The issue presented by this appeal is whether the Bowling Brook Home for Boys (the Home) in Middleburg, Maryland is a “school” so that it may be operated on land zoned agricultural by the Carroll County Zoning Ordinance (1965, as amended through 1985). Article 6, § 6.2(i) of that ordi *436 nance lists as one of the principal permitted uses under the agricultural classification, “Schools and colleges, including nursery schools or day care centers.” The Circuit Court for Carroll County (Gilmore, J.) ruled that the Home met that definition, reversing a contrary decision by the County Board of Zoning Appeals. We agree with the Circuit Court and affirm its judgment.
The Raymond I. Richardson Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit charitable organization, operates the Bowling Brook Home for Boys. The Home was established in 1957 on a portion of a 263 acre horse farm owned by the Foundation.
The Home’s current facilities consist of a manor house, an administrative office building, staff living quarters, a maintenance barn, a sports clubhouse, a baseball field and a basketball court. The Foundation’s plans to abandon those facilities and to construct a new expanded physical plant for the Home at another site on the 263 acre tract precipitated this zoning dispute.
Michael Sunday, director of the Home, testified before the Board of Appeals: “Bowling Brook Home for Boys is a residential facility that provides educational, counseling, vocational training to young men with troubled backgrounds, ages 15V2 to 18, who have been deemed by the courts to be removed from their home so that we can provide care, assistance and guidance to these young men.” The program at the Home is licensed by the State Juvenile Services Administration and is a highly structured one. Mr. Sunday described the daily regimen:
[TJhey get up at six o’clock in the morning, make their beds, take their showers, prepare themselves for breakfast. A number of the boys also prepare breakfast. After breakfast, the boys go out to a work program from 8 to 12, supervised by one of our staff members. Upon return, at twelve o’clock we have lunch and following lunch, we have on-grounds educational program from one o’clock to four o’clock, which is staffed by a certified teacher from the State of Maryland. From 4:15 to 5:45, an hour and a half, we have a group meeting every day, *437 which is used to identify problems, to resolve problems and to have all the young men in the group involved in the helping process with each other. Following the group meeting at 5:45 we move into supper at six o’clock and following supper and the chores around supper, from 7 to 8:30 or 7 to 9, we have a supervised recreational period for these young men. Following the recreational period, we have another group meeting, which we term a riffraff, which is more than say a counseling session. It’s more of a planning session for the following day and that’s from 9 to 10. Following that, there is a short free period for snacks and maybe listening to some music or a game of pool and then they’re in bed by eleven o’clock
The average length of stay of residents in the program is five and a half to six months. 1 Mr. Sunday pointed out that most of the boys in the Home are boys referred by the Juvenile Services Administration who have been adjudicated delinquent, in need of assistance or in need of supervision by the juvenile courts of this State pursuant to Md. Code (1984 RepLVol.), §§ 3-801 through 3-835 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article. That administration has classified the Home as a “juvenile care facility — group home.” 2
*438 Mr. Sunday elaborated on the educational component of the Home’s program:
The educational component, though we only have one certified teacher in the classroom, our group leader who handles the group sessions, is a certified educator. Our vocational supervisor is a Master degree person with an education degree and I feel like not just the classroom but the total program is an educational process. With some young men, for example, that would come into our educational program, we coordinate with the school that they may be targeted to return to, that school will send us materials which [we] will monitor____ [L]ast spring, we had a young man graduate from his high school while he was still in our program, or upon the day after he was released from our program. I think more than anything else, sir, most of our boys have been failures in school and another focus of oúr educational program is to whet their appetite for learning and to have them understand that in order for them to be successful out there, they are going to have to learn every day of their lives and if not, they are going to struggle.
[W]hat we do is we have to by State law develop an I.E.P., 3 which is an individual education plan for each *439 unit, which needs to be reviewed by the case worker, the parents, youth and the people involved with our facility. Also we have an educational coordinator, who is not a paid staff member out of Bowling Brook, but is a member of the Carroll County Board of Education of the public school system, Mr. Larry Weis from the Bowling Brook Service Center. He also oversees and coordinates our educational programs.
I feel as far as meeting the State regulations and the certifiable monitoring that the student — insures that we adhere to — that we are meeting the time frame for the educational services that we are providing.
Mr. Sunday also stressed that “[m]ost of the young men that come to our facility are functioning usually below their grade level in math and reading, and we do a lot of remedial work to try to bring them up to level____” Although only one teacher monitors the daily three hour education session, four members of the Home’s staff are certified teachers who interact with the boys. A vocational program is also a part of the curriculum.
*440 In construing the meaning of a word in a statute, the cardinal rule is to ascertain and carry out the real legislative intention. Reid v. State,302 Md. 811 , 816,490 A.2d 1289 (1985); Atlantic Richfield Co. v. Sybert,295 Md. 347 , 361,456 A.2d 20 (1983); Smelser v. Criterion Ins. Co.,293 Md. 384 , 388-89,444 A.2d 1024 (1982); Mauzy v. Hornbeck,285 Md. 84 , 92,400 A.2d 1091 (1979). The primary source of legislative intent is, of course, the language of the statute itself. Auto. Trade Ass’n. v. Harold Folk Enter.,301 Md. 642 , 653,484 A.2d 612 (1984); Haskell v. Carey,294 Md. 550 , 556,451 A.2d 658 (1982); Bledsoe v. Bledsoe,294 Md. 183 , 189,448 A.2d 353 (1982); State v. Berry,287 Md. 491 , 495,413 A.2d 557 (1980). When the legislature has not defined a term, it should ordinarily be given its usual and natural meaning. DeJarnette v. Federal Kemper Ins. Co.,299 Md. 708 , 717,475 A.2d 454 (1984); Brown v. State,285 Md. 469 , 474,403 A.2d 788 (1979); Mauzy v. Hornbeck, supra,285 Md. at 84 ,400 A.2d 1091 ; Williams v. Loyola College,257 Md. 316 , 328,263 A.2d 5 (1970). Of course, where statutory provisions are clear and unambiguous, no construction or clarification is needed or permitted, it being the rule that a plainly worded statute must be construed without forced or subtle interpretations designed to extend or limit the scope of its operation. State v. Intercontinental, Ltd.,302 Md. 132 , 137,486 A.2d 174 (1985); Hornbeck v. Somerset Co. Bd. of Educ.,295 Md. 597 , 619,458 A.2d 758 (1983).
