Anonymous wrote:USN rankings are meaningless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, what can he to actually improve TJ that is 100% within his control?
He can shift the focus back to STEM academics and recognizing students' merit-based efforts, rather than DEI and woke stuff.
Be really specific in describing exactly how Bonitatibus focused on “DEI and woke stuff” in matters of educational policy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0wJYHnOyJM&t=3s
At about 13:30 Bonitatibus speaks on this subject during the debate about the admissions change.
She cosigns the whole diversity and representation rationale the board presents for it's racial discrimination.
No discrimination.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best part is in the email they had to make sure to talk of the former failed principals fake promotion to gatehouse! Lmao "following Dr. Ann Bonitatibus' promotion to a central office position."
Here is a better article calling out how awful the previous tj principal was pushing racial quotas causing TJ to fall form #1 in the nation to 14. More info on the new principal and an endorsement from the Republican nominee fellow classmate https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/fcps-selects-tjhsst-alum-michael-mukai-to-be-new-principal/article_675df76c-cee9-11ef-9b2a-ab958f33eb91.html
Letter from gatehouse:
January 9, 2025
Dear FCPS Community,
I am writing today with exciting news regarding the future leadership of TJHSST.
As you know, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) launched a nationwide search for a new principal earlier this fall
After several weeks of extensive and diligent consideration of numerous highly-qualified candidates, we are delighted to share that we have found an exceptional leader - and TJHSST alum - close to home. Michael Mukai has accepted the position and will begin later this month. Mukai has been the principal of West Springfield High School since 2014, and has held a variety of FCPS school-based positions since 1995 when he began his career as a math and science teacher. He has also coached wrestling and volleyball.
In a full circle moment, Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech.
During the recruitment process, Mukai impressed all with his passion for TJHSST, his innovative vision for the future, and his track record of elevating academic excellence.
His many accomplishments at WSHS include:
Significant gains in advanced academic access and success which has resulted in gold recognition by the College Board for the AP School Honor Roll.
Increasing the number of students recognized through the National Merit Scholarship program.
Cappies recognitions for theater arts, honor band recognitions, Virginia Music Educators Association recognitions, district, region, and state championships in Virginia High School League athletics and activities.
Thank you for your continued support of FCPS.
Dr. Geovanny Ponce
Chief of Schools
You are spreading RWNJ misinformation.
There are no quotas.
And TJ went from #5 to #14 out of 25,000 schools on the USNWR rankings. It was only #1 twice in the preceding decade.
lol. admissions aim for a predetermined diversity chart, aka race based quotas.
No, there are allotments by middle school, providing geographic diversity. So more kids in FCPS have a shot. Not just the ones from a handful of wealthy feeders.
Without those handful of academically wealthy feeders there is no way a TJ class can be formulated, according to FCPS. Top one third of every class comes from the top four academically ranked feeders.
There are still plenty of those kids.
Now that they’ve added seats to take kids from other middle schools, kids from across the county get a shot.
The majority of FCPS' STEM talent comes from those top four middle schools. FCPS puts considerable effort into nurturing advanced math and science at the top four middle schools and students there reciprocate with hard work, which is why it draws heavily from that academically wealthy talent pool. The new TJ principal is tasked with restoring the school’s academic excellence to its former glory as the national leader among stem schools, and the top talent pool will help get there.
Why is FCPS only putting “considerable effort into nurturing advanced math and science” at the wealthier AAP centers?
Anonymous wrote:Former classmate of accomplished VA politician Hung Cao.
Cautiously optimistic about this new TJ principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best part is in the email they had to make sure to talk of the former failed principals fake promotion to gatehouse! Lmao "following Dr. Ann Bonitatibus' promotion to a central office position."
Here is a better article calling out how awful the previous tj principal was pushing racial quotas causing TJ to fall form #1 in the nation to 14. More info on the new principal and an endorsement from the Republican nominee fellow classmate https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/fcps-selects-tjhsst-alum-michael-mukai-to-be-new-principal/article_675df76c-cee9-11ef-9b2a-ab958f33eb91.html
Letter from gatehouse:
January 9, 2025
Dear FCPS Community,
I am writing today with exciting news regarding the future leadership of TJHSST.
