Welcome to the School Age Child Care (SACC) Program- a great place to be a child! SACC provides fun, safe and educational care for children in kindergarten-sixth grade before school, after school and during school vacations in most Fairfax County public elementary schools. Children with special needs are fully included in all SACC centers. In addition, SACC programs at Key and Kilmer Centers serve youth, ages 5 - 21, with multiple types of disabilities.
SACC offers a sliding fee scale for income eligible families. The SACC program serves children five days a week, Monday - Friday. Before School - 7 a.m. Until school begins.
After School - End of school day until 6:15 p.m. SACC service begins when the children are dismissed from school. Winter/Spring/Summer Programs - SACC operates full-day winter, spring and summer programs at a number of consolidated sites throughout the county. History. Licensing. Programs and Curriculum (School Year, Winter, Spring, Summer).
Weather Policy. Parent Handbook. Parent Advisory Council. Spotlight on SACC Centers.
Working for SACC. Eligibility. Enrollment. Forms. Fees. Billing.
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Snack Menu. A Day in SACC. Center Directory. Staff. Community Service Connections Additional Information.
Merritt Academy After School Program (MAAP) Merritt Academy recognizes the need for quality afterschool care and programming for students in K-6th grade, and developed the Merritt Academy After School Program (M.A.A.P.) in 2009 to provide safe, fun, enriching afterschool programming to students attending area elementary schools. MAAP participants receive transportation from their base school to Merritt Academy’s campus immediately after dismissal, an after-school snack, and participate in a diverse range of activities. Students in 2nd-6th grade start their afternoons in a teacher-proctored study hall, allowing a quiet environment to complete homework or read. Younger students enjoy recess outside on our expansive playground, followed by games, crafts or read alouds in the classrooms. All MAAP students are eligible to register for our extensive list of on-campus extracurricular activities, including marital arts, piano lessons, language clubs, computer club and more.
Additionally, MAAP students may be registered for full-day programs during the weeks of winter and spring break. If you are interested in enrolling your child in MAAP, please contact Director of Admissions, Ari Autor for a complete list of participating schools and availability. Tuition 2016-2017 MAAP serves public school children in grades K-6. Activities are planned for the children on Mondays, when dismissal is early for elementary schools in Fairfax County, to include an intergenerational visit at Sunrise as well as games and time in the computer lab. Tuesday through Friday the children join the Merritt students in their classroom or on the playground depending on grade level. Application/Wait List Fee: $50.00 Annual fee program (excluding winter & spring breaks).
The After School Satan curriculum includes “science, creative learning activities, songs, art projects, educational stories,” and will teach “basic critical reasoning, problem solving, character qualities, and creative expression.” A spokesman with the Fairfax County public schools says the system currently has Good News Clubs in 23 schools. While the Satanic Temple made a request, school spokesman John Torre told The the school system does not bar groups from using schools based on their views. Watch the promotional video from the Satanic Temple, about its plans to bring After School Satan clubs to public schools.
The public school system in Fairfax County was created after the with the adoption by Virginia of the -era state constitution in 1870, which provided for the first time that a free public education was a constitutional right. The first Superintendent of Schools for Fairfax County was Thomas M. Moore, who was sworn in on September 26, 1870. At the time of its creation, the Fairfax County Public Schools system consisted of 41 schools, 28 white and 13 colored schools. In 1886, Milton D. Hall was appointed superintendent. He would serve for 44 years until his retirement in 1929.
Fairfax County Schools, like most school systems in the south schools practiced de jure segregation. There were local elementary schools for black students but not high schools. Although Fairfax was a densely populated area there were proportionately few Negro high school students. Fairfax, Prince William, Loudon, Arlington and Fauquier Counties shared the high school for black students. The school was centrally located between the counties in Manassas. Others attended high schools in Washington D.C., where many had relatives. Those schools were Armstrong High School, Cardozo High School, Dunbar High School, and Phelps Vocational Center in Washington DC.
In 1951 Fairfax County, at the request of residents for a black high school, began construction of the Luther Jackson School. The opening coincided with the Brown decision passed in 1954. In 1954, FCPS had 42 elementary schools and 6 high schools. That year, the, the first high school for black students, opened in Falls Church.
Massive resistance. Further information: The Supreme Court ruling in (1954) ordered an end. In response, the Commonwealth of Virginia immediately enacted legislation to stop the process of desegregation, took control of all the schools in Virginia, and resorted to closing school systems attempting to desegregate. When Arlington County announced an early attempt at a desegregation plan, its school board was fired by the State Board of Education. In 1955 the Fairfax School Board, renamed the 'Committee on Desegregation' to the 'Committee on Segregation' after a petition and thread of litigation from a civic group called 'Virginia Citizens’ Committee for Better Schools'. After the Brown VS Board of Education decision Daniel Duke who authored Education Empire wrote: 'Whether local school systems such as Fairfax County left to their own, would have moved forward to implement desegregation in the late 50's will never be known.
