

Correctional Education 48

Vocational Rehabilitation Statistics 49

Maryland's Rank Among the States 52

Other Facts 53

Additional Resources 54

Maryland Local School Superintendents 55

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83 cl EmUsilcs Dadffa R lqu SamallC@EITIMERN I

Population of Maryland, July 1, 1998 5,134,808

Local operating budget from

federal, state, and local sources

(includes State-paid retirement)

$5.9 Billion

Cost per pupil belonging (estimate) $7,100

Average 10-month Teacher Salary $42,557

Percent of teachers with:

Five years or less experience 31.7%

6-10 years experience 15.0%

11-20 years experience 21.5%

more than 20 years experience 31.8%

Percent of teachers with:

Standard Professional Certificate (SPC) 29.6%

Advanced Professional Certificate (APC) 62.2%

Percent of teachers with:

Less than Bachelor's Degree 0.6%

Bachelor's Degree 32.4%

Master's or Master's Equivalent 53.8%Master's Degree + 30 hours or higher 13.2%

Minimum number of required school days 180

Average Daily Membership (ADM), 1997-98 828,477.3

Average Daily Attendance (ADA), 1997-98 776,364.4

Percent Promoted, Prek. 12, 1997-98 96.6%

Average Percent Attending, 1997-98 93.5%

61

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[Mc Nionpti6EIGF IE E ent Sum

S9 1 79 AP

1993 1997 1998

Percent Change

Five-Year One-Year

TOTAL PUB/NONPUB 922,858 1,001,029 1,017,293 10.2% 1.6%TOTAL PUBLIC 771,377 830,744 841,671 9.1% 1.3%

Prekindergarten 17,998 19,739 20,013 11.2 1.4Kindergarten 60,300 60,385 57,813 -4.1 -4.3Grade 1 64,418 67,742 66,761 3.6 -1.4Grade 2 62,363 67,998 67,387 8.1 -0.9Grade 3 62,030 66,482 68,479 10.4 3.0Grade 4 61,166 64,763 67,230 9.9 3.8Grade 5 60,323 63,554 65,175 8.0 2.6Grade 6 60,047 62,145 64,561 7.5 3.9Ungraded Elementary 6,407 6,315 3,636 -43.2 -42.4

Grade 7 58,346 62,200 63,379 8.6 1.9Grade 8 55,264 60,010 62,174 12.5 3.6Grade 9 59,885 66,172 68,672 14.7 3.8Grade 10 49,947 57,711 59,651 19.4 3.4Grade 11 45,997 51,580 53,890 17.2 4.5Grade 12 40,550 46,532 49,321 21.6 6.0Ungraded Secondary 6,336 7,416 3,529 -44.3 -52.4

TOTAL NONPUBLIC 151,481 170,285 175,622 15.9 3.1

Prekindergarten 37,812 40,058 41,219 9.0 2.9Kindergarten 14,903 15,814 15,781 5.9 -0.2Grade 1 10,502 11,800 11,869 13.0 0.6Grade 2 9,588 11,179 11,220 17.0 0.4Grade 3 9,114 10,468 11,002 20.7 5.1Grade 4 8,561 9,999 10,364 21.1 3.7Grade 5 8,238 9,233 9,973 21.1 8.0Grade 6 8,866 9,904 10,475 18.1 5.8Ungraded Elementary 831 1,221 914 10.0 -25.1

Grade 7 8,321 9,579 10,209 22.7 6.6Grade 8 7,904 8,884 9,785 23.8 10.1Grade 9 7,423 8,660 8,821 18.8 1.9Grade 10 6,760 8,013 8,208 21.4 2.4Grade 11 6,170 7,233 7,558 22.5 4.5Grade 12 5,575 6,605 6,844 22.8 3.6Ungraded Secondary 913 1,635 1,380 51.2 -15.6

2

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Fah N Fr Ntio ens sd 1c ic oak

12

Local Unit 1993 1997 1998

Percent Change

Five-Year One-Year

Total State 771,377 830,744 841,671 9.1% 1.3%

Allegany 11,241 11,110 10,978 -2.3 -1.2

Anne Arundel 69,020 73,363 74,079 7.3 1.0

Baltimore City 112,093 107,416 106,540 -5.0 -0.8

Baltimore 96,402 104,708 105,914 9.9 1.2

Calvert 12,295 14,736 15,241 24.0 3.4

Caroline 5,168 5,635 5,685 10.0 0.9

Carroll 23,730 26,823 27,224 14.7 1.5

Cecil 13,809 15,327 15,550 12.6 1.5

Charles 20,101 21,620 22,263 10.8 3.0

Dorchester 5,179 5,175 5,143 -0.7 -0.6

Frederick 30,451 34,569 35,383 16.2 2.4

Garrett 5,116 5,105 5,082 -0.7 -0.5

Harford 34,775 38,572 38,909 11.9 0.9

Howard 34,416 40,215 41,858 21.6 4.1

Kent 2,738 2,903 2,891 5.6 -0.4

Montgomery 113,429 125,023 127,933 12.8 2.3

Prince George's 115,918 128,347 130,259 12.4 1.5

Queen Anne's 5,889 6,607 6,888 17.0 4.3

St. Mary's 13,063 14,691 14,743 12.9 0.4

Somerset 3,387 3,162 3,113 -8.1 -1.5

Talbot 4,319 4,557 4,590 6.3 0.7

Washington 19,156 20,019 20,159 5.2 0.7

Wicomico 13,471 14,229 14,330 6.4 0.7

Worcester 6,211 6,832 6,916 11.4 1.2

8

3

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an ITiramanllgdapy[land PuttlEc Sch@gsSwaniosv Se9 11196

Local Unit TotalPrekinder- Kinder-

garten gartenGrades

1-6Grades

7-12

Total State 841,671 20,013 57,813 403,229 360,616

Allegany 10,978 245 734 4,796 5,203Anne Arundel 74,079 1,012 4,939 35,404 32,724Baltimore City 106,540 4,127 7,794 52,757 41,862Baltimore 105,914 3,170 6,572 50,581 45,591Calvert 15,241 291 1,011 7,272 6,667

Caroline 5,685 198 349 2,672 2,466Carroll 27,224 173 1,911 12,966 12,174Cecil 15,550 478 1,089 7,552 6,431Charles 22,263 662 1,308 9,981 10,312Dorchester 5,143 234 329 2,337 2,243

Frederick 35,383 639 2,528 16,772 15,444Garrett 5,082 135 418 2,360 2,169Harford 38,909 826 2,731 18,508 16,844Howard 41,858 296 2,865 20,267 18,430Kent 2,891 141 173 1,327 1,250

Montgomery 127,933 2,431 9,014 61,384 55,104Prince George's 130,259 2,642 9,104 63,238 55,275Queen Anne's 6,888 277 482 3,261 2,868St. Mary's 14,743 556 995 6,760 6,432Somerset 3,113 160 228 1,375 1,350

Talbot 4,590 162 307 2,094 2,027Washington 20,159 485 1,442 9,517 8,715Wicomico 14,330 482 1,019 6,865 5,964Worcester 6,916 191 471 3,183 3,071

4

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uninT Pid Bric antRonpullac SCI1M112 Marge

gO@-gg

Public Schools

Local Unit

TotalPublic

Schools

Ele-men-tary

SeniorMiddle High

Com-bined Other

Non-public

Schools

Total State 1,355 811 224 221 65 34 1,113

Allegany 26 13 3 4 5 , 1 9

Anne Arundel 118 77 20 16 2 3 97

Baltimore City 182 104 26 24 28 0 126

Baltimore 168 102 27 30 3 6 192

Calvert 23 11 5 5 2 0 10

Caroline 10 5 2 3 0 0 6

Carroll 38 20 8 7 1 2 22

Cecil 30 17 6 6 1 0 20

Charles 33 19 8 6 0 0 15

Dorchester 14 6 2 4 1 1 6

Frederick 54 31 11 11 0 1 35

Garrett 17 9 2 3 3 0 7

Harford 53 31 10 11 0 1 37

Howard 65 37 16 10 1 1 68

Kent 8 4 0 1 3 0 4

Montgomery 188 124 33 25 3 3 240

Prince George's 187 122 25 28 2 10 126

Queen Anne's 13 7 3 3 0 0 5

St. Mary's 27 16 4 5 1 1 26

Somerset 11 5 2 2 2 0 3

Talbot 9 6 1 1 1 0 13

Washington 45 25 7 8 2 3 27

Wicomico 22 14 2 4 2 0 15

Worcester 14 6 1 4 2 1 4

NOTE: Includes non-home-based schools, e.g., vocational schools and other

alternative setting schools that take students from a primary location for a

limited period during the day or school year

105

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Full-time Equivalent StallEmploye I in MaxylintiAg I( weliminary

Local UnitGrandTotal

Instructional

TotalInstruc-tional

Teachersand

Thera-pists

Media,Guidance

and Psych.Personnel

OtherProfes-sional* Aides

Total State 95,035 65,486 51,177 3,601 1,172 9,536

Allegany 1,359 952 705 52 9 186

Anne Arundel 7,477 5,271 4,231 336 133 571

Baltimore City 11,322 8,091 6,058 373 164 1,496Baltimore 12,344 8,142 6,713 486 147 796

Calvert 1,534 1,108 829 60 12 207

Caroline 691 502 339 29 12 122

Carroll 2,704 1,915 1,568 102 16 229

Cecil 1,725 1,224 996 74 0 154

Charles 2,223 1,602 1,258 98 81 165

Dorchester 579 405 323 25 1 56

Frederick 3,881 2,622 2,154 135 45 288

Garrett 660 478 354 15 20 89Harford 4,068 2,933 2,370 166 29 368

Howard 5,018 3,736 2,721. 221 85 709

Kent 348 243 185 17 3 38

Montgomery 15,728 10,648 8,057 599 145 1,847

Prince George's 15,280 9,810 7,812 501 201 1,296

Queen Anne's 712 514 404 31 20 59

St. Mary's 1,539 1,113 910 68 3 132

Somerset 433 287 214 6 0 67

Talbot 568 353 292 24 6 31

Washington 2,177 1,608 1,292 94 3 219Wicomico 1,748 1,269 936 53 14 266Worcester 917 660 456 36 23 145

* Includes staff developers, teacher trainers, athletic coachs, remedial specialists, and

other school-level professionals

NOTE: Office of the Principal became a noninstructional area beginning July 1, 1997.