As you know, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) launched a nationwide search for a new principal earlier this fall
After several weeks of extensive and diligent consideration of numerous highly-qualified candidates, we are delighted to share that we have found an exceptional leader - and TJHSST alum - close to home. Michael Mukai has accepted the position and will begin later this month. Mukai has been the principal of West Springfield High School since 2014, and has held a variety of FCPS school-based positions since 1995 when he began his career as a math and science teacher. He has also coached wrestling and volleyball.
In a full circle moment, Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech.
During the recruitment process, Mukai impressed all with his passion for TJHSST, his innovative vision for the future, and his track record of elevating academic excellence.
His many accomplishments at WSHS include:
Significant gains in advanced academic access and success which has resulted in gold recognition by the College Board for the AP School Honor Roll.
Increasing the number of students recognized through the National Merit Scholarship program.
Cappies recognitions for theater arts, honor band recognitions, Virginia Music Educators Association recognitions, district, region, and state championships in Virginia High School League athletics and activities.
Thank you for your continued support of FCPS.
Dr. Geovanny Ponce
Chief of Schools
You are spreading RWNJ misinformation.
There are no quotas.
And TJ went from #5 to #14 out of 25,000 schools on the USNWR rankings. It was only #1 twice in the preceding decade.
lol. admissions aim for a predetermined diversity chart, aka race based quotas.
No, there are allotments by middle school, providing geographic diversity. So more kids in FCPS have a shot. Not just the ones from a handful of wealthy feeders.
Without those handful of academically wealthy feeders there is no way a TJ class can be formulated, according to FCPS. Top one third of every class comes from the top four academically ranked feeders.
There are still plenty of those kids.
Now that they’ve added seats to take kids from other middle schools, kids from across the county get a shot.
The majority of FCPS' STEM talent comes from those top four middle schools. FCPS puts considerable effort into nurturing advanced math and science at the top four middle schools and students there reciprocate with hard work, which is why it draws heavily from that academically wealthy talent pool. The new TJ principal is tasked with restoring the school’s academic excellence to its former glory as the national leader among stem schools, and the top talent pool will help get there.
Why is FCPS only putting “considerable effort into nurturing advanced math and science” at the wealthier AAP centers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best part is in the email they had to make sure to talk of the former failed principals fake promotion to gatehouse! Lmao "following Dr. Ann Bonitatibus' promotion to a central office position."
Here is a better article calling out how awful the previous tj principal was pushing racial quotas causing TJ to fall form #1 in the nation to 14. More info on the new principal and an endorsement from the Republican nominee fellow classmate https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/fcps-selects-tjhsst-alum-michael-mukai-to-be-new-principal/article_675df76c-cee9-11ef-9b2a-ab958f33eb91.html
Letter from gatehouse:
January 9, 2025
Dear FCPS Community,
I am writing today with exciting news regarding the future leadership of TJHSST.
As you know, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) launched a nationwide search for a new principal earlier this fall
After several weeks of extensive and diligent consideration of numerous highly-qualified candidates, we are delighted to share that we have found an exceptional leader - and TJHSST alum - close to home. Michael Mukai has accepted the position and will begin later this month. Mukai has been the principal of West Springfield High School since 2014, and has held a variety of FCPS school-based positions since 1995 when he began his career as a math and science teacher. He has also coached wrestling and volleyball.
In a full circle moment, Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech.
During the recruitment process, Mukai impressed all with his passion for TJHSST, his innovative vision for the future, and his track record of elevating academic excellence.
His many accomplishments at WSHS include:
Significant gains in advanced academic access and success which has resulted in gold recognition by the College Board for the AP School Honor Roll.
Increasing the number of students recognized through the National Merit Scholarship program.
Cappies recognitions for theater arts, honor band recognitions, Virginia Music Educators Association recognitions, district, region, and state championships in Virginia High School League athletics and activities.
Thank you for your continued support of FCPS.
Dr. Geovanny Ponce
Chief of Schools
You are spreading RWNJ misinformation.
There are no quotas.
