Anonymous wrote:Westfield parent here- the tragedy last year with the murdered student was handled very distastefully from start to finish by the school admin and fcps. The students internalized that if something terrible happened to them, their school would try and ignore that they ever existed. Very sad.
The chaos with the day spent in the stadium did not inspire confidence in the event of a true emergency.
Anonymous wrote:Westfield parent here- the tragedy last year with the murdered student was handled very distastefully from start to finish by the school admin and fcps. The students internalized that if something terrible happened to them, their school would try and ignore that they ever existed. Very sad.
The chaos with the day spent in the stadium did not inspire confidence in the event of a true emergency.
Anonymous wrote:I used to be a Westfield parent I think the principal Mr. DiBari has done a pretty good job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend was complaining that her Westfield child's journalism class was cut for next year-literally no journalism classes will be offered at all, and no school paper. Seems like the school is poorly run. It is one of the largest HS and should offer at least basic programs like choir and a school paper.
Westfield used to be considered superior to Chantilly. Administration issues?
The admin at Westfield is the worst.
Administration makes a big difference. I know nothing about it at Westfield.
He mishandled multiple crises last year. He's not good.
What happened last year? This year has been uneventful
They had three lockdowns in two weeks this fall including a disturbed man outside with a rifle and a swatting and the parents were given no details
Last year:
The student who was murdered, terrible tragic situation handled absolutely terribly by the principal and fcps
The fire drill that was a real fire where the 2800 kids were trapped in the stadium all day long with no water and their cells and belongings were in their classrooms-parents were not notified, students were not allowed to leave, admin was not even there.
Is this one of the incidents you were talking about?
“Dear Families,
I wanted to make you aware of a situation that happened this morning, which was quickly resolved but impacted your student’s class. This morning, we were alerted to an incident occurring in the community that did not directly affect Westfield High School nor its students. However, out of an abundance of caution, as soon as we were notified, we decided to pull students into the building from their trailer classrooms and physical education classes occurring outside. At the time, your student was enrolled in one of these classes. The incident was resolved in under 5 minutes and we were able to return to our regular routines for the school day. ”
Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that something like choir was a class to begin with, and more shocked that an actual class was held outside of school hours. It's not just inequitable, it's absurd. Things like that are extra curricular at almost every school district in the country. It's bizarre that Westfield was giving academic credit for it. It's like if being on the football team was a class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that something like choir was a class to begin with, and more shocked that an actual class was held outside of school hours. It's not just inequitable, it's absurd. Things like that are extra curricular at almost every school district in the country. It's bizarre that Westfield was giving academic credit for it. It's like if being on the football team was a class.
What are you talking about? Choir is a class during the day at every single school in the county
I said country. Not county. Choir is probably a high school elective in the county. During the day. In most places choir is competitive and not a class at all, but an extra curricular. If it's not during the day, it's extra curricular, period. No one should be getting credit and a GPA boost for being in an extra curricular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that something like choir was a class to begin with, and more shocked that an actual class was held outside of school hours. It's not just inequitable, it's absurd. Things like that are extra curricular at almost every school district in the country. It's bizarre that Westfield was giving academic credit for it. It's like if being on the football team was a class.
What are you talking about? Choir is a class during the day at every single school in the county
I said country. Not county. Choir is probably a high school elective in the county. During the day. In most places choir is competitive and not a class at all, but an extra curricular. If it's not during the day, it's extra curricular, period. No one should be getting credit and a GPA boost for being in an extra curricular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that something like choir was a class to begin with, and more shocked that an actual class was held outside of school hours. It's not just inequitable, it's absurd. Things like that are extra curricular at almost every school district in the country. It's bizarre that Westfield was giving academic credit for it. It's like if being on the football team was a class.
What are you talking about? Choir is a class during the day at every single school in the county
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend was complaining that her Westfield child's journalism class was cut for next year-literally no journalism classes will be offered at all, and no school paper. Seems like the school is poorly run. It is one of the largest HS and should offer at least basic programs like choir and a school paper.
Westfield used to be considered superior to Chantilly. Administration issues?
The admin at Westfield is the worst.
Administration makes a big difference. I know nothing about it at Westfield.
He mishandled multiple crises last year. He's not good.
What happened last year? This year has been uneventful
They had three lockdowns in two weeks this fall including a disturbed man outside with a rifle and a swatting and the parents were given no details
Last year:
The student who was murdered, terrible tragic situation handled absolutely terribly by the principal and fcps
The fire drill that was a real fire where the 2800 kids were trapped in the stadium all day long with no water and their cells and belongings were in their classrooms-parents were not notified, students were not allowed to leave, admin was not even there.
Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked that something like choir was a class to begin with, and more shocked that an actual class was held outside of school hours. It's not just inequitable, it's absurd. Things like that are extra curricular at almost every school district in the country. It's bizarre that Westfield was giving academic credit for it. It's like if being on the football team was a class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend was complaining that her Westfield child's journalism class was cut for next year-literally no journalism classes will be offered at all, and no school paper. Seems like the school is poorly run. It is one of the largest HS and should offer at least basic programs like choir and a school paper.
Westfield used to be considered superior to Chantilly. Administration issues?
The admin at Westfield is the worst.
Administration makes a big difference. I know nothing about it at Westfield.
He mishandled multiple crises last year. He's not good.
What happened last year? This year has been uneventful
They had three lockdowns in two weeks this fall including a disturbed man outside with a rifle and a swatting and the parents were given no details
Last year:
The student who was murdered, terrible tragic situation handled absolutely terribly by the principal and fcps
The fire drill that was a real fire where the 2800 kids were trapped in the stadium all day long with no water and their cells and belongings were in their classrooms-parents were not notified, students were not allowed to leave, admin was not even there.