Baltimore City Youth Data Scorecard

The Baltimore City Youth Data Scorecard, a resource that is updated and maintained by Baltimore’s Promise, is designed to make data related to the health and well-being of children and young people living in Baltimore City accessible to all.

The interactive Data Scorecard provides the community an opportunity to track the best available data on how Baltimore’s children and youth are collectively faring, from birth through post-secondary education, and into the early stages of their careers. It also compiles data that currently exists in different sources by bringing it together in an easy-to-view format.  

Presenting key youth well-being data in one single site supports community efforts to hold decision-makers accountable, improve services, and generate better outcomes for Baltimore children and families.

Baltimore’s Promise has five ambitious goals for the city’s youth as they progress from childhood to adulthood:

  • Babies are born healthy

  • Children enter kindergarten ready to succeed in school

  • Children and youth achieve at grade level in school

  • Youth graduate high school prepared for the next step without remediation

  • Youth earn quality post-secondary credentials or receive training and are career-ready

Each of the five Data Scorecard sections tracks the above community-level outcomes along the Cradle-to-Career Continuum. In total, across these five sections, there are over 20 indicators we are tracking through our Data Scorecard.

For additional context and narrative around data indicators, please expand the text options below the dashboard.

Want a printed version? Please download a PDF version of the scorecard here.

Scorecard Dashboard

 

Scorecard Key Findings by Indicator Group

 

A note on labels for youth subgroups related to race, ethnicity, and gender:

Because different data sources may use unique labels for different racial, ethnic, and gender subgroups, the Baltimore City Youth Data Scorecard does not have consistent labels for subgroups across the 20+ indicators. For example, the Kindergarten Readiness Assessment Report, which informs our Kindergarten Readiness indicator, labels subgroups as “Black/African American,” “Hispanic/Latino,” and “White.” Data from the American Community Survey from the US Census, which informs several of our indicators, labels similar subgroups as “Black or African American,” “Hispanic,” and “White.” In order to not misrepresent or mistranslate data from indicator sources, we always keep the same labels used by each individual data source. For more details about our data sources, see the data source linked in each graph, the additional details provided in links above, or email James Sadler at james@baltimorespromise.org