11

6

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NoninstructionalTotal Supt's, Direct., Prin., ViceNon- Assoc., Coord., Prin., and Other

Instruc- Asst. Super- Other Sch. Profes- Supporttional Supt's visors t Admin. sional Staff tt

29,549 104 1,620 3,398 1,989 22,438

407 3 28 37 5 3342,206 5 92 259 107 1,743

3,231 14 258 776 488 1,695

4,202 10 265 416 325 3,186426 2 26 50 16 332

189 2 23 19 6 139

789 3 44 86 69 587

501 5 27 54 8 407

621 3 35 77 27 479

174 3 11 24 10 126

1,259 4 63 113 25 1,054

182 2 17 20 4 139

1,135 4 78 124 58 871

1,282 4 83 151 74 970

105 3 8 11 2 81

5,080 7 169 367 397 4,140

5,470 10 206 558 245 4,451

198 3 10 23 19 143

426 2 41 52 16 315146 2 16 16 19 93

215 3 19 18 15 160

569 3 39 66 1 460479 4 42 52 38 343257 3 20 29 15 190

t Includes pupil personnel workers and school social workers

tt Includes technicians, service workers, secretaries and clerks, drivers, crafts

and trades, laborers, etc.

`127

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PagRO0gadeMs Iq MiEc@Fm[1[1 111E3

Region/Local Unit

TotalStudents

AfricanAmerican

American Indian/Alaskan Native

Number Percent Number Percent

Total State 841,671 307,906 36.6% 2,840 0.3%

Baltimore

Metropolitan 394,524 150,251 38.1 1,173 0.3

Anne Arundel 74,079 14,226 19.2 111 0.1

Baltimore City 106,540 92,029 86.4 417 0.4

Baltimore 105,914 31,046 29.3 394 0.4

Carroll 27,224 621 2.3 42 0.2

Harford 38,909 5,120 13.2 162 0.4

Howard 41,858 7,209 17.2 47 0.1

National Capital 258,192 125,607 48.6 1,106 0.4

Montgomery 127,933 26,852 21.0 428 0.3

Prince George's 130,259 98,755 75.8 678 0.5

Western Maryland 71,602 4,626 6.5 113 0.2

Allegany 10,978 322 2.9 28 0.3

Frederick 35,383 3,000 8.5 57 0.2

Garrett 5,082 15 0.3 0 *

Washington 20,159 1,289 6.4 28 0.1

Upper Shore 35,604 4,692 13.2 58 0.2

Caroline 5,685 1,202 21.1 3 *

Cecil 15,550 815 5.2 29 0.2

Kent 2,891 761 26.3 2 0.1

Queen Anne's 6,888 786 11.4 15 0.2

Talbot 4,590 1,128 24.6 9 0.2

Lower Shore 29,502 10,522 35.7 28 0.1

Dorchester 5,143 2,139 41.6 4 0.1

Somerset 3,113 1,436 46.1 2 *

Wicomico 14,330 4,923 34.4 13 *

Worcester 6,916 2,024 29.3 9 0.1

Southern Maryland 52,247 12,208 23.4 362 0.7

Calvert 15,241 2,451 16.1 28 0.2

Charles 22,263 6,893 31.0 235 1.1

St. Mary's 14,743 2,864 19.4 99 0.7

*Less than 0.1 percent

8 13

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Asian/PacificIslander Hispanic White

Number Percent Number Percent Number Percent

34,065 4.0% 33,580 4.0% 463,280 55.0%

10,677 2.7 5,146 1.3 227,277 57.6

1,834 2.5 1,380 1.9 56,528 76.3

617 0.6 524 0.5 12,953 12.2

3,792 3.6 1,393 1.3 69,289 65.4

263 1.0 219 0.8 26,079 95.8

731 1.9 781 2.0 32,115 82.5

3,440 8.2 849 2.0 30,313 72.4

20,945 8.1 25,994 10.1 84,540 32.7

16,387 12.8 17,841 13.9 66,425 51.9

4,558 3.5 8,153 6.3 18,115 13.9

979 1.4 924 1.3 64,960 90.7

79 0.7 30 0.3 10,519 95.9

651 1.8 641 1.8 31,034 87.7

7 0.1 8 0.2 5,052 99.4

242 1.2 245 1.2 18,355 91.1

235 0.7 437 1.2 30,182 84.8

28 0.5 78 1.4 4,374 76.9

101 0.6 218 1.4 14,387 92.5

18 0.6 48 1.7 2,062 71.3

35 0.5 31 0.5 6,021 87.4

53 1.2 62 1.4 3,338 72.7

372 1.3 353 1.2 18,227 61.8

40 0.8 47 0.9 2,913 56.6

10 0.3 24 0.8 1,641 52.7

268 1.9 210 1.5 8,916 62.2

54 0.8 72 1.0 4,757 68.8

857 1.6 726 1.4 38,094 72.9

115 0.8 123 0.8 12,524 82.2

468 2.1 363 1.6 14,304 64.3

274 1.9 240 1.6 11,266 76.4

1 4...

9

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Maryland Public S6iioolTeaches by ace and Gander9cleberl DP PTO ryl)

Local UnitGrandTotal

UnknownRace/

Gender

African American

Total Percent Male Female

Total State 50,915 103 10,363 20.4% 2,320 8,043

Allegany 692 0 4 0.6 1 3

Anne Arundel 4,225 7 406 9.6 73 333

Baltimore City 6,171 22 3,829 62.0 817 3,012

Baltimore 6,697 15 612 9.1 168 444

Calvert 811 0 95 11.7 23 72

Caroline 335 0 33 9.9 7 26

Carroll 1,530 3 16 1.0 4 . 12

Cecil 995 2 32 3.2 8 24

Charles 1,245 1 183 14.7 31 152

Dorchester 325 1 51 15.7 13 38

Frederick 2,085 1 73 3.5 10 63

Garrett 349 0 0 0.0 0 0

Harford 2,309 0 104 4.5 24 80

Howard 2,710 4 323 11.9 64 259

Kent 185 0 23 12.4 12 11

Montgomery 8,065 17 824 10.2 182 642

Prince George's 7,720 27 3,395 44.0 802 2,593

Queen Anne's 403 0 38 9.4 10 28

St. Mary's 900 1 66 7.3 17 49

Somerset 212 0 40 18.9 6 34

Talbot 290 1 27 9.3 6 21

Washington 1,282 1 12 0.9 2 10

Wicomico 929 0 123 13.2 24 99

Worcester 450 0 54 12.0 16 38

*American Indian/Alaskan Native, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Hispanic

15

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White Other*

Total Percent Male Female Total Percent Male Female

39,305 77.2% 9,370 29,935 1,144 2.2% 204 940

687 99.3 223 464 1 0.1 1 03,754 88.9 762 2,992 58 13 452,239 36.1 655 1,584 107 1.7 21 865,963 90.1 1,436 4,527 25 0.4 21 4

710 88.0 163 547 2 0.2 2 0

302 88.8 71 231 5 1.5 0 51,504 98.3 338 1,166 7 0.5 2 5

955 94.5 209 746 22 2.2 1 21

1,036 84.5 250 786 6 0.5 4 2270 77.8 66 204 25 7.2 1 24

1,984 96.3 542 1,442 3 0.1 3 0349 95.4 99 250 17 4.6 0 17

2,184 92.8 569 1,615 65 2.8 4 61

2,311 87.2 527 1,784 11 0.4 11 0162 25.8 44 118 444 70.6 0 444

6,698 86.3 1,474 5,224 225 2.9 82 1434,120 54.3 952 3,168 39 0.5 35 4

361 88.7 84 277 8 2.0 0 8823 92,3 199 624 2 0.2 2 0172 80.4 32 140 2 0.9 0 2

260 89.7 67 193 2 0.7 0 21,266 98.4 332 934 7 0.5 1 6

800 86.6 182 618 1 0.1 0 1

395 77.6 94 301 60 11.8 0 60

16

11

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rd6itiand ublic High choplihopouts and Retentions!ales 'it 109718

Local UnitNumber ofDropouts*

DropoutRate

HoldingPowert

Total/Average State 9,775 4.05% 71.4%

Total/Average Counties 6,676 3.16% 78.9%

Allegany 127 3.38 89.4

Anne Arundel 884 4.16 67.1

Baltimore City 3,099 10.22 35.7

Baltimore 660 2.19 80.1

Calvert 239 5.40 84.7

Caroline 103 6.21 64.9

Carroll 224 2.75 86.9

Cecil 153 3.75 75.8

Charles 310 4.35 79.5

Dorchester 93 5.91 67.0

Frederick 253 2.39 90.1

Garrett 74 4.78 77.6

Harford 338 3.05 75.8

Howard 252 2.06 88.9

Kent 29 3.76 69.8

Montgomery 735 1.96 87.3

Prince George's 1,260 3.14 75.0

Queen Anne's 82 4.59 79.2

St. Mary's 180 3.94 71.9

Somerset 47 4.77 69.1

Talbot 19 1.38 69.0

Washington 311 5.23 74.3

Wicomico 237 5.80 70.2

Worcester 66 3.16 77.3

* Excludes re-entries

t Graduates as a percentage of ninth grade enrollment four years earlier

1712

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ED %Min y Felt CentrState DI Maryland

ly MT-June 190

Test CenterTotal Number Incomplete

Tested Passed Testing FailedPercentPassed*

Total State 12,091 6,598 388 5,105 56.4%

Baltimore Metropolitan AreaBaltimore 2,072 717 94 1,261 36.2Bel Air 576 328 13 235 58.3Catonsville 899 460 37 402 53.4Dundalk 586 302 22 262 53.5Severn 651 420 13 218 65.8Parkville 465 245 13 207 54.2Westminster 345 215 8 122 63.8

