About 11 to 12 percent of Green Street Academy students passed annual math assessments in 2017 and about 89 percent of students failed, according to a Baltimore City Wire analysis of the latest Maryland schools report card.
Now that President Trump has approved the first of Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan’s FEMA requests in the wake of last month’s flooding, another flood will begin – this one involving paperwork.
About 1 percent of City Neighbors High School students passed annual math assessments in 2017 and 99 percent of students failed, according to a Baltimore City Wire analysis of the latest Maryland schools report card.
Frostburg State University reported having the most outdoor track and field athletes in the state in 2016, according to a Higher Education Tribune analysis of the latest federal data.
About 16.5 percent of City Neighbors Hamilton students passed annual math assessments in 2017 and 83.5 percent of students failed, according to a Baltimore City Wire analysis of the latest Maryland schools report card.
About 7 percent of Digital Harbor High School students passed annual English language arts assessments in 2017 and 93 percent of students failed, according to a Baltimore City Wire analysis of the latest Maryland schools report card.
Among Maryland's most populous urban centers, the Baltimore-Columbia-Towson Metropolitan Statistical Area posted the highest percentage of mortgages that owe at least 25 percent more on their loans than their property is worth, according to a home equity analysis by ATTOM Data Solutions.
Congratulations to the following GBMC departments for meeting or exceeding their Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) goal, this quarter.
Greater Baltimore Medical Center issued the following announcement on June 23.The GBMC Parents Advisory Council (PAC) celebrated another successful year at its annual summer gathering.
In the effort to prevent #opiod deaths, MedStar Franklin Square was among four Baltimore County hospitals to receive 1,200 doses of the anti-opioid naloxone medication.
Paul Celano, MD, Medical Director of the Sandra and Malcolm Berman Cancer Institute at GBMC, discusses a recent study that suggests that chemotherapy may not be necessary for all types of breast cancer.