Tucker v. Firemen’s Fund Ins. Co.,
Maryland’s appellate courts have considered the definition of the word “school” in several different contexts. In
Wooddy v. Wooddy,
The Court of Appeals discussed the nature of a school at length in
Board of Public Welfare v. Myers,
the record makes it clear that educational programs offered in the training schools are substantially the same as those offered in the regular public schools. The trial judge in the instant case found as a fact, from the evidence submitted, that these programs are so closely patterned after those in the public schools that a child, when his scholastic grades and credits are earned, “can usually return to his former school in his neighborhood ... without academic difficulty.” The judge stated that the training schools are “basically schools, and not custody-centered institutions with education secondary.” In support of his conclusion that they are “a part of the State’s public education system,” he pointed out that there are some public schools in Maryland that admit only special groups of problem or handicapped children. He also referred to the fact that by Chapter 29 of the Acts of 1922, the Maryland Training School was placed under the general supervision of the Department of Education, and its transfer to the Department of Welfare in 1943 did not alter its basic character.
Myers, supra,
Several cases from other jurisdictions are persuasive authority on the question presented to us. In
Crist v. Bishop,
The requisites of ... a school are: some physical facility, teachers, a curriculum for study or training, and students who are the object thereof. If these requisites are met, the status of the institution is not changed because of variation in methods of teaching or of training, or of discipline or control. These are all present in greater or lesser degree in practically all schools; and they may vary greatly without preventing one from being properly so characterized. Id. at 198-99 (footnote omitted).
At issue in
Armstrong v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
In the case
sub judice,
the Home is staffed with four qualified teachers. One teacher supervises the daily three hour classroom session. Each boy, differing in age and ability, has a personalized program tailored to his needs. Each boy’s program is coordinated with the public school system to which the boy will return. The Home complements the educational aspect of its program with vocational training, group counseling sessions, and recreational activities. These programs are similar to those offered in the State institutions found by the Court of Appeals in
Board of Public Welfare v. Myers, supra,
to be part of the public educational system. In that case the Court of Appeals did not agree with the State’s position that “training schools for delinquent minors are places of detention, analogous to prisons, although the accent is on education and training rather than punishment.”
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED;
COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE APPELLANT.
Notes
. The Home also formerly operated a “graduate program” for boys who had successfully completed the initial program. The "graduate program,” which was located on a different portion of the property, has been discontinued and is not a subject of this appeal.
. “Juvenile care facilities” are defined in COMAR 10.25.03.01, adopted by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene for its Juvenile Services Administration pursuant to Md.Code (1982), § 6-125(b) of the Health-General Article. It provides:
A. "Juvenile care facility” is a generic term which denotes the administration, program, and physical plan involved in rendering residential services on a 24-hour basis to youths under 21 years old.
B. The following types are included in the definition of "Juvenile care facilities."
(4) "Youth group home" means a community based family-type dwelling, housing between five and twelve youths operated separately or as a part of an affiliate corporation. The purpose of the home *438 is to offer a group living experience in a neighborhood not unlike the original community from which the youth originates and to which he is expected to return.
. COMAR 10.25.03.18 requires that a juvenile care facility provide at least the following educational program components:
D. Education and Employment Services.
(1) Each facility shall provide for an educational or employment program designed to meet the needs of each youth.
(2) Education.
(a) As appropriate for individual youths, arrangements shall be made for their enrollment in a school approved by the Department of Education. Educational records shall be maintained in accordance with Regulation .15C(9).
(b) When enrollment of a youth in a school is inappropriate, the facility shall provide an educational program designed to meet the needs of each youth until he can be enrolled in a school.
*439 (c) The program shall:
(i) Be staffed with qualified teachers, as specified in Regulation .14H.
(ii) Be regularly scheduled.
(iii) Include instruction in the studies usually taught in the public schools to youths of the same age.
(iv) Be short term, not more than 90 days, with an immediate objective of returning the youth to school. The juvenile care facility may not provide long-term educational programs.
(v) Be coordinated with local educational agency to assure proper placement when the youth returns to school.
(3) The juvenile care facility shall maintain educational records which include:
(a) Each youth’s weekly schedule including subjects, teachers, and time schedules for each subject; and
(b) Grade and progress reports.
(4) Employment Service. If enrollment in a school program is inappropriate, the youth shall be enrolled in a vocational training program, a special employment preparation program, or helped to find employment.
. For cases holding that schools for the mentally retarded, emotionally disturbed or physically handicapped are "schools," or educational in nature, thus qualifying for treatment as such under zoning ordinances, see
Fitchburg Housing Authority v. Board of Zoning Appeals,