Northwest

Frederick 191 139 9 43 76.4Frostburg 193 140 3 50 73.7Hagerstown 190 127 2 61 67.6McHenry 26 13 0 13 50.0

Washington National Capital AreaLanham 179 95 5 79 54.6Riverdale 359 185 4 170 52.1Rockville 912 525 44 343 60.5Largo 454 185 8 261 41.5

Southern Maryland

Leonardtown 202 136 3 63 68.3Waldorf 329 214 15 100 68.2

Eastern Shore

Chesapeake College 171 113 6 52 68.5Salisbury 185 110 5 70 61.1North East 205 127 10 68 65.1

Special Testing

Correctional Institutions 1,954 1,304 57 593 68.7Disabled Persons Testing t56 28 0 28 50.0Job Corps Centers 564 215 10 339 38.8Office-MSDE 35 21 1 13 61.8Other 292 tt234 6 52 81.8

. * Pass Rate computed without regard to incomplete testing

t Special accommodations were made for an additional 33 persons tested inregular centers

ttlncludes 66 diplomas issued to Maryland residents who tested out-of-state or inthe military

NOTE: The GED test is used to assess the educational development of adults who

have not completed their formal high school education. A Maryland High

School Diploma is awarded upon successful completion of the test.

18 13

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U CT GC 9 GraduM s andMantua nsMI RA PRO RC SchogNs

Local Unit Total

Number of Graduates

HighSchoolDiploma

SpecialEducation

Completion

EarlyCollege

Admission

Total State 45,033 44,423 478 132

Allegany 796 786 9, 1

Anne Arundel 3,942 3,935 1 6

Baltimore City 3,915 3,727 188 0

Baltimore 5,920 5,853 64 3

Calvert 834 831 2 1

Caroline 285 282 3 0

Carroll 1,591 1,573 13 5

Cecil 829 786 13 30

Charles 1,252 1,238 14 0

Dorchester 278 275 3 0

Frederick 2,109 2,083 4 22

Garrett 316 313 1 2

Harford 2,027 2,017 8 2

Howard 2,426 2,389 12 25

Kent 141 141 0 0

Montgomery 7,313 7,196 100 17

Prince George's 7,274 7,259 13 2

Queen Anne's 335 334 1 0

St. Mary's 761 748 13 0

Somerset 195 195 0 0

Talbot 236 232 4 0

Washington 1,141 1,125 7 9

Wicomico 746 741 0 5

Worcester 371 364 5 2

* Duplicated with other columns

t Includes nonrespondents

NOTE: Percentages based on pre-graduation plans submitted by the

class of 1998

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Graduation PlansCollege Trade/

BusinessSchool Work Military Othert

TotalCollege

Full-time

Part-time*

80.8% 65.9% 14.9% 3.6% 15.7% 4.5% 6.4%

74.0 62.6 11.4 2.5 23.4, 3.8 5.7

81.5 63.6 17.9 3.3 17.7 4.0 6.6

80.1 58.0 22.1 4.5 18.5 5.4 5.3

80.4 64.2 16.2 3.2 18.2 4.2 6.7

74.1 53.6 20.5 3.4 21.6 5.0 7.6

69.6 53.1 16.5 3.5 26.4 7.9 6.3

80.8 63.4 17.4 3.6 19.5 4.1 4.8

69.0 51.1 17.9 4.5 24.3 5.5 7.5

78.1 61.6 16.5 3.9 16.7 6.6 5.8

70.0 53.6 16.4 7.2 24.2 6.3 8.2

77.7 63.8 13.9 3.1 21.1 4.1 6.7

68.4 50.5 17.9 5.3 33.7 4.9 11.6

82.6 67.1 15.5 4.7 15.4 3.7 5.8

89.4 81.7 7.7 1.6 8.0 2.4 5.1

76.4 54.3 22.1 5.0 24.3 5.7 7.1

86.8 80.8 6.0 1.8 6.7 2.7 5.7

80.1 62.6 17.5 .5.5 13.0 5.3 8.1

75.9 55.9 20.0 5.9 23.2 7.4 4.7

78.0 55.5 22.5 4.8 22.3 8.6 7.4

70.1 53.3 16.8 4.1 27.4 14.2 2.5

75.6 62.9 12.7 3.8 16.9 4.6 5.5

72.6 58.0 14.6 4.3 21.7 4.9 7.4

80.5 61.5 19.0 2.0 20.0 6.5 4.7

77.4 67.5 9.9 1.1 22.6 8.8 3.3

2015

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s in Average c olasticptitude Test. s its

to 1190

Year

Verbal Mathematics

Maryland U. S. Maryland U. S.

1994 505 499 503 504

1995 506 504 503 506

1996 507 505 504 508

1997 507 505 507. 511

1998 506 505 508 512

1998 Maryland's Results by Gender/Ethnic Group

Average Score

Gender/Ethnic Group Verbal Math

Male

Female

509

503

526

493

American Indian/Alaskan Native 464 470

Asian/Pacific Islander 514 575

African American 429 419

Hispanic 484 485

White 533 541

1998 Maryland's Results Compared to Nearby States

State% Taking

SAT

Average Score

Verbal Math

Maryland 65% 506 508

Delaware 70% 501 493

Pennsylvania 71% 497 495

District of Columbia 83% 488 476

Virginia 66% 507 499

New York 76% 495 503

New Jersey 79% 497 508

* Scores range from 200 to 800; Scores from prior to 1996 have been recentered

for comparison purposes

Source: College Bound Seniors; 1998 Profile of SAT and Achievement Test Takers

NOTE: Includes public and nonpublic test takers

1621

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SuLalastic Aptitute Test ScoresMaryland gublic High Schools1998

Local Unit

Numberof

Test Takers

Average Scores

Verbal Math

Total State 26,578 499 505

Allegany 352 486 492

Anne Arundel 2,109 511' 530

Baltimore City 1,836 424 412

Baltimore 3,145 496 496

Calvert 450 524 519

Caroline 147 489 486

Carroll 926 518 527

Cecil 354 497 513

Charles 572 494 500

Dorchester 115 487 479

Frederick 1,161 521 532

Garrett 125 506 525

Harford 1,200 525 529

Howard 1,729 536 550Kent 89 489 463

Montgomery 5,455 537 554Prince George's 3,977 447 443

Queen Anne's 158 491 492St. Mary's 360 511 514

Somerset 77 457 438

Talbot 139 491 489

Washington 531 499 512

Wicomico 386 491 490

Worcester 209 487 487

Unknown 976 492 497

Source: Education Testing Service Data Tape "1998 Maryland Scholastic

Aptitute Test Summary Report"

2217

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ssess1997-9

d cho Performanc!Omni esufir

Percent Scoring at Satisfactory Level

Grade/Race Reading WritingLanguage Mathe- Social

Usage matics Science Studies

Grade 3 41.6% 46.9% 49.4% 41.6% 39.4% 41.0%

American Indian/

Alaskan Native 31.3 38.5 40.5 33.3 30.0 32.5

African American 23.2 30.1 32.7 20.0 20.2 22.2

Asian/Pacific Islander 58.6 66.0 71.6 60.9 53.4 52.9

Hispanic 35.1 42.8 42.6 32.9 31.4 31.7

White 52.8 57.1 59.5 54.8 51.7 53.2

Grade 5 40.4 42.0 51.4 47.9 51.6 43.8

American Indian/

Alaskan Native 34.7 44.0 46.3 39.9 40.4 36.3

African American 23.0 24.4 33.1 24.0 29.4 23.2

Asian/Pacific Islander 57.0 61.6 72.9 67.3 69.9 57.6

Hispanic 30.9 33.4 39.7 35.3 40.0 28.1

White 50.5 52.1 62.1 62.3 65.1 56.8

Grade 8 25.5 43.5 47.8 47.4 48.7 42.3

American Indian/

Alaskan Native 20.7 34.4 39.6 41.3 39.7 33.9

African American 12.1 25.7 29.3 21.3 25.0 22.6

Asian/Pacific Islander 46.9 67.7 71.9 75.2 72.8 62.6

Hispanic 18.4 36.5 38.9 38.6 38.6 32.0

White 32.4 53.0 57.9 61.8 62.0 53.6

* State satisfactory standard is 70%

2318

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Avenge Salarie6 forinstructio sal Positions InMaryland Public School& '1997-g

Local Unit

ProfessionalInstructional

Staff PrincipalAssistantPrincipal Teacher*

State Average $43,081 $72,057 $61,159 $41,404

Allegany 38,758 60,609 48,107 37,804

Anne Arundel 44,260 78,094 70,061 42,001

Baltimore City 39,770 66,064 55,534 38,171

Baltimore 42,971 71,124 63,808 41,143

Calvert 46,378 79,816 66,158 44,718

Caroline 39,686 66,467 54,004 38,217

Carroll 43,348 74,011 64,546 41,831

Cecil 40,311 64,019 53,572 39,071

Charles 41,975 67,669 52,058 40,473

Dorchester 40,590 64,813 51,217 38,919

Frederick 40,574 66,626 58,223 39,085

Garrett 36,910 54,267 47,605 35,886

Harford 38,747 65,551 57,013 37,910

Howard 43,708 77,816 61,335 41,751

Kent 42,846 64,916 58,255 41,178

Montgomery 51,106 84,131 74,888 49,342

Prince George's 41,822 74,693 59,645 40,087

Queen Anne's 40,077 66,698 57,325 38,803

St. Mary's 41,156 66,176 50,715 40,032

Somerset 38,790 54,592 51,645 36,662

Talbot 38,913 61,717 44,663 37,765

Washington 39,247 63,788 52,378 38,237

Wicomico 39,031 62,797 53,407 37,737

Worcester 41,598 67,858 59,346 39,834

* Classroom and other teachers, therapists, librarians, guidance counselors and

school psychologists

24

19

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Salary Range for Ten-ionthMaryland Public schoolTeachers: 1998-99

