The East
Maryland Receives Good Grades for School Nutrition
You could say the Maryland State Department of Education made the honor roll for its summer nutrition program. In fact, the program ranked second in the nation for its increase in the number of children participating for the 2008-2009 school year, according to a press release.
Those rankings were done by the Food Research and Action Center and published in its report “Hunger Doesn’t Take A Vacation: Summer Nutrition Status Report 2010.” www.frac.org. According to the report, the summer nutrition program in Maryland increased the number of children it serves by 17.4 percent. The program served more than 2.5 million meals to children throughout the summer of 2009, the press release reports.
The state’s summer nutrition program offers children from low-income families and neighborhoods nutritious meals and snacks during the summer, according to the press release. Many of the children participating in the summer food program also participate in the school lunch programs during the year receiving free or reduced-price meals.
“While Maryland has risen above a national decline in summer nutrition participation, there is still work to be done,” State Superintendent of Schools Nancy S. Grasmick said in the press release. “Our responsibility to children doesn’t end when school lets out. The summer nutrition programs serve as building blocks for children so that they can continue to grow and return to school ready to learn.”
CHARTER SCHOOLS
Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell announced nearly $1.7 million in funding for two charter schools, according to the New Haven Register. Nearly $190,000 will replace windows at Elm City College Preparatory Middle School and $1.5 million will go to expanding and improving Common Ground Charter School. Two more charter schools are in line for state money, the newspaper reports.
TEXTBOOK RENTALS
As tuition at many public colleges and universities is increasing, the University of Vermont Bookstore will begin renting textbooks this fall to students looking to save hundreds on buying books, according to the Burlington Free Press. For example, a physics book that costs $209.35 rents for $78, the newspaper reports.
RACE TO THE TOP
Pennsylvania was one of 16 finalists invited to present its federal Race to the Top grant application in Washington, D.C., and its application was rated 7th out of the 41 states that applied, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Higher Education. Pennsylvania’s record of seven years of gains in student achievement gives the state an edge in the contest for up to $400 million in Race to the Top funds, Gov. Ed Rendell said in a press release. Pennsylvania did not receive the federal funding, however.
LOW-INCOME SCHOOLS
Five elementary schools in Delaware received grants from the state for closing achievement gaps and scoring well on federal benchmarks under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, according to a press release. The schools each won $150,000 from the state’s new Academic Achievement Award, for academic excellence with low-income student populations, the press release said.
SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS
A New Jersey appeals court rejected a claim of a New Jersey school administrators’ group that new regulations limiting administrator compensation are unconstitutional, according to The Associated Press. The ruling benefit restrictions in question were imposed under former Gov. Jon Corzine.