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History

A Tradition of Innovation

Since its founding in 1953, The Children's Guild has been an innovator in providing services for children and adolescents with emotional, behavioral and mental disorders. It has grown from a one-room preschool to serving hundreds of seriously disturbed children and their families, through special education schools, outpatient mental health services, after-school partnerships, treatment foster care and the group living academy, among other programs. The Children's Guild's tradition of leadership in special education and care of the emotionally disturbed child continues today.

1953 - Founding of The Children's Guild

The Children's Guild pioneers the idea of helping preschool-aged children with emotional problems and challenges the prevailing belief that these children had no emotions and could not benefit from psychological intervention. Dr. Leo Kanner, father of child psychiatry and the discoverer of childhood autism; Dr. Matthew Debuskey, pediatrician; and Sadie Dashew Ginsberg, prominent child advocate, found The Children's Guild after creating a study group to learn about children with emotional difficulties. The founders describe the organization as "an experiment in mental hygiene to alleviate behavior difficulties in children before they become serious maladjustments."

1955 - Achieves Nonprofit Status and First Press Coverage

The Children's Guild achieves nonprofit status as a private preschool serving Baltimore area preschool-aged children. The Children's Guild also receives its first of many feature articles in The Evening Sun and other Baltimore-area newspapers, which educate the public about children's mental health issues.

1956 - Move to Greenspring Ave.

From a room at cofounder Dr. Matthew Debuskey's office, The Children's Guild's nursery school opens on the grounds of the Children's Hospital School on Greenspring Ave. in Baltimore, with financial assistance from the Altrua Guild, the Royal Sisters Society of Baltimore, the Forrest Park Child Study Group, and the Community Chest, which provides funding to The Guild in future years.

1958 - First Annual Training Conference

The Children's Guild hosts the first of its annual training sessions and forums on child behavioral issues. Over the years, the sessions feature many leading physicians and experts in the field of child psychiatry and mental health.

1960 - First Award

The Health and Welfare Council honors The Children's Guild with its annual Organization Achievement Award, touting, "There's no other agency in Maryland performing a similar service for emotionally disabled preschool children."

1962 - First Teaching Partnership Created

The Children's Guild partners with the University of Maryland School of Nursing, creating a first-ever two-year graduate program to train psychiatric nurse specialists for children.

1966 - First to Receive Baltimore City Health Commission Funding

The Baltimore City Health Commission provides $75,000 to The Children's Guild to create a new facility, the first-ever mental health care program for children funded by the city. Through arrangements with the State Department of Mental Hygiene, The Children's Guild becomes a participating agency in the training of psychiatric residents.

1970s - Education of All Handicapped Children Act Changes Services

In 1975, U.S. Congress passes Public Law 94-142, The Education of All Handicapped Children Act, mandating an "appropriate education for all children regardless of handicapping condition." With the law's passage, The Children's Guild becomes an interdisciplinary agency, providing mental health services and special education for high-intensity need and emotionally disabled children referred through the public school system. The Guild's student population grows rapidly, and the ages and characteristics of the children it serves change dramatically.

The Children's Guild moves from Greenspring Ave. to Mt. Washington and leases a school building owned by the Sisters of Mercy.

1980s - Leadership

The Children's Guild Executive Director Stanley Mopsik leads the effort to create an organizational structure to foster the expansion of Maryland nonpublic schools for children with special needs statewide. He participates in the founding of the National Association of Private Schools for Exceptional Children, enabling private schools to lobby for federal legislation to support children with special needs. In 1986, The Guild establishes the first therapeutic group home in Maryland for emotionally disabled adolescents, named Kanner House after one of the agency's founders Dr. Leo Kanner. 

In 1986, the Sisters of Mercy sell its school to USF&G, necessitating The Children's Guild to relocate to its current headquarters in Baltimore at 6802 McClean Blvd.

1994 - First Public/Private School Partnership Created

Under Executive Director Stanley Mopsik's continued leadership, The Children's Guild creates the first public/private school partnership in Maryland to serve seriously emotionally disturbed students who could not be educated in a public school. The cost-effective partnership makes it easier for local school systems to maintain involvement with the children referred to The Children's Guild. The success of this partnership leads to expansion of these partnerships throughout Maryland.