Local Unit

SalaryAnnual Percentage

IncreaseBeginning(Bachelor's

Step 1)

Mid-level(Master's& APC-Step 11)

Maxi-mum*

Begin-ning

Mid-level

Allegany $25,174 $38,191 $40,809 3.0% 1.1%

Anne Arundel 27,083 42,707 60,046 4.9% -3.5%

Baltimore City 27,355 39,302 55,720 10.8% 13.4%

Baltimore 28,750 41,880 55,720 2.7% 3.0%

Calvert 28,000 49,112 62,337 4.2% 3.0%

Caroline 28,271 39,603 52,359 2.0% 2.0%

Carroll 27,352 41,373 58,135 2.0% 3.6%

Cecil 28,113 38,338 51,263 3.8% 3.6%

Charles 28,258 41,047 57,475 2.0% 2.0%

Dorchester 27,675 37,825 51,714 2.5% 2.5%

Frederick 27,560 40,491 55,385 4.0% 4.0%

Garrett 24,519 35,881 46,007 2.0% 1.9%

Harford 27,947 40,879 52,726 2.2% 5.4%

Howard 27,668 43,065 59,672 1.8% 2.5%

Kent 26,707 39,065 54,439 1.0% -2.5%

Montgomery 30,891 49,656 65,325 3.3% 4.4%

Prince George's 28,752 43,046 60,390 5.9% 4.0%

Queen Anne's 28,000 38,785 54,065 2.0% 1.7%

St. Mary's 29,277 40,493 56,554 2.5% 1.4%

Somerset 25,877 35,904 47,147 0.0% 0.0%

Talbot 27,500 38,500 54,600 1.9% 2.1%

Washington 27,000 35,171 49,257 7.7% 3.0%

Wicomico 27,130 38,260 51,820 3.7% 4.5%

Worcester 27,654 39,049 53,758 3.0% 3.0%

* Educational level and years of experience required to reach maximum varies

betWeen local units

20

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Financial ResourcesMaryland Public SO') Is1997-9

Where the Money Comes From

LOCAL GOVERNMENT STATE

OTHER SOURCES FEDERAL

Local Government $ 2,999,644,354 51.9%State 2,378,116,216 41.1%Federal 328,356,930 5.7%Other Sources 74,431,301 1.3%

Where the Money Goes

STUDENT TRANSPORTATION OPERATION/

MID-LEVEL ADMINISTRATION

SPECIALEDUCATION*'

OTHER

INSTRUCTIONALCOSTS

MAINTENANCE

FIXED CHARGES

Nr

INSTRUCTIONAL SALARIES

ADMINISTRATION

Administration $122,083,116 2.1%Instructional Salaries 2,204,463,191 38.2%Other Instructional Costs 176,613,526 3.1%Special Education 666,891,133 11.5%

Mid-level Administration* 367,200,557 6.4%Student Transportation 258,687,229 4.5%Operation! Maintenance 497,880,872 8.6%Fixed Charges 1,218,166,931 21.1%Othert 263,047,948 4.6%

* Includes Office of the Principal and Instructional Supervision

tStudent Personnel and Health Services, Adult Education, Community Services, Net

Food Service, and current equipment

26 21

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Charles

Calvert

Wicom

ico

Talbot

Harford

Allegany

Cecil

Frederick

Carroll

Washington

Caroline

4,716.227

.1 6,216

L,

776,202

_16,132

-.-.4..

16,131

106,122

.16,116

1 6,066

6,047

5,985

1,0002,000

3,0004,000

5,0006,000

7,0008,000

9,000

Cost per P

upil

* Includes the following expenditure categories:

administration; m

id-level administration; instructional salaries and w

ages;textbooks and other instructional

materials; other instructional costs; special education;

student personnel services; health services; studenttransportation; operation of plant; m

aintenance of

plant; fixed charges; and state-paid teachers' retirement.

Expenditures for equipm

ent, tuition payments, and interfund

transfers are excluded.

2'7(-4

2Th

NO

TE

: Cost per pupil reflects the average cost of providing

educational and related services to the students of eachlocal school system

.

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Major Slat 8id rogramsFor Maryland ublic Schools11 a -99 (1Tholosands of DollarQ

APEX Funds

Local Unit

TotalAPEXFunds

BasicCurrentExpense

Aid

Compen-satory

Education

TargetedPovertyI and IIGrants

SpecialEducationFormula

Total State $1,620,423 $1,518,740 $101,683 $26,163 $81,253

Allegany 31,056 27,975 3,081 774 1,222Anne Arundel 118,741 115,369 3,372 1,414 6,680Baltimore City 337,999 281,063 56,936 2,270 23,080Baltimore 172,119 166,030 6,089 3,337 6,739Calvert 28,502 27,882 620 251 582

Caroline 15,654 14,736 918 339 481Carroll 59,279 58,357 922 292 1,741Cecil 36,168 34,821 1,347 403 1,205Charles 46,480 45,246 1,235 603 1,952Dorchester 12,618 11,627 991 357 461

Frederick 73,820 72,257 1,564 606 1,986Garrett 13,016 12,003 1,013 346 535Harford 85,370 83,141 2,229 825 2,727Howard 61,694 60,812 882 458 2,542Kent 4,822 4,582 240 130 352

Montgomery 98,171 94,839 3,332 3,339 8,490Prince George's 283,637 274,356 9,281 7,741 14,847Queen Anne's 11,369 11,029 339 154 394St. Mary's 33,263 31,824 1,439 471 1,660Somerset 8,605 7,780 825 268 341

Talbot 3,055 2,821 234 147 270Washington 46,332 44,153 2,178 745 1,710Wicomico 35,226 32,993 2,233 595 1,000Worcester 3,427 3,044 383 298 256Unallocated 0 0 0 0 0

* Excludes funding for aging schools

2824

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Transpor-tationAid

School Accountability Funding for Excellence (SAFE)*

TargetedImprove-

mentGrants

Non- andLimitedEnglish

Proficient

ExtendedElemen-

taryEducation

Teacher EffectiveDevelop- Schools &ment & Elementary

Mentoring Libraries

$112,251 $16,318 $23,549 $19,263 $13,388 $9,000

2,481 529 7 348 192 4010,680 613 660 1,295 232 2699,247 4,328 825 4,135 1,392 380

13,196 1,518 1,824 1,190 8,484 3761,895 132 24 454 8 54

1,265 269 88 351 64 204,165 188 97 172 48 992,318 286 46 810 80 554,317 353 108 1,070 96 781,260 205 51 412 72 18

4,093 360 197 812 80 1261,609 187 0 311 120 195,386 503 197 850 128 1394,994 204 1,213 255 24 148

836 60 48 280 56 10

13,211 1,059 10,942 1,266 568 45418,207 3,961 6,470 1,732 1,088 5,963

1,412 70 29 351 32 242,848 284 84 873 96 52

982 185 46 310 72 11

805 44 39 315 48 163,198 464 243 599 200 732,407 430 248 790 128 511,439 86 63 282 80 25

0 0 0 0 0 500

29'25

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$3,000

AID PER PUPIL

$2,000 $1,000

WEALTH PER PUPIL

$100,000 $200,000 $300,000 $400,000

Baltimore City $2,

Caroline 2,:01

Somerset

Allegany

Wicomico

Dorchester

Cecil

Garrett

St. Mary's

Washington

Harford

Prince George's

Carroll

Charles

Frederick

Calvert

State Average

Queen Anne's

Kent

Baltimore

Anne Arundel

Howard

Montgomery

Talbot

Worcester

40 1

,703,67 151,19;....1111111

910

2,051

2,323

185,587

194,533

194,795

200,534

.

,

8

,662

74,235

'84,060

293,500

.,:.;.Y.t:.4N4P-Wi': Int.::,..'.-1.6 $129,061

:',:r..,i5-;.-yini':,.. g ,, 134,156

146,86

1712,511

2,434

2,434

2,407

2,338

2,336

2,292

2,277

2,277

2,221

2,206

1,994

1,94

1,

1

1

00

727

696

652

1,579

8 4

662

476

1

1

C'e.14.1MVEelfiic;k.'-'-', ,-!,,.

i';:itZer,f1.1MP:';'.:::;:....,,-1.05f4M.V

.r.': . , % \-, J::1,- ,y 202,530

L. 202,541

litielin 209,741v., . . 0 '' - 211,737

.;;V::- 7 239,40

., 245,7

26

Lr .;;. ,. . ,. ,,,i<., !:!.,L;.1: "..:'

.78,355

,;',:::.., ff-0,tigAI

,e):,v,;,,.f?.,:;':t...-:-:..',L-',.':::,L.',.-2.:,:.,:.rt.,/,1..;).-,. 394,728

, .:..;c!'b ,Y 413,237

4:?.,:i.,:.;,::!'....,.g:;.:rn J.;:,.':::ii 437,530

* Local wealth includes adjusted real property assessment, public utility operating property and net taxable income.

