Is she was so good why not have her stay 10 more years either the kpis were to increase diversity and she succeeded or the failing ratings and lowered academics caused them to cut her loose and make her the sacrificial lamb |
+1 |
Mukai is amazing. He is principled and a moderate, one of the few left in FCPS. |
Those are VERY low standards for TJ. My B/C high school student met those easily in middle school. |
You B/C high school students should be doing better then. |
Meh. Learning disabilities but taking a rigorous AP course load. Middle school is easy and the new standards are a joke. |
But the reason for the USNWR drop is that TJ had multiple students failing their SOL exams post-freshman/sophomore admission changes, something that had not happened previously. |
I agree and he clearly has an impressive record. It is really saddening to repeatedly encounter a few people on DCUM who harbor so much open hatred and hostility toward TJ students, past and present. To those people: what is your problem and why are you even on these threads? I mean, I am the parent of a current TJ student; can you say the same? |
They're liberal racists who hate Asians. They also hate TJ because TJ's majority isn't white. |
Cao has the double whammy of being a conservative. This board hates non liberals. It is probably more about him being center right rather than his TJ status. |
New principal brings hope for the prepandemic era academic standards to be restored. |
For me the point is that the FCPS admissions reps tasked with promoting school and admitting students don’t even understand what TJ is about. The new principal can hopefully turn this around too. Current FCPS handling of the school has been its downfall. |
NP. I'm a bit of an FCPS historian and my understanding is that TJHSST was created because of temporary low enrollment in the mid-1980s that led the School Board at the time to conclude that one of Annandale, Stuart (now Justice) or Jefferson (now TJHSST) should be closed. Jefferson was geographically in the middle of that area, and a newer school with less vocal parents, so it got the short end of the stick and was converted to a magnet. The school obviously has some good qualities, but three things about it make me wish they'd just had a bit more patience and kept "old" Jefferson open. 1. If they'd kept Jefferson open, we could now have multiple schools (Annandale, Edison, Jefferson, Justice, and Woodson) with lower enrollments; instead, we ended with a number of schools with higher than desirable enrollments and multiple boundary changes. 2. Closing Jefferson meant concentrating poverty along Route 236 (Little River Turnpike) that had previously been shared between Annandale and Jefferson at one school - Annandale - instead. Over time, this led to overcrowding at Annandale, and multiple single-family areas redistricted out of Annandale to other schools (Falls Church, Lake Braddock, Woodson, and Edison) while Annandale retained most of the poverty. Net result - TJHSST benefitted at the expense of the surrounding neighborhoods and AHS, which have declined. 3. TJHSST sucks up a disproportionate amount of FCPS time and resources, and its existence sends the message that as long as there is one "flagship" or "crown jewel" whose achievements FCPS can herald, it really doesn't matter what happens at the rest of FCPS's 25 high/secondary schools. In a school system that claims to prioritize "equity," TJHSST students get access to resources that are denied to over 95% of FCPS students; the only development of note is that, with the recent admissions changes, those resources are allocated slightly more evenly to students who attended every FCPS middle school. That doesn't change the fact that less than 1 in 20 FCPS high students derives any benefit from TJ's existence. Even now, you can see that the appointment of a new principal at TJ gets a lot more attention than, say, the recent appointments of the new principals at Langley and Justice. The larger TJ community is very good at making the case that it's essential to the county, the state, the nation, etc. The people associated with the school are often incredibly self-promoting to the point of being vain. Any critic of the school is harshly attacked and marginalized by people who enjoyed their TJ experience or derive a lot of their self-worth from having (or having had) a kid at TJ. So I've no illusion that it will get wound down, but I still wish it had never come into existence. |
The failures weren't due to the pandemic; there were no TJ SOL exam failures in 2020-21. The failures didn't appear until 2021-22, post freshman/sophomore admissions changes. |
You have complete misunderstanding of why TJ was created in the first place. |