Baltimore Sun

School city abandoned now a boarding school

SEED School takes children of challengin­g background­s

- Jacques Kelly jacques.kelly@baltsun.com

It may not be fully visible from the roadway, but there’s a boarding school with an enrollment of 400 students on a hill in Southwest Baltimore.

Located behind the Mount Olivet Cemetery on Font Hill Avenue, the 52-acre campus of the SEED School of Maryland is home to students in grades six to 12 who arrive each Sunday evening from communitie­s stretching from Salisbury to Frederick.

There are separate girls’ and boys’ dormitorie­s. The head of school lives on campus in a faculty residence.

Affiliated with the SEED Foundation, a Washington-based nonprofit that also operates schools in Washington and Miami, the SEED School describes itself as “Maryland’s first and only public, college-preparator­y boarding school.” Officials say its concept is simply that “some students need and deserve a 24-hour learning model to reach their full potential.”

The students must come from a singlepare­nt home or live on public assistance or with a non-custodial guardian. Some have challengin­g home environmen­ts, some have a history of truancy that has left them needing to catch up on their studies.

“The kids who arrive here average three grades behind,” said Katie del Carmen Byram, the school’s developmen­t director.

There’s an annual lottery to gain admis- sion to the school, which is in its 10th year.

This SEED took root in a problemati­c location. It ’s housed in what’s left of the former Southweste­rn High School, which opened in September 1971 and closed 35 years later. At its debut, there were hopes the new $10 million Southweste­rn High would ease overcrowdi­ng at Rock Glen Junior High and Edmondson Senior High.

Within days of the school’s opening, though, police and plaincloth­es detectives were called to the campus to quell what The Sun described as “racial tensions” at the facility.

The city gave up on Southweste­rn in 2006 after decades of declining school-age population, and listed the building as surplus property in May 2007. SEED’s administra­tors realized the potential that old and battered Southweste­rn held. They got busy taming the sprawling T-shaped main building that was designed in the 1970s-era brutalist architectu­re style. They demolished a long classroom wing and built the boys’ and girls’ dorms. They restored the school’s auditorium and gym and upgraded lighting.

The renovated campus reflects the $50 million invested in it, much from private donors.

“We operate as our own educationa­l authority and report directly to the Mary- Kevin Ridgely, managing director, and Katie del Carmen Byram, director of developmen­t, in the library of the SEED School of Maryland, overlookin­g the dorms. land Department of Education,” said del Carmen Byram.

The school opened in 2008 and began graduating students in 2015. Counselors work with SEED students to help find colleges where they can get financial aid.

Officials say SEED’s counselors continue to work with graduates after they move on from the Southwest Baltimore campus. In three years, more than 80 percent of SEED graduates remain enrolled in college.

Because there are more applicants than space, there is a waiting list for admission. The SEED School will host an open house 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday for prospectiv­e sixth-grade students. A lottery will be held May 9 in the auditorium.

Currently, the majority of students are from Baltimore City, followed by Prince George’s, Baltimore, Harford and Anne Arundel counties. There are students from 14 of Maryland’s 23 counties. “The lottery starts with each county for which we have an applicant,” said Kevin P. Ridgely, the school’s managing director and chief financial officer.

The package of tuition, room and board is free with the assistance of state, local and private funding.

In many ways, SEED School of Maryland operates as any other educationa­l facility in the city. It has athletic teams that compete on its broad fields near the AMTRAK right-of-way. Its cross country team uses the nearby Gwynns Falls Trail. Yet the campus setting and its boarder component make it a unique facility.

“We’re so remote — yet we’re located right in the city,” Ridgely said.

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AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN
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