%.)SOURCE: 1998-99 State Aid Calculation

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

30

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Students Receiving Special EducalowServices in M ryland elsBy Mali n'% 199 99

Local Unit

TotalSpecial

Education

Regular SchOol

RegularClass

ResourceRoom

SeparateClass

Total State 111,688 51,725 23,827 27,367

Allegany 1,765 612 806 331

Anne Arundel 10,455 5,479 1,859 2,086

Baltimore City 18,686 4,934 2,837 8,786

Baltimore 13,023 6,587 2,918 2,587

Calvert 2,078 987 565 383

Caroline 796 258 394 138

Carroll 3,835 2,769 530 419

Cecil 2,364 1,217 552 565

Charles 2,869 1,644 539 607

Dorchester 671 490 106 74

Frederick 4,653 3,306 804 353

Garrett 762 332 213 215.Harford 5,551 2,876 2,052 384

Howard 4,285 2,309 1,374 405

Kent 351 180 119 50

Montgomery 15,891 6,698 2,491 5,730

Prince George's 13,189 4,928 3,378 3,028

Queen Anne's 1,012 564 294 133

St. Mary's 2,036 958 702 355

Somerset 412 229 121 59

Talbot 544 419 87 36

Washington 2,981 2,209 418 175

Wicomico 1,581 967 322 286

Worcester 881 535 216 126

State Operated 1,017 238 130 56

* Regular Class-students receiving special education services outside the regularclassroom for less than 21 percent of the school day

Resource Room-students receiving special education services outside the regularclassroom for 21 to 60 percent of the school day

Separate Class-students receiving special education services outside theregular classroom for more than 60 percent of the school day

3128

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Special School

Other LocationPublic Nonpublic

DayResi-

dentialResi-

Day dential Home Hospital

4,134 612 3,059 457 480 27

4 0 6 4 2 0368 9 382 39 224 9986 19 1,010 37 72 5559 23 329 18 2 0109 2 24 0 7 1

3 0 0 1 2 042 0 51 10 13 1

1 3 9 4 13 014 7 5 29 24 0

1 0 0 0 0

134 1 26 9 16 40 0 1 0 1 0

142 3 60 14 20 0119 0 65 6 6 1

0 0 1 0 1

570 72 290 22 16 2975 22 721 105 29 3

4 0 8 0 9 02 3 3 4 8 1

1 0 2 0 0 0

0 0 1 0 1 0100 2 65 2 10 0

0 1 0 3 2 00 0 0 2 2 00 445 0 148 0 0

Special School-students receiving special education services more than 50 percentof the school day in a separate facility

Home/Hospital-students receiving special education in hospital programs orhomebound programs

32 29

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&Mc ppL nditions titodentsRacer of Sp Val Education 30 oc s

M 0ant 11 g -99

Local Unit

TotalSpecial

Education

Deaf/ TraumaticMentally Hearing Brain Speech/Retarded Impaired Injury Autism Language

Total State 111,688 6,753 1,458 327 1,591 32,723

Allegany 1,765 125 8 ,3 3 452Anne Arundel 10,455 432 78 32 206 2,729Baltimore City 18,686 2,300 126 69 323 5,411Baltimore 13,023 629 130 33 304 4,122Calvert 2,078 96 20 3 17 643

Caroline 796 66 6 1 11 261Carroll 3,724 21 22 15 28 1,467Cecil 2,364 102 19 11 9 645Charles 2,869 306 31 9 14 708Dorchester 671 68 9 2 4 204

Frederick 4,653 136 37 8 91 1,360Garrett 762 29 5 0 1 233Harford 5,551 255 34 16 33 1,644Howard 4,285 178 28 21 169 1,341Kent 351 25 4 4 3 104

Montgomery 15,891 278 202 28 82 5,678Prince George's 13,189 790 205 36 209 3,302Queen Anne's 1,012 27 9 2 8 152St. Mary's 2,036 113 23 9 13 601Somerset 412 63 1 1 5 78

Talbot 544 92 3 2 4 178Washington 2,981 161 23 12 27 716Wicomico 1,581 231 16 5 22 374Worcester 881 102 5 5 5 311State Operated 1,128 128 414 0 0 9

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VisuallyImpaired

Emotion-ally

Disturbed

Orthope-dically

Impaired

Other SpecificHealth Learning Multiple Deaf/

Impaired* Disability Handicap Blind

563 8,353 572 6,790 45,907 6,629 22

2 75 8 161 830 . 98 0

21 743 21 606 4,843 744 0

114 2,343 118 894 6,767 220 1

33 1,013 36 778 5,494 450 1

10 124 6 76 1,036 47 0

0 28 2 3 391 27 0

10 115 19 219 1,446 361 1

5 95 17 76 1,329 56 0

6 241 7 105 1,289 153 0

4 10 0 7 325 38 0

18 260 23 407 2,192 120 1

0 74 1 4 382 33 0

14 234 23 798 2,354 146 0

17 255 42 464 1,593 176 1

3 10 3 19 170 6 0

63 1,143 59 491 5,534 2,332 1

44 1,170 136 1,089 4,963 1,240 5

1 40 7 71 668 27 0

9 86 13 44 1,091 33 1

2 8 2 17 230 5 0

3 19 3 7 222 11 0

13 110 17 343 1,444 115 0

7 41 6 84 702 93 0

3 8 3 20 405 14 0

161 108 0 7 207 84 10

3431

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Title 1* StatisticsMarylon Public Schools19971

Local Unit

TotalTitle 1Expen-ditures

Numberof

Partici-pants

AverageCost perPartici-

pant

Numberof Schools

School-Total wide

Total State $94,525,910 119,041 $794 412 300

Allegany 2,728,700 4,512 605 14 13

Anne Arundel 4,801,989 2,466 1,947 20 4

Baltimore City 39,702,931 42,092 943 142 133

Baltimore 9,662,537 13,147 735 25 25

Calvert 656,454 667 984 7 0

Caroline 540,668 2,032 266 5 3

Carroll 858,868 848 1,013 5 0

Cecil 1,005,368 448 2,244 9 5Charles 1,180,773 786 1,502 8 2

Dorchester 954,603 1,822 524 5 4

Frederick 1,568,986 2,789 563 14 10

Garrett 1,018,647 2,186 466 8 8

Harford 1,977,670 2,424 816 10 4

Howard 1,176,394 1,416 831 7 3Kent 303,639 1,097 277 5 3

Montgomery 7,401,763 4,580 1,616 21 4

Prince George's 10,859,249 26,145 415 59 59

Queen Anne's 570,149 221 2,580 7 0

St. Mary's 1,304,318 2,649 492 8 6Somerset 665,953 650 1,025 5 4

Talbot 457,898 416 1,101 2 0

Washington 2,012,123 2,311 871 11 6

Wicomico 2,175,940 2,607 835 11 4

Worcester 940,290 730 1,288 4 0

* Title I is a federally-funded program designed to help disadvantaged children meet

challenging content and student performance standards

t Schools with schoolwide programs are included in Total Schools column

NOTE: Excludes migrant programs, neglected and delinquent (N&D) programs in

correctional institutions, and juvenile services; nonpublic school programs

are included.

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Extended Elementary EducationProvanr ParticipantsMaryland 7111lt Schools 1998-99

Local Unit

Prekinder-garten

Participants

Number ofTeachers/

SitesStateAid

Total State 10,760 271.5 $19,262,500

Allegany 200 5.0 348,315

Anne Arundel 680 17.0 1,295,265

Baltimore City 2,400 60.0 4,134,779

Baltimore 700 17.5 1,189,770

Calvert 260 6.5 453,810

Caroline 180 4.5 351,484

Carroll 100 2.5 171,658

Cecil 460 11.5 809,625

Charles 640 16.0 1,069,945

Dorchester 240 6.0 411,978

Frederick 420 10.5 812,125

Garrett 100 5.0 311,484

Harford 460 11.5 850,293

Howard 140 3.5 255,321

Kent 160 4.0 279,652

Montgomery 620 15.5 1,265,933

Prince George's 940 23.5 1,731,575

Queen Anne's 240 6.0 350,815

St. Mary's 400 10.0 873,288

Somerset 160 4.0 309,652

Talbot 180 4.5 314,652

Washington 340 8.5 598,636

Wicomico 560 14.0 790,293

Worcester 180 4.5 282,152

* The Extended Elementary Education Program (EEEP) is a half-day program in all

locations except Garrett County where it is a full-day program

NOTE: The EEEP is a state-funded program to help four-year-old children

develop and maintain the basic skills required for successful school

performance. The program provides developmentally appropriate

experiences that address cognitive, social, emotional, and physical needs

of young children.

36

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Limit GA EnglishSpeaking Students indlariland Public Schools

Geographic Distribution of LEP Studentsin Maryland Public Schools

BALTIMOREC----TYIETROPOLITAN

20.7%

Tij 18

co 16

4° 14

in 121--

iij 10OO 8

60cc 4

co2

Z 0

34

WESTERNMARYLAND

1.6%

UPPER-4--SHORE

1.1%

NATIONALCAPITAL73.6%

SOUTHERNMARYLAND

1.1% LOWERSHORE1.9%

Trends in LEP Populationsby Primary Home Language

1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1998

YEAR

Chinese Korean

Vietnamese if Other

Spanish

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Education any LiteracyS r Mos Elte rain aBlcipation

9s)77-ge

Local Unit

TotalProgram

Participation*

Number Completing Programs

HighSchool

Diplomat

English Proficiency (ESL)

Pre- Begin- Inter-Literacytt ningtt mediate

Ad-vanced

Total State 39,867 2,503 1,490 3,028 2,965 661

Allegany" 802 97 5 ' 0 0 0

Anne Arundel" 5,018 378 123 121 40 11

Baltimore City" 6,221 239 59 76 43 60

Baltimore 3,934 278 109 321 270 134

Calvert 498 40 1 16 12 9

Caroline 235 13 50 3 7 9

Carroll" 869 145 20 14 23 6

Cecil 629 50 4 15 10 11

Charles" 1,076 179 11 22 4 6

Dorchester 252 24 5 9 1 4

Frederick 690 74 19 47 68 27

Garrett 235 20 0 0 0 0

Harford 1,177 150 12 61 86 0

Howard" 1,640 99 136 210 128 146

Kent 221 7 9 39 4 0

Montgomery 6,507 58 715 1,320 1,674 164

Prince George's 3,184 86 170 645 510 67

Queen Anne's" 260 26 7 3 0 0

St.Mary's 398 48 0 16 20 1

Somerset" 1,213 130 0 0 0 0

Talbot 207 22 15 0 0 0

Washington" 3,727 257 1 38 16 3

Wicomico" 603 43 11 42 31 2

Worcester 271 40 8 10 18 1

* Number of individual participants was 35,076.