And TJ went from #5 to #14 out of 25,000 schools on the USNWR rankings. It was only #1 twice in the preceding decade.
lol. admissions aim for a predetermined diversity chart, aka race based quotas.
No, there are allotments by middle school, providing geographic diversity. So more kids in FCPS have a shot. Not just the ones from a handful of wealthy feeders.
Without those handful of academically wealthy feeders there is no way a TJ class can be formulated, according to FCPS. Top one third of every class comes from the top four academically ranked feeders.
There are still plenty of those kids.
Now that they’ve added seats to take kids from other middle schools, kids from across the county get a shot.
The majority of FCPS' STEM talent comes from those top four middle schools. FCPS puts considerable effort into nurturing advanced math and science at the top four middle schools and students there reciprocate with hard work, which is why it draws heavily from that academically wealthy talent pool. The new TJ principal is tasked with restoring the school’s academic excellence to its former glory as the national leader among stem schools, and the top talent pool will help get there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, what can he to actually improve TJ that is 100% within his control?
One thing I would like to see is a focus on actually communicating the great successes that have taken place at TJ over the years - and that will continue to in the future - so as to claim the narrative away from the ghouls who are obsessed with tearing it down.
One thing TJ has never suffered from is a lack of preening self-promotion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it seems like a good pick. people seem really happy with WSHS so he must be doing a good job there and it seems positive he was a student at TJ back in the day.
I really really hope he continues Dr B’s effort to make the school less stressful for kids than it needs to be. I think that shift has been positive (from what I have heard of before vs what DD there has experienced) and that the kids put enough pressure on themselves already for all As and the hardest classes - the leadership doesn’t need to feed into that frenzy further.
nice try. if fcps was indifferent to the academic decline, they wouldnt be getting rid of Bonita. Th new principal is being brought to change the current course and restore academic excellence. The nonsensical days of convincing students to stay back at TJ and accept Cs and Ds in least rigor courses are coming to end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, what can he to actually improve TJ that is 100% within his control?
One thing I would like to see is a focus on actually communicating the great successes that have taken place at TJ over the years - and that will continue to in the future - so as to claim the narrative away from the ghouls who are obsessed with tearing it down.
Anonymous wrote:I think it seems like a good pick. people seem really happy with WSHS so he must be doing a good job there and it seems positive he was a student at TJ back in the day.
I really really hope he continues Dr B’s effort to make the school less stressful for kids than it needs to be. I think that shift has been positive (from what I have heard of before vs what DD there has experienced) and that the kids put enough pressure on themselves already for all As and the hardest classes - the leadership doesn’t need to feed into that frenzy further.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best part is in the email they had to make sure to talk of the former failed principals fake promotion to gatehouse! Lmao "following Dr. Ann Bonitatibus' promotion to a central office position."
Here is a better article calling out how awful the previous tj principal was pushing racial quotas causing TJ to fall form #1 in the nation to 14. More info on the new principal and an endorsement from the Republican nominee fellow classmate https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/fcps-selects-tjhsst-alum-michael-mukai-to-be-new-principal/article_675df76c-cee9-11ef-9b2a-ab958f33eb91.html
Letter from gatehouse:
January 9, 2025
Dear FCPS Community,
I am writing today with exciting news regarding the future leadership of TJHSST.
As you know, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) launched a nationwide search for a new principal earlier this fall
After several weeks of extensive and diligent consideration of numerous highly-qualified candidates, we are delighted to share that we have found an exceptional leader - and TJHSST alum - close to home. Michael Mukai has accepted the position and will begin later this month. Mukai has been the principal of West Springfield High School since 2014, and has held a variety of FCPS school-based positions since 1995 when he began his career as a math and science teacher. He has also coached wrestling and volleyball.
In a full circle moment, Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech.
During the recruitment process, Mukai impressed all with his passion for TJHSST, his innovative vision for the future, and his track record of elevating academic excellence.
His many accomplishments at WSHS include:
Significant gains in advanced academic access and success which has resulted in gold recognition by the College Board for the AP School Honor Roll.
Increasing the number of students recognized through the National Merit Scholarship program.
