“The county and, I think, MCPS both agree that there’s a need to serve these students, but how to go about doing that has not been figured out,” he said.
“Once a child is suspended or expelled are they MCPS’ problem?” Hauprich continued. “When a student is suspended, for that period they’re out, they’re no longer MCPS’ problem.
“However MCPS recognizes that it is their problem when they come back and they have to pass their tests.”
Councilmember Valerie Ervin (D-Dist 5), chair of the council’s education committee, said she wants to move student-related expenses away from other departments and into MCPS’ budget, including the SHARP programs and school resource officers, according to a spokesperson for Ervin’s office.
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Showing posts with label Sharp Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharp Street. Show all posts
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Suspended Students Keep Up with School in Burtonsville Program
Colesville Patch: B-SHARP, a free service for middle and high school students to keep up with school work, received a temporary budget reprieve from the County Council this week.
Friday, May 20, 2011
Gazette: Programs for suspended students eyed for cuts
Fate of operations in Gaithersburg, Sandy Spring and Burtonsville in question
by Danielle E. Gaines | Staff Writer
A Montgomery County-funded program that helps suspended students and those facing expulsion keep up with classwork while they're barred from school campuses is on the chopping block.The Health and Human Services and Education committees of the County Council considered a cut to SHARP, the Student Help and Academic Resource Program, at a meeting Wednesday because the program serves a limited number of students and cost the county $114,000 last fiscal year."While it's small, it all adds up. I'm kind of torn," said Councilman Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2), who voted for the cut.After a 3-2 vote in favor of the cut, committee members voted to forward the elimination to the full council on May 16. A meeting originally scheduled for Tuesday was delayed, said Neil Greenberger, County Council spokesman.County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) has recommended flat funding for the program in fiscal 2012. Leggett's budget also includes an $8.8 million spending reduction, to about $240.2 million, for the Health and Human Services department.SHARP was created in 1998 and at its peak had seven locations — Bethesda, Burtonsville, Gaithersburg, Germantown, Montgomery Village, Sandy Spring and Silver Spring. Montgomery County began funding the program in 2000 and restructured it to eliminate four sites in fiscal 2010 because of declining attendance.Eileen Shea, director of the Gaithersburg program, defended it at Wednesday's meeting.When a student is suspended from high school, it often represents a low point in his or her life, Shea said outside the meeting room. The SHARP program aims to buoy those students' spirits by helping them stay on top of their schoolwork during their time outside of the classroom...
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Gazette: Programs for suspended students eyed for cuts
Fate of operations in Gaithersburg, Sandy Spring and Burtonsville in question
by Danielle E. Gaines | Staff Writer
A Montgomery County-funded program that helps suspended students and those facing expulsion keep up with classwork while they're barred from school campuses is on the chopping block.The Health and Human Services and Education committees of the County Council considered a cut to SHARP, the Student Help and Academic Resource Program, at a meeting Wednesday because the program serves a limited number of students and cost the county $114,000 last fiscal year."While it's small, it all adds up. I'm kind of torn," said Councilman Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2), who voted for the cut.After a 3-2 vote in favor of the cut, committee members voted to forward the elimination to the full council on May 16. A meeting originally scheduled for Tuesday was delayed, said Neil Greenberger, County Council spokesman.County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) has recommended flat funding for the program in fiscal 2012. Leggett's budget also includes an $8.8 million spending reduction, to about $240.2 million, for the Health and Human Services department.SHARP was created in 1998 and at its peak had seven locations — Bethesda, Burtonsville, Gaithersburg, Germantown, Montgomery Village, Sandy Spring and Silver Spring. Montgomery County began funding the program in 2000 and restructured it to eliminate four sites in fiscal 2010 because of declining attendance.Eileen Shea, director of the Gaithersburg program, defended it at Wednesday's meeting.When a student is suspended from high school, it often represents a low point in his or her life, Shea said outside the meeting room. The SHARP program aims to buoy those students' spirits by helping them stay on top of their schoolwork during their time outside of the classroom...
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