+ High School Diplomas earned through GED, Evening High School, and

Maryland Adult High School External Diploma Program

tt Prior to FY98, Pre-literacy ESL and Beginning ESL were combined.

" Includes enrollment in Maryland State Correctional Institutions

38

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Meals Served inidlaryland Public Sc ools19979

Local Unit

School Lunch

Total Paid FreeReduced

Price

Total State 62,199,638 28,080,688 29,112,907 5,006,043

Allegany 1,209,674 504,353 559,019 146,302Anne Arundel 5,570,836 4,001,892 1,230,607 338,337Baltimore City 10,613,014 837,415 9,390,549 385,050Baltimore 7,328,092 3,742,938 2,825,463 759,691Calvert 795,529 550,241 203,573 41,715

Caroline 546,766 201,444 283,488 61,834Carroll 1,774,747 1,464,108 243,907 66,732Cecil 988,599 575,184 348,424 64,991Charles 1,373,460 774,861 504,837 93,762Dorchester 466,677 152,400 272,235 42,042

Frederick 2,287,075 1,688,212 455,227 143,636Garrett 540,168 222,525 252,159 65,484Harford 2,472,767 1,604,516 666,640 201,611Howard 2,595,131 2,062,015 428,289 104,827Kent 280,316 123,138 125,635 31,543

Montgomery 7,122,681 3,358,125 3,070,692 693,864Prince George's 11,271,990 3,854,676 6,083,616 1,333,698Queen Anne's 416,868 261,392 119,724 35,752St. Mary's 909,412 480,723 344,542 84,147Somerset 369,487 123,942 217,499 28,046

Talbot 351,816 192,493 135,870 23,453Washington 1,342,331 691,131 510,916 140,284Wicomico 1,010,162 383,880 550,394 75,888Worcester 562,040 229,084 289,602 43,354

NOTE: Information for nonprofit private schools and state institutions are excluded.

36

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School Breakfast Special Milk

Total Paid FreeReduced

Price Total Paid Free

13,891,528 1,470,238 11,454,385 966,905 189,740 185,544 4,196

280,907 35,416 218,925 26,566 0 0 0678,330 165,020 463,106 50,204 0 0 0

3,412,897 103,745 3,199,999 109,153 0 0 01,352,525 195,200 1,028,887 128,438 0 0 0

130,022 35,957 86,069 7,996 0 0 0

118,836 7,536 103,865 7,435 0 0 081,829 26,861 49,428 5,540 68,548 68,548 0

185,656 38,393 133,803 13,460 0 0 0311,596 54,323 239,816 17,457 0 0 0173,207 19,301 142,371 11,535 0 0 0

192,318 36,279 140,694 15,345 0 0 0104,938 18,752 71,975 14,211 0 0 0459,650 69,700 334,177 55,773 73,911 72,608 1,303143,673 27,056 107,063 9,554 0 0 078,368 17,081 53,251 8,036 0 0 0

1,610,567 218,312 1,268,945 123,310 0 0 03,395,078 223,122 2,893,481 278,475 0 0 0

71,311 16,456 48,906 5,949 47,281 44,388 2,893148,120 15,801 122,555 9,764 0 0 0144,925 17,266 116,744 10,915 0 0 0

78,294 16,406 55,972 5,916 0 0 0223,988 43,346 162,451 18,191 0 0 0380,027 60,577 295,335 24,115 0 0 0134,466 8,332 116,567 9,567 0 0 0

37

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[food effice enueMarylane lic knoEsT997-3

Local Revenue

Local Unit SalesOther

ReceiptsState

Revenue

Total State $81,756,553 $3,742,583 $4,294,208

Allegany 1,631,458 0 91,692Anne Arundel 8,134,404 202,902 205,717Baltimore City 3,681,329 876 1,238,251Baltimore 11,831,531 407,002 474,831

Calvert 1,689,200 16,298 36,818

Caroline 959,630 62,190 40,225Carroll 3,268,555 72,673 34,974Cecil 1,557,082 25,946 50,540Charles 2,661,911 24,343 89,988Dorchester 559,600 49,124 42,199

Frederick 3,742,822 378,734 77,757Garrett 652,004 3,142 39,540Harford 4,223,061 55,380 122,094Howard 4,755,214 154,708 59,460Kent 358,152 3,323 20,884

Montgomery 13,033,581 637,849 487,887Prince George's 11,148,709 1,218,476 842,685Queen Anne's 836,325 146,100 21,567St. Mary's 1,395,805 16,969 52,017Somerset 330,410 5,558 30,584

Talbot 614,680 30,746 19,105Washington 2,693,259 12,716 85,913Wicomico 1,375,813 62,463 86,822Worcester 622,018 155,065 42,658

NOTE: Information for nonprofit private schools and state institutions are excluded.

38

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Federal Revenue

SchoolLunch

SchoolBreakfast

Summer Food/Family Day Care

Special Milk

U.S.D.A.Commodities

Used

$67,776,839 $14,842,049 $4,111,023 $9,546,466

1,365,319 300,924 0 213,273

3,550,310 590,173 0 747,912

18,684,857 4,107,660 0 1,446,887

7,145,794 1,404,588 160,933 1,052,698

545,952 109,119 4,326 109,164

675,120 122,868 6,896 87,329

823,954 61,152 8,569 300,976

858,891 175,726 0 173,607

1,233,322 296,367 18,819 231,236

613,932 191,029 9,735 73,884

1,378,274 184,562 3,427 395,073

614,206 106,789 0 113,973

1,849,163 465,998 47,410 414,324

1,336,821 124,410 0 422,397

306,614 76,475 20,853 50,729

7,441,928 1,699,468 2,053,302 1,094,895

14,179,086 3,595,307 1,692,696 1,736,193

326,599 66,041 10,719 69,958

863,094 163,121 0 167,738

482,561 159,105 9,809 56,528

326,388 74,848 0 65,410

1,299,058 216,640 5,976 251,605

1,222,416 397,236 43,600 169,049

653,180 152,443 13,953 101,628

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Maryland u offTrans !Mann1997-9

Local Unit

Number of Vehicles Number of Miles

Publicly-Owned Contract Regular

Dis-abled

Total State 3,388 2,968 73,367,475 35,454,342

Allegany 17 103 1,212,604 " 269,118

Anne Arundel 63 397 6,253,080 3,122,783

Baltimore City 24 345 379,800 3,665,729

Baltimore 561 124 6,949,419 4,715,012.

Calvert 0 116 2,039,400 253,980

Caroline 9 54 872,820 242,903

Carroll 11 269 3,451,300 1,251,921

Cecil 12 114 1,789,821 281,402

Charles 5 192 3,140,419 908,923

Dorchester 5 47 741,060 109,900

Frederick 298 12 4,325,660 917,429

Garrett 3 74 980,755 69,105

Harford 85 307 4,808,800 1,400,825

Howard 0 296 3,343,840 1,509,666

Kent 0 30 529,804 73,011

Montgomery 974 0 8,550,973 7,765,008

Prince George's 1,178 3 14,406,479 7,298,761

Queen Anne's 14 59 1,443,168 238,635

St. Mary's 9 146 2,462,310 502,509

Somerset 0 38 648,180 116,640

Talbot 37 0 490,470 26,641

Washington 83 64 2,032,794 263,585

Wicomico 0 111 1,415,834 289,170

Worcester 0 67 1,098,685 161,686

*Percent of 9/30/97 enrollment

tlncludes expenditures for equipment and fixed charges

if Actual number of pupils transported on September 30

4 340

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Pupils Eligible for TransportationExpenditures

