J. E. B. Stuart High School

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J.E.B. Stuart High School
100px
Address
3301 Peace Valley Lane
Falls Church, Virginia 22044
Information
School type Public, high school
Founded 1959
School district Fairfax County Public Schools
Principal Penny Gros
Staff approximately 180
Grades 9–12
Enrollment 1,859 (2008)
Language English
Campus Suburban
Color(s) Red, white, and blue
Mascot Raiders
Feeder schools Glasgow Middle School Poe Middle School
Rival schools Falls Church High School
Athletic conferences National District
Northern Region
Website

J.E.B. Stuart High School is a high school in Fairfax County, Virginia named for Confederate cavalry leader J. E. B. Stuart. The school is part of the Fairfax County Public Schools district. The school has a Falls Church address but is not located within the city limits of the City of Falls Church.

The school has been featured in National Geographic magazine,[1] and has received national recognition by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the International Baccalaureate program. President George W. Bush chose to speak there about education during the 2004-2005 school year.

In 2006, then-principal Mel Riddile, former director Straight, Inc., drug rehabilitation program for teens,[2] was chosen as the principal of the year by the National Association of Secondary School Principals.[3] Riddile moved to T. C. Williams High School in neighboring Alexandria City at the end of the 05-06 school year. Assistant Principal Pamela Jones took his place and retired in 2012. The current principal is Penny Gros.

Veteran math department chair Stu Singer retired in protest when Stuart administrators dismantled a remedial math program that had given Stuart the highest pass rate in the county. Singer later published a book on the program.[4] Singer labeled the dismantling of this program “education malpractice that can only be described as unconscionable.” Math scores plummeted after the reorganization.[5] Other successful programs were also dismantled. Faculty morale fell to the lowest in the county, and many teachers retired or transferred out in protest.[6] In 2014, the district sent a support team to Stuart to help the beleaguered administration.[7]

In 2000, the school's music department began to gain prominence, being named a Blue Ribbon School for music by the Virginia Music Educators Association in 2003, 2006, and 2008. The school's band was named a Virginia Honor Band by the Virginia Band & Orchestra Directors Association in 2000, 2004, and 2006-2009. The band commissioned composer John Mackey to write a piece, which the band premiered on May 8, 2009 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the school. The school's top choir, the Madrigal Chamber Singers, were selected to perform at the Virginia Music Educators Association's annual conference in 2006 and 2008. Stuart has also hosted District X Band auditions annually since 2004, hosted the District X Orchestra event in 2005, and hosted Senior Regional Orchestra Auditions in 2007 and 2008.

On April 22, 2015, Fairfax County Superintendent of Schools Karen Garza named Penny Gros as principal of Stuart High School. Penny Gros had previously been the principal of Glasgow Middle School, the middle school for the Stuart High School Pyramid.


Demographics

In the 2011-12 school year, Stuart High School's student body was 44.73% Hispanic, 24.62% White, 16.21% Asian, 11.78% Black and 2.66% Other.[8]

Name Controversy and Protest

In June of 2015 before the Charleston church shooting, alumni and students (Abby Conde, Anna Rowan, Cassie Marcotty, Lidia Amanuel, and Marley Finley) of the school began a petition in order to change the name of the school, noting that it was named after J. E. B. Stuart in a direct response to the desegregation of schools brought about by Brown v. Board of Education.[9] The petition asked that the school be renamed after Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court Justice. Alumni and actress Julianne Moore and producer Bruce Cohen added their support in August of that year.[10]

Senior traditions

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. During the summer, the rising senior class used the portion of Peace Valley Lane, which is across from the school to paint their names. This tradition is usually done at nightfall to avoid cars from running over the student's work or the students themselves. Behind the baseball fields, the symbolic "S" rock formation was turned into the graduating class's year. In the 2008-09 school year, principal Pamela Jones decided to get rid of most of the rocks, due to students changing the rocks to different numbers or letters. She has also claimed that students were making obscene drawings and/or hate symbols. Another tradition that most rising seniors look forward to is the privilege to leave class 15 minutes early, which gives seniors the chance to get a head start to go to lunch before the underclassmen arrive. In the 2009-2010 school year, the senior class was stripped of both the ability to leave class early and the ability to paint the street because of actions taken predominantly by underclassmen.

Notable alumni

References

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  4. Singer, Stuart Alan, The Algebra Miracle: The True Story of a High-Poverty School's Triumph in the Age of Accountability, lulu.com (2012). ISBN 978-1105416323
  5. Matthews, Jay, How administrators killed Fairfax school’s math success, The Washington Post, 25 May 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
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  7. Shapiro, T. Rees In Fairfax, Garza announces new support team at Stuart High amid low staff morale The Washington Post, 23 June 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
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External links