1995 - 2000 - Transformation Education Begins

Dr. Andrew Ross succeeds retiring CEO Stanley Mopsik as The Children's Guild new president. Dr. Ross, with colleague Gary Grenier, executive director of The Lincoln Center in Philadelphia, discovers that culture is an elemental force in promoting change and growth in emotionally troubled children. Evaluation results demonstrate that culture, if consciously shaped, can be extremely effective in transforming the behavior of emotionally disturbed children and motivating them to learn. This discovery leads to The Children's Guild initiating Transformation Education (TranZed), a new approach to educating and resocializing emotionally disturbed children.

1996 - 1998 - Two Campuses Open

The Children's Guild opens a school in Annapolis, Md., in 1996, and a school in Chillum, Md., in 1998, becoming one of the largest providers of nonpublic special education in Maryland.

1999 - First Maryland Schools Nationally Accredited for Special Education

The Children's Guild's Baltimore and Annapolis campuses become the first nonpublic special education schools in Maryland to achieve accreditation from the National Commission for the Accreditation of Special Education Services. The Guild begins taking its expertise into the public schools by providing the support services necessary for emotionally disturbed children to participate in an after-school program at Govans Elementary School.

2000 - New Master's Degree Training Partnership Established

The Children's Guild partners with George Washington University to create a professional development school for training master's degree candidates in special education.

2005 - First Book on Transformation Education

The Children's Guild President Dr. Andrew Ross and Executive Vice President Frank Kros, with Lincoln Center Executive Director Gary Grenier, publish the first book on Transformation Education, "Creating the Upside Down Organization: Transforming Staff to Save Troubled Children."

2006 - Upside Down Organization Created

The Children's Guild creates The Upside Down Organization (UDO), which provides child-serving organizations and professionals with cutting-edge, research-based learning experiences based on Transformation Education (TranZed). UDO's reach soon becomes international, as it brings workshops, consultations and other learning experiences to organizations around the globe.

2007 - Launch of Treatment Foster Care Program and a 2nd University Partnership

The Children's Guild launches its treatment foster care program for children who have complex problems and are difficult for a regular foster home to manage. Many of the children are challenging because they have experienced abuse and neglect, and they exhibit disordered behaviors.

The Guild begins its second university partnership with Loyola College.

2008 - National Children's Guild Fund established, student population shifts

The National Children's Guild Fund (NCGF) is established to transform schools and other child-serving organizations nationwide through its philosophy of Transformation Education (TranZed). This is done by supporting the organizations that test, practice and promote methods for transforming how people care for and educate children and youth with a variety of disadvantages, including trauma-related behavior disorders, autism spectrum disorders, multiple disabilities and ineffectual education.

2009 - Restructuring, Expansion of Services, 2nd Book Published

A multi-corporate structure was created under the umbrella of The Children's Guild Institute, laying the ground work for future expansion and organizational growth. In August 2009, The Children's Guild celebrated the opening of its first public charter school, Monarch Academy, in Glen Burnie, Md. In addition, The Children's Guild Family Help Center expanded services, serving students in schools in Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties. The Children's Guild published its second book "The Upside Down Organization: Reinventing Group Care."

2011

It was an exciting year with the opening of our second charter school Monarch Academy Baltimore Campus on McClean Boulevard to serve the children of Baltimore City. The Children's Guild also purchased from the Archdioceses of Baltimore The St. Rose of Lima School in South Baltimore and after a complete renovation opened its new Baltimore Campus in Fall 2011. This campus is consolidating students from its Anne Arundel Campus and Baltimore Campus into one new facility. The girls group living home (The Academy) was renamed Staffa House in memory of staff member Bill Staffa.

FOUNDERS

Matthew Debusky
Dr. Matthew Debuskey, pediatrician

 Sadie Ginsberg
Sadie Dashew Ginsberg, prominent child advocate

 

Leo Kanner
Dr. Leo Kanner, father of child psychiatry and the discoverer of childhood autism

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