StateAid

Number of Pupils

Percent*Dis-

Regular abled AmounttPer

Pupil

577,142 26,892 72.7% $298,883,209 $495. $106,348,431

6,958 252 64.9 3,441,556 477 2,405,515

tt 49,532 1,638 69.7 25,618,758 501 10,184,961

32,609 5,845 35.8 27,683,240 720 8,904,797

85,135 2,837 84.0 30,384,769 345 12,454,645

14,397 190 99.0 6,036,027 414 1,758,996

4,931 89 89.1 2,249,272 448 1,216,360

24,048 451 91.3 10,890,392 445 3,936,959

12,771 252 85.0 4,631,579 356 2,206,502

17,266 303 81.3 8,112,024 462 4,138,659

4,822 53 94.2 1,931,892 396 1,221,462

27,084 467 79.7 10,865,674 394 3,846,039

5,037 56 99.8 2,478,782 487 1,554,559

tt 32,051 416 84.2 14,571,302 449 5,122,250

29,881 788 76.3 13,751,119 448 4,663,910

2,502 35 87.4 1,159,297 457 809,997

84,978 6,091 72.8 51,953,717 571 12,233,896

tt 83,620 6,027 69.8 60,029,516 670 17,134,737

6,555 59 100.0 2,988,448 452 1,341,474

13,945 191 96.2 5,904,102 418 2,715,485

2,977 70 96.4 1,624,348 533 943,821

4,001 60 89.1 1,136,188 280 773,288

14,639 339 74.8 4,836,685 323 3,059,686

11,173 290 80.6 3,974,804 347 2,326,027

6,230 93 92.5 2,629,718 416 1,394,406

41

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SO° IMa la9 7-9

J Conlon IAGil Pafi 1 lric Schools

Local Unit

Number ofLibraryMedia

Centers

Percent of SchoolsMeeting Staffing

StandardsCentralOfficeProfes-sionals*

Profes-sional

Clerical/Technical

Total State 1,218 54.0% 28.6% 12.30

Allegany 25 72.0 4.6 0.40

Anne Arundel 109 59.6 16.5 1.00

Baltimore City 144 23.3 4.4 0.25

Baltimore 154 53.5 8.3 1.00

Calvert 18 68.4 63.2 0.50

Caroline 9 77.8 11.1 0.10

Carroll 34 58.8 5.9 1.00

Cecil 28 28.6 17.9 0.20

Charles 31 64.5 54.8 0.10

Dorchester 11 81.8 54.6 0.50

Frederick 50 62.0 20.0 0.70

Garrett 15 6.7 66.7 1.00

Harford 49 63.3 18.4 1.00

Howard 58 98.3 60.3 1.00

Kent 8 12.5 50.0 0.15

Montgomery 181 76.2 70.7 1.00

Prince George's 170 38.9 25.1 0.60

Queen Anne's 10 30.0 100.0 0.10

St. Mary's 23 78.3 8.7 0.50

Somerset 9 20.0 40.0 0.05

Talbot 9 0.0 55.6 0.15

Washington 40 82.5 2.5 0.70

Wicomico 21 14.3 61.9 0.20

Worcester 12 83.3 33.3 0.10

* Full-time equivalent; 50% of the system level school library media administrators are

certified educational media administrators

t Includes print and nonprint materials, i.e., books, periodicals, filmstrips,

videocassettes, microcomputer programs, etc.

4542

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Materials Collectiont Sailor/InternetConnectionsCenters Meeting

CollectionGuidelines

Number ofItems at

the CentralOffice

Percent ofCenters with CentralConnections OfficeNumber Percent

214 16.9% 136,563 81.1% 83.3%

3 12.0 9,046 88.0 Yes18 16.5 9,675 89.9 Yes15 8.3 0 27.8 Yes5 3.2 934 95.5 Yes1 5.3 7,847 94.7 Yes

1 11.1 1,243 100.0 Yes17 50.0 2,642 97.1 Yes

1 3.6 19,689 89.3 Yes14 45.2 452 100.0 Yes2 18.2 1,297 81.8 Yes

17 34.0 8,251 92.0 Yes1 6.7 547 66.7 Yes

22 44.9 5,424 77.6 Yes13 22.4 2,962 89.7 Yes0 0.0 0 100.0 No

47 26.0 24,030 100.0 Yes11 6.3 12,460 80.0 Yes3 30.0 865 100.0 Yes

14 60.9 8 91.3 Yes0 0.0 0 20.0 No

1 11.1 0 100.0 No0 0.0 26,591 95.0 Yes5 23.8 2,600 71.4 Yes3 25.0 0 83.3 No

4 6

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Wag Aram SilallhUcsStag ana

§7-28

Local Unit

Staff

TotalStaff

LibrariansOther

Profes-sional

Clericaland

Other*Profes-sional

Asso-elate

Total State 2,793.3 613.6 455.0 98.3 1,626.4

Allegany 42.0 4.0 0.0 1.0 37.0

Anne Arundel 253.0 53.0 45.0 5.0 150.0

Baltimore City 461.5 111.0 37.0 14.0 299.5

Baltimore 461.1 50.0 82.7 38.7 289.7

Calvert 31.2 5.6 12.2 1.0 12.4

Caroline 18.0 4.0 5.8 0.0 8.2

Carroll 133.7 21.0 35.8 3.0 73.9

Cecil 30.2 6.0 11.0 0.0 13.2

Charles 38.7 1.0 22.0 1.0 14.7

Dorchester 13.2 4.0 4.0 0.0 5.2

Frederick 71.1 14.5 26.9 1.0 28.7

Garrett 16.1 3.0 1.5 0.0 11.6

Harford 145.1 31.3 18.3 8.9 86.6

Howard 180.5 41.5 47.0 5.0 87.0

Kent 10.3 2.0 4.3 0.0 4.0

Montgomery 402.9 148.5 21.0 5.5 227.9

Prince George's 267.9 75.2 45.2 4.0 142.5

Queen Anne's 20.3 7.1 0.0 1.0 12.2

St. Mary's 38.0 5.0 13.8 0.0 19.2

Somerset 13.7 2.0 0.0 0.0 11.7

Talbot 15.3 5.9 0.0 0.2 9.2

Washington 54.5 9.0 6.5 0.0 39.0

Wicomico 56.0 8.0 7.0 4.0 37.0

Worcester 20.0 1.0 8.0 5.0 6.0

* Pages, maintenance personnel, security personnel, hourly employees, and

substitutes

t Excludes federal

ft Baltimore City includes network funds for SLRC.

4744

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Operating Income

TotalIncome

AmountPer

Capita f

Source

Federal Special f 1- State Local

$152,772,396 $29.56 $1,940,121 $23,259,673 $19,773,907 $107,798,695

1,023,996 13.76 16,551 67,850 459,595 480,000

12,942,848 27.53 77,436 687,591 1,425,436 10,752,385

23,874,904 33.68 665,346 6,259,661 4,494,693 12,455,204

27,718,410 38.39 157,500 6,020,358 2,636,929 18,903,623

1,676,936 24.45 33,600 176,607 165,533 1,301,196

1,057,197 32.89 86,944 84,572 165,681 720,000

5,594,667 38.56 107,834 441,137 534,961 4,510,735

1,439,528 16.82 100,551 124,216 340,729 874,032

1,999,218 17.64 2,500 296,326 407,875 1,292,517

580,086 19.04 1,400 32,382 154,198 392,106

2,974,934 16.31 22,200 240,638 639,135 2,072,961

650,292 20.80 30,407 210,167 133,868 275,850

7,357,587 34.37 80,581 561,345 895,546 5,820,115

8,515,051 37.47 53,655 796,830 429,856 7,234,710

373,088 19.52 2,150 15,146 65,329 290,463

30,790,590 37.26 273,301 3,145,321 1,515,150 25,856,818

16,040,640 20.52 38,500 3,215,666 3,486,474 9,300,000

968,570 26.07 4,000 82,950 92,969 788,651

1,465,536 17.73 2,950 124,440 365,834 972,312

484,189 16.47 90,447 18,680 157,647 217,415

621,073 19.05 0 131,388 60,310 429,375

2,102,759 15.95 49,040 324,714 653,005 1,076,000

1,649,079 19.95 43,228 201,688 417,859 986,304

871,218 21.41 0 0 75,295 795,923

4845

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are TeehneI®l anddffl lea ing Taw a ska 41'0 Sc colic 11 r-g

Local Unit

TotalCareer andTechnologyEducation*

Agri-culture

Market-ing

Education

HealthOccupa-

tions

Occupa-tionalHome

Economics

Total State 95,054 4,444 1,584 2,201 15,769

Allegany 963 75 0 . 32 12

Anne Arundel 9,244 31 322 150 514Baltimore City 9,971 0 0 661 1,296

Baltimore 13,065 405 478 440 1,354

Calvert 1,349 0 0 162 267

Caroline 755 46 0 32 175

Carroll 3,299 1,039 46 51 114

Cecil 991 36 0 19 30

Charles 2,465 0 0 31 65

Dorchester 593 42 0 37 43

Frederick 4,581 1,364 47 37 1,018

Garrett 849 150 38 25 106

Harford 3,708 262 35 89 940Howard 1,913 0 0 0 481

Kent 416 0 0 65 0

Montgomery 12,794 173 137 20 3,565Prince George's 17,954 29 150 86 4,807Queen Anne's 1,151 160 0 54 0St. Mary's 1,370 29 133 45 137

Somerset 724 33 0 30 38

Talbot 946 72 21 0 103

Washington 3,605 439 35 34 531

Wicomico 1,435 34 142 73 141

Worcester 913 25 0 28 32

* Total excludes everything to the right of the vertical line.

4946

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Business&

Office Co-OpTech-nical

Tradesand

Industry

Consumer& Home-

I makingEducation

Voca-tional

SupportServices

48,571 5,579 4,223 12,683 126,265 9,559

408 213 21 202 3,932 926,484 942 4 797 18,504 2015,047 0 92 2,875 2,967 8307,743 1,147 160 1,338 13,111 578

220 0 5 695 2,287 290

397 0 0 105 1,100 01,570 0 14 465 8,792 614

494 111 0 301 4,156 3381,950 133 15 271 2,246 406

191 0 0 280 959 143

869 534 38 674 2,774 1,035188 0 0 342 1,142 292

1,664 245 2 471 1,227 01,187 245 0 0 9,473 0

117 0 0 234 95 50

3,510 942 3,630 817 12,626 1,78911,517 660 30 675 28,102 2,064

777 0 0 160 1,499 294578 32 44 372 1,742 0450 0 33 140 731 0

344 202 0 204 681 271,757 166 44 599 4,131 516

489 7 65 484 3,052 0620 0 26 182 936 0

50

47

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BIticath Rem s urw-CorrocUng ElnsEalkns'a27-2E

