Skip to main content

The Cost of Access



Let’s take it from the top: the Glenelg High School boosters organization is proud of their Girls Ice Hockey team.



First and only.

Taking a moment to share something very unique to Glenelg. We are the first and only public school in Maryland with a Girls Ice Hockey team.

This team works really hard and has a lot of fun. It is customary to see them all smiling as they play and when they line change. Way to go Glads on a great season!

That’s pretty cool. But if they’re the first and only public high school with a girls hockey team, who do they play?

Truth in advertising: I didn’t ask. But it stands to reason that they are playing students from independent schools. You might call them private schools. Why don’t all public schools have girls hockey teams? 

I’m guessing there are a variety of reasons. Here’s one that comes to mind right away: cost.


Infographic from Playground Equipment Website *


A cursory online search shows ice hockey at the top in terms of cost per participant. (This particular graphic doesn’t include equestrian sports which are also quite costly.) So, while a photo of a girls high school ice hockey team in Howard County undoubtedly shows determination, commitment, and a love of the sport, it is also a photo of financial privilege.

It seems unlikely that the only high school aged young women in HoCo who want to play ice hockey live in Glenelg. Doesn’t it? So why Glenelg and not anywhere else? And what does this mean? (From the GHS website.)

Ice Hockey Club Information:

Ice Hockey Club is a private organization which is not affiliated or sponsored by the Howard County Public School System or any Howard County Public School.

So is it a team sport or a club sport? I need to do more research.

Believe it or not, I got the idea for this post because of a question I read about the National Honor Society. Apparently the NHS is a dues-paying organization and you can be dropped from the rolls if you fail to pay your dues. 

My first thought: isn’t the NHS a merit based organization? Do we really have a merit based student organization where a failure to pay could bar access?

Cost. Access. They are swirling around in my head this morning. And one more thing that’s been bugging me:

I just realized that every time I read 5 books I deserve a pizza. I have not been eating nearly enough pizza.

You know what this post on Bluesky is referring to, don’t you? Yes, the Book It program from Pizza Hut.  At some point during the last year I began to think about the logistics of this reading incentive initiative. And I began to wonder if maybe it presumes an awful lot.

It presumes that:

  • your family lives near a Pizza Hut and has reliable transportation to reach one.
  • someone is available to take the child to the restaurant.
  • the whole family is going to be able to come to the restaurant or order takeout so the honored child can get a free pizza. 
There may be very careful, extremely thrifty ways to circumvent those presumptions for families with not one penny to spare but pretty much all of them would advertise your financial status. Wouldn’t they? 

So Book It just might be a reading incentive program for students whose families can afford to redeem a free pizza. And are those necessarily the students for whom the support of reading is most valuable?

Cost. Access. Pizza.

It’s complicated.




*Yes, this is a commercial site selling playground equipment, but other sites I viewed show similar cost rankings. 

Comments

  1. Please do not submit comments here. This function will be disabled shortly. Use the link above instead. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Teacher Gifts

Today is the last day of school before the Winter Break. It’s a good time to remember the far-reaching nature of our public school system. You may not have children. You may have sent your children to independent schools. It matters not. You will be impacted one way or another. Yesterday I read a long thread on Facebook about several waves of illness in the schools right now. There’s influenza A and norovirus, I believe. And of course there’s COVID. Apparently in some individual schools the rate of illness is high enough for school admin to notify parents.  When I was little the acceptable holiday gift for a teacher was one of those lovely floral handkerchief squares. (I don’t know what it was for male teachers. They were rare in my elementary years.) These days the range of teacher gifts is wider and I have fond memories of Target gift cards which I have written about before. I think it’s safe to say that giving one’s teacher Influenza, norovirus, or COVID is not the ideal holiday...

Getting Fresh

One of my favorite days in the Spring comes when this year’s list of Farmer’s Markets is released. That happened this week. New this year are markets in Old Ellicott City and the “Merriweather Market” which, according to the address, will be located here . I mistakenly thought at first glance that it was in the new-construction part of the Merriweather District. I find the name confusing considering its actual location. I’m going to guess that this market is an initiative of the Howard Hughes Corporation because the name seems chosen more for branding purposes than anything else.  Alas, the market in Maple Lawn is gone. The thread on the markets on the County Executive’s FB page will provide you with quite the education in who actually runs the Farmers Markets vs what people often think is going on. Short answer: they are not  chosen nor run by the county. Each market is an independent entity, sometimes started by community volunteers, other times supported by local businesses...

They Can Wait

This is not a typical Saturday post. That’s because, in my community, it’s not a typical Saturday.  Oakland Mills High School, after years of deferred repair, needs massive renovation. It’s pretty simple: when you don’t fix a problem it gets bigger. The school system itself said the the OMHS school building was  "no longer conducive to learning" back in 2018.  2018 .  But Thursday the Boad of Education voted to push it out of the lineup of important projects which will be given the go-ahead to proceed soonest.  In my opinion it’s a terrible decision and sets a dangerous precedent. To explain, here’s the advocacy letter I sent in support of Oakland Mills High School. I was rather proud of it. I am writing to ask you to proceed with needed renovation at Oakland Mills High School in the most timely and comprehensive manner humanly possible. I have read the letter sent to you by the Oakland Mills Community Association and I am in complete agreement. You are extremel...