Cappies recognitions for theater arts, honor band recognitions, Virginia Music Educators Association recognitions, district, region, and state championships in Virginia High School League athletics and activities.
Thank you for your continued support of FCPS.
Dr. Geovanny Ponce
Chief of Schools
You are spreading RWNJ misinformation.
There are no quotas.
And TJ went from #5 to #14 out of 25,000 schools on the USNWR rankings. It was only #1 twice in the preceding decade.
lol. admissions aim for a predetermined diversity chart, aka race based quotas.
No, there are allotments by middle school, providing geographic diversity. So more kids in FCPS have a shot. Not just the ones from a handful of wealthy feeders.
Without those handful of academically wealthy feeders there is no way a TJ class can be formulated, according to FCPS. Top one third of every class comes from the top four academically ranked feeders.
There are still plenty of those kids.
Now that they’ve added seats to take kids from other middle schools, kids from across the county get a shot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, what can he to actually improve TJ that is 100% within his control?
He can shift the focus back to STEM academics and recognizing students' merit-based efforts, rather than DEI and woke stuff.
Be really specific in describing exactly how Bonitatibus focused on “DEI and woke stuff” in matters of educational policy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0wJYHnOyJM&t=3s
At about 13:30 Bonitatibus speaks on this subject during the debate about the admissions change.
She cosigns the whole diversity and representation rationale the board presents for its racial discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best part is in the email they had to make sure to talk of the former failed principals fake promotion to gatehouse! Lmao "following Dr. Ann Bonitatibus' promotion to a central office position."
Here is a better article calling out how awful the previous tj principal was pushing racial quotas causing TJ to fall form #1 in the nation to 14. More info on the new principal and an endorsement from the Republican nominee fellow classmate https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/fcps-selects-tjhsst-alum-michael-mukai-to-be-new-principal/article_675df76c-cee9-11ef-9b2a-ab958f33eb91.html
Letter from gatehouse:
January 9, 2025
Dear FCPS Community,
I am writing today with exciting news regarding the future leadership of TJHSST.
As you know, Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) launched a nationwide search for a new principal earlier this fall
After several weeks of extensive and diligent consideration of numerous highly-qualified candidates, we are delighted to share that we have found an exceptional leader - and TJHSST alum - close to home. Michael Mukai has accepted the position and will begin later this month. Mukai has been the principal of West Springfield High School since 2014, and has held a variety of FCPS school-based positions since 1995 when he began his career as a math and science teacher. He has also coached wrestling and volleyball.
In a full circle moment, Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech.
During the recruitment process, Mukai impressed all with his passion for TJHSST, his innovative vision for the future, and his track record of elevating academic excellence.
His many accomplishments at WSHS include:
Significant gains in advanced academic access and success which has resulted in gold recognition by the College Board for the AP School Honor Roll.
Increasing the number of students recognized through the National Merit Scholarship program.
Cappies recognitions for theater arts, honor band recognitions, Virginia Music Educators Association recognitions, district, region, and state championships in Virginia High School League athletics and activities.
Thank you for your continued support of FCPS.
Dr. Geovanny Ponce
Chief of Schools
You are spreading RWNJ misinformation.
There are no quotas.
And TJ went from #5 to #14 out of 25,000 schools on the USNWR rankings. It was only #1 twice in the preceding decade.
lol. admissions aim for a predetermined diversity chart, aka race based quotas.
No, there are allotments by middle school, providing geographic diversity. So more kids in FCPS have a shot. Not just the ones from a handful of wealthy feeders.
Without those handful of academically wealthy feeders there is no way a TJ class can be formulated, according to FCPS. Top one third of every class comes from the top four academically ranked feeders.
Anonymous wrote:"Mukai was in the very first class of TJHSST when it converted to a magnet STEM school in 1985. He majored in Chemistry at Virginia Tech and he has a Masters of Curriculum and Instruction, Math Education also from Virginia Tech. He has also completed post-master's graduate work in the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge through the Department of Science Technology and Society of Virginia Tech. "
It took a drastic national ranking decline for fcps to realize that a high school for Science & Technology needs a principal with background in STEM.