EnrollmentLocal Unit 5/1/98

Number Completing Programs

Basic/LifeSkills

Certificate

HighSchoolDiploma

VocationalCertificates

Maryland House of Correction 172 56 14 0

Maryland House

of Correction - Annex 173 28 18 0

Maryland Correctional

Institution Jessup 395 46 69 30

Maryland Correctional

Institution Hagerstown 518 196 101 53

Maryland Correctional

Institution for Women 252 75 48 63

Maryland Correctional

Training Center 615 219 140 116

Maryland Correctional

Pre-Release System 774 190 161 19

Patuxent Institution 153 50 28 36

Roxbury Correctional

Institution 402 75 117 106

Eastern Correctional

Institution

East

West

318

326

108

88

101

94

64

60

Western Correctional

Institution 186 60 53 0

Maryland Transition Center/

Occupational Skills Training Center 175 0 6 161

5.148

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haNEgraD6 roma22E

Local Unit

Numberof Persons

Served

Numberof Persons

Rehabilitated

Total State 27,077 2,831

Allegany 587 73

Anne Arundel 1,855 , 232

Baltimore City 7,477 687

Baltimore 3,141 361

Calvert 295 30

Caroline 159 17

Carroll 866 114

Cecil 400 53

Charles 447 53

Dorchester 122 17

Frederick 1,053 142

Garrett 127 16

Harford 818 79

Howard 796 97

Kent 75 12

Montgomery 2,683 245

Prince George's 3,841 320

Queen Anne's 61 6

St. Mary's 509 49

Somerset 58 10

Talbot 172 24

Washington 921 105

Wicomico 392 57

Worcester 122 13

Unknown 100 19

5249

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RehabilitatPersons Sunk

97- e

Persons-Rehabilitated by Primary Disability

Primary Disability

NumberRehabilitated

Psychiatric Disability 546

Orthopedic 469

Mental Retardation 473

Learning Disability 327

Other Disabilities/Disorders 289

Deaf & Hard of Hearing 248

Drug Addiction 209

Blind & Visual Impairments 91

Alcoholism 79

Epilepsy 38

Heart & Circulatory Disorders 21

Digestive System Disorders 25

Speech Impairment 8

Respiratory Disorders 4

Autism 4

Persons Rehabilitated by Occupation at Case Closure

Occupation

NumberRehabilitated

Service 967

Clerical, Sales 705

Professional, Technical, Managerial 459

Miscellaneous 226

Structural 107

Benchwork 129

Machine 81

Farming, Fishery, & Forestry 72

Processing 29

Sheltered Employment 29

Homemaker 27

NOTE: The Division of Rehabilitation Services (DORS) provides statewide

rehabilitative services to assist Maryland citizens in becoming employed.

"Number Rehabilitated" refers to those individuals who have achieved

gainful employment as a result of DORS services.

5350

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1998 Miaracteristics nsSe e the Vocation all

km PT®l ra

Number Percent

Gender

Male

Female

1,561

1,270

55%

45

Race

White 1,617 57

African American 1,174 42

Other 35 1

Age at Referral

Younger than 20 304 11

20 to 21 239 8

22 to 34 913 32

35 to 44 832 29

45 to 64 520 18

65 and older 23 1

Years of Education Attained at Referral

1 7 36 1

8 47 2

9 -11 423 15

12 1,267 45

13 15 349 12

16 or more 190 7

Special Education 519 18

Referral Sources

Individuals 1,334 47

Educational Institutions 373 13

Health Organizations and Agencies 466 17

Public Organizations and Agencies 323 11

Private Organizations and Agencies 196 7

General and Psychiatric Hospitals 109 4

Welfare Agencies 30 1

NOTE: The Maryland Rehabilitation Center (MRC) provides multi-disciplinary

services to address the needs of persons who require multiple rehabilita-

tion services over an extended period of time in order to achieve

independence and employment .

5151

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anyElenrz Hank a org RaRn

Category

MD

AmountU.S.

Avg. Rank

Percent Change in Public School Enrollment

Fall 1995 to Fall 1996 1.6% 1.6% *16

Population per Square Mile of Land Area, 1995 516 74 6

Population Age 5-17 as Percent of

Total Population, 1995 17.9 18.7 *38

Average Daily Attendance as Percent of

Average Daily Membership, 1996-97 93.4% NA *27

Pupils Enrolled per Teacher in Public

Elementary and Secondary Schools, Fall 1996 17.4 17.0 *11

Average Salaries of Public School Teachers,

1996-97 $41,148 $38,611 13

Percent Change in Average Salaries of Public

School Teachers, 1995-96 to 1996-97 0.0% 2.40% *48

Per Capita Personal Income, 1995 $26,547 $23,348 6

Percent of Revenue, by Source, for Public

Elementary/Secondary Schools, 1996-97

Local Government 54.4% 44.5% 14

State Government 40.0% 48.7% 38

Federal Government 5.6% 6.8% *35

Per Capita State Government

Expenditures for All Education, 1994-95 $757 $952 46

Per Capita Expenditures of State and Local

Governments for all Education: 1993-94 $1,413 $1,357 21

Current Expenditures for Public Elementary/

Secondary Schools, 1996-97

per pupil in Average Daily Attendance $7,052 $6,335 12

per pupil in Fall Enrollment $6,547 $5,889 11

*Tied with other states

Source: Ranking of the States, 1997; National Education Association

5552

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1 Mag ERCNY 0 . .

Maryland received an "A" rating in Education Week's 1999 Quality Counts

report for Maryland's work in "Academic Standards, Assessments and

Accountability."

Advanced placement courses were offered by 94% of high schools in Maryland

in 1998. Only two other states exceeded that percentage.

Maryland was recognized in 1998 by the National Education Goals Panel as

having the highest high school completion rate (95%) in the nation in 1996, the

latest results released by the Panel.

Eighty-three Maryland elementary and middle schools shared $2.7 million in

awards for having made at least two years of substantial progress toward

Maryland's rigorous academic standards (November 1998).

Thirteen Maryland teachers representing seven school systems earned National

Board Certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards

in 1998.

Maryland was one of only five states to receive the 1998 Time Magazine/NASBE

Award for Outstanding Achievement in Voter Education.

American Correctional Association named the Maryland Correctional Education

Program's basic education classes the best in the nation in 1998.

Eighty schools averaged 70% or more students satisfactory (state standard) on

the 1998 Maryland School Performance Assessment Program (MSPAP) given

annually to students in grades 3, 5, and 8. One school system surpassed 60%

and seven school systems posted scores above 50%.

In 1998, MSDE unveiled two additional web sites at

www.msp.msde.state.md.us (school performance reports) and

www.mdkl2.orq (school improvement information). MSDE's home pageaddress is www.msde.state.md.us.

5653

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Man l SlatDepart pint eV Edam RD

hilleatrions

Division of Certification and AccreditationTeacher Supply and Demand in Maryland

Division of Instruction and Staff DevelopmentFacts About Maryland School Library Media ProgramsStatewide Data Collection for Limited English Proficient Children

Division of Library Development and ServicesMaryland Public Library Statistics

Division of Planning, Results, and Information ManagementAnalysis of Professional SalariesCharacteristics of Professional StaffGrade Organization: Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity and Professional

Staff at School LevelsMaryland Adolescent SurveyMaryland Public School Enrollment by Race/Ethnicity and Gender

and Number of SchoolsMaryland Special Education Census DataMaryland School Performance Program ReportNonpublic School EnrollmentProfessional Salary SchedulesProfessional Staff by Assignment, Race and GenderSelected Financial Data, Part 1 Revenue, Wealth, and EffortSelected Financial Data, Part 2 - ExpendituresSelected Financial Data, Part 3 Analysis of CostsSelected Financial Data, Part 4 Ten-Year SummaryStaff Employed at School and Central Office LevelsSummary of Attendance

54

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Wszgua d fJ 1II Sch@edSupeololond@nt

Local Unit Superintendent Telephone

Allegany Dr. John O'Connell 301-759-2036

Anne Arundel Dr. Carol Parham 410-222-5304

Baltimore City Dr. Robert Booker, CEO 410-396-8803

Baltimore Dr. Anthony G. Marchione. 410-887-4281

Calvert Dr. James R. Hook, Interim 410-535-7207

Caroline Dr. Allan Gorsuch 410-479-1460

Carroll Mr. William H. Hyde 410-751-3128

Cecil Dr. Carl D. Roberts 410-996-5499

Charles Dr. James E. Richmond 301-934-7223

Dorchester Dr. Spicer Bell 410-228-4747

Frederick Dr. Jack D. Dale 301-694-1310

Garrett Dr. Wendell D. Teets 301-334-8902

Harford Ms. Jacqueline C. Hass, Interim 410-838-7300

Howard Dr. Michael E. Hickey 410-313-6674

Kent Dr. Lorraine Costella 410-778-7113

Montgomery Dr. Paul L. Vance 301-279-3383

Prince George's Dr. Jerome Clark 301-952-6008

Queen Anne's Dr. Bernard J. Sadusky 410-758-2403

St. Mary's Dr. Patricia Richardson 301-475-4250

Somerset Dr. Michael Thomas 410-651-1616

Talbot Dr. J. Sam Meek 410-822-0330

Washington Dr. Herman G. Bartlett, Jr. 301-766-2815

Wicomico Mr. William Middleton 410-677-4596

Worcester Dr. Jon Andes 410-632-2582

5855

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u)Lo,

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(Maryland State

ED JCA1) epartment of

ONPlanning, Results, and Information Management200 West Baltimore StreetBaltimore, Maryland 21201-2595

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U.S. Department of EducationOffice of Educational Research and Improvement (OER!)

National Library of Education (NLE)Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC)

NOTICE

REPRODUCTION BASIS

ERICTM030611

This document is covered by a signed "Reproduction Release(Blanket) form (on file within the ERIC system), encompassing allor classes of documents from its source organization and, therefore,does not require a "Specific Document" Release form.

This document is Federally-funded, or carries its own permission toreproduce, or is otherwise in the public domain and, therefore, maybe reproduced by ERIC without a signed Reproduction Release form(either "Specific Document" or "Blanket").

EFF-089 (9/97)


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