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How convenient, for the school board. By moving the WSHS principal to TJ, the board can destabilize WSHS and its community, bring in a poor principal for a year and try to get the WSHS community further broken apart.
In their eyes, this may help their redistricting plan be less contentious. If you pull down WSHS, parents will be more willing and less combative over the move. |
| I don’t know. That school runs itself and we didn’t find Mukai to be part of the day to day operations in the last few years. I think he wanted the other opportunity and got it. |
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From the announcement email, it sounded like he applied for the position, not was moved like a checkers piece.
Congrats to TJ! And I'm interested to see who the next WSHS principal will be. |
| We are a WSHS family who is sad to see him go… congratulations to TJ and Mr. Mukai! |
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Not everything is a conspiracy, OP.
Congratulations to Mr Mukai. |
This “analysis” seems contrived, to put it mildly. |
| We are very bummed about this. |
I think you are correct. The FCPS leadership wants to make WSHS less appealing. Fortunately, Mr. Mukai built an incredible team there at all levels, so Reid and co might not achieve the result they want. |
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Lucky TJ
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I’ll add that I don’t blame him a bit. It will be hard to be the principal of WSHS next year. Remember how they brought a “rookie” Renee Miller (later she moved to Keene mill) in to close out Clifton Elementary? The interim principal will have a tough job next year. But out of a national search to decide to move the WSHS principal during a contentious time. They know what they are doing. |
That was my first thought when I read the email. How convenient… |
This is certainly tied to Reid's rezoning plans for WSHS. Mukai has been such an asset as a principal. They are protecting him from the ugly rezoning fight next year. |
Fwiw Miller was an excellent principal. Teachers and staff loved her. Parents, not so much, because she wasn't warm and catering. But during the pandemic, her organizational skills made virtual school and in person classes as easy and normal as possible. |
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I think he genuinely saw the opportunity and went for it and wanted it. There are lots of principals who move on leaving the school in a good place.
Maybe he didn’t want to deal with the hassle next year will bring but I hope this wasn’t contrived on Reid’s part. |
+1 After 10 years, it's good that he is looking for a new challenge rather than planning to stay at one school forever. A good sign for his energy and talent as a principal. |