Education in Maryland

Maryland Education Intel

Saturday, June 13, 2026
4 min read
10 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on education developments in Maryland. Today we're covering 10 key stories including updates on maryland education headlines, maryland education updates, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Maryland Education Headlines

5 stories

1.1

Federal dollars cover 10.5% of MD public school funding in 2022-23.

About one in every ten dollars of Maryland public school funding came from the federal government during the 2022-23 school year, with the rest coming primarily from state and local sources and significant variation across districts based on student demographics and locale.

Why It Matters

Understanding your district's funding mix helps MD education leaders anticipate budget vulnerabilities and advocate effectively for state and local support.

Sources:Source
1.2

Montgomery County Board of Education Meetings: Stay Informed on MD School Governance.

The Montgomery County Public Schools Board of Education maintains a webpage listing its meetings, providing access to schedules, agendas, and materials for its public sessions.

Why It Matters

For Maryland education professionals, monitoring board meetings in the state's largest school district offers insight into policy trends, budget decisions, and governance practices that may influence other districts statewide.

Sources:Source
1.3

MDMASSP Executive Board Minutes Now Available for 2024-2026.

The Maryland Association of Secondary School Principals has published archived minutes from its executive board meetings spanning September 2024 through May 2026.

Why It Matters

Maryland education professionals can review these minutes to stay informed about MASSP leadership decisions and priorities affecting secondary school administration statewide.

Sources:Source
1.4

Carroll County Public Schools Board Meeting Info Now Available.

The Carroll County Public School District has published meeting information for its board of education.

Why It Matters

Maryland education professionals can monitor board discussions and decisions that may shape policies across the state's school districts.

Sources:Source
1.5

MHEC Launches Dashboard Hub for Maryland Higher Education Data.

The Maryland Higher Education Commission has published an official state website featuring data dashboards.

Why It Matters

Education professionals across Maryland can access centralized MHEC data to inform policy, planning, and institutional decision-making.

Sources:Source
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2

Maryland Education Updates

2 stories

2.1

Maryland Report Card Updated with Latest Student Achievement Data Across All 24 Districts.

The Maryland Report Card now provides the most current information available to help stakeholders measure student achievement year over year in every district statewide.

Why It Matters

Education professionals in MD can use this standardized data to benchmark performance, identify trends, and inform instructional and policy decisions across their districts.

Sources:Source
2.2

MD State Board 2025 Meeting Schedule Now Available.

The Maryland State Board of Education has published its 2025 meeting schedule with dates, agendas, and participation details.

Why It Matters

Education professionals in MD can plan ahead to engage with board decisions affecting policy, funding, and statewide standards.

Sources:Source
3

Background & Context

3 stories

3.1

Three fiduciary duties that nonprofit boards routinely confuse.

Board members owe duties of care (informed decision-making), loyalty (no self-dealing), and obedience (consistent with the mission). The duties are distinct: a member can satisfy care while violating loyalty, or vice versa. Most board mistakes involve loyalty (related-party transactions without disclosure).

Why It Matters

State attorneys general can pursue board members personally for breaches; D&O insurance typically covers care violations but excludes intentional loyalty breaches. Confusing the duties leaves members exposed without realizing it.

3.2

E-Rate Category One and Category Two have different rules.

Category One (telecommunications and internet access) has higher discount rates and is essentially uncapped; Category Two (internal connections, managed services) has a five-year per-student budget cap. Mixing the categories on a single application typically delays funding by a full cycle.

Why It Matters

Schools that misclassify equipment requests get bumped to the wrong queue and miss the funding-year window. The discount can be 20-90% depending on poverty rate, so the stakes are substantial.

3.3

The IEP procedural safeguards parents most often waive accidentally.

Federal IDEA gives parents specific rights — to consent or refuse evaluations, to participate in placement decisions, to request independent educational evaluations at district expense — that are routinely waived by signing a standard IEP without raising objections. Once signed, undoing a placement decision is procedurally heavy.

Why It Matters

Districts have neither the obligation nor the resources to re-explain rights at every meeting; the procedural-safeguards notice is delivered annually and that satisfies the legal requirement. Parents who do not know the rights cannot exercise them.

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Issue Summary

DateJun 13, 2026
Stories10
Sections3
Read Time4 min
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