Richmond removed any possibility of local option.' It was recognized in court cases that it was the state who was running the show, not the county.
The ruling from the court stated 'Prior to the Brown decision1 Fairfax County maintained a dual school system: one for Negro students; one for all other races. Shortly thereafter the placement of all children in the Fairfax County schools was taken from the local School Board and vested in the state Pupil Placement Board. The assignment of students remained with the state Board until the 1961-62 school year, at which time placement responsibilities were reinvested in the local School Board. Fairfax County began their desegregation efforts shortly thereafter. As early as 1955 it was noted that in the Virginia General Assembly: Delegates from Northern Virginia openly opposed the as well as calls for even more radical legislation. Virginia's 10th district was the only congressional district to vote against the Gray Plan.
Delegate Boatwright also introduced another bill aimed at correcting the unorthodox views of the northern Virginians. Boatwright's legislation would have prohibited certain federal employees from serving on school boards or holding other local offices. The point of this bill, called the 'Boatwright Bill' was without a doubt aimed at Northern Virginia and the School Boards.
Boatwright himself said his bill affected all of Virginia communities but admitted Northern Virginia was most affected. The reason for the bill was because they felt that Federal Employees were in support of the Federal government's position on integration. The 7 member Fairfax County School Board included four Federal employees. In Blackwell v. Fairfax County School Board (1960), Negro plaintiffs charged that the Fairfax grade-a-year plan was discriminatory and dilatory. Fifteen Negro children had been refused admission to white schools because they did not fall within the prescribed grades of the School Board's assignment plan. The plaintiffs contended successfully that the speed of desegregation was too slow under the school board's plan.
In accepting the plaintiff's argument, District Judge Albert V. Bryan did not categorically rule out such plans. Instead, he emphasized that they must be judged according to the character of the community. Since the Negro school population of Fairfax County was less than four percent, Bryan considered the fear of racial friction an unacceptable justification for such a cautious desegregation plan. The Civil Rights Commission report of 1962 found that 'Every sign indicates that the communities in northern Virginia will be the first in the State to reach compliance with the mandate in the School Segregation Cases.' Ultimately Fairfax County was one of the first school systems in the country to be awarded funds to aid with desegregation because of their efforts to implement a desegregated system.
The Fairfax County School Board voted to switch from a 7-5 to a 6-2-4 grade level configuration in 1958, necessitating the creation of what were then called intermediate schools for students in grades 7 and 8. By the time the first eight intermediate schools opened in the Fall of 1960, they were already over their 1000 student capacities. In the Fall of 1960, the first black students were admitted to newly desegregated public schools. Betz and Raynard Wheeler were enrolled at the Belvedere Elementary School in Falls Church, and Gwendolyn Brooks was enrolled at Cedar Lane Elementary School in Vienna. The changeover to the 6-2-4 plan was the last major initiative of Superintendent W.
Woodson, who retired in 1961, having served at 32 years the second-longest tenure as head of the Fairfax County Public Schools system. In April 1961, Superintendent Earl C. Funderburk was appointed as superintendent to replace Woodson. Post-segregation As early as 1965, Superintendent Funderburk was discussing plans to decentralize FCPS. By 1967, Funderburk had put together a plan for five area offices, each serving a portion of the county, and had appointed Principal Robert E. Phipps and Principal S. John Davis as his first two administrators that December.
Although the school board had endorsed Funderburk's plan, they also hired the consulting firm of Cresap, McCormick & Paget to conduct an audit of the system's management organization and operations. In 1968, based on their consultant's recommendations, the school board put a significantly modified version of the decentralization plan into effect, dividing FCPS into four areas which were in effect miniature school systems. In January of the following year, Funderburk resigned, telling the school board he did not want a third term as superintendent. The school board selected Dr. Watts from the in to take the reins of the Fairfax County Public Schools system, which had grown during Funderburk's tenure from 65,000 to 122,000 students, in May 1969. In May 1970, Dr.
Watts appointed Taylor M. Williams as the first black high school principal since FCPS had desegregated, placing Williams in charge of in Vienna. Watts' appointment of Williams would be one of his final official acts. After less than a year as superintendent, Dr. Watts died, aged 44, of a heart attack at his home in in June 1970. Assistant Superintendent S. Barry Morris was named interim superintendent while the school board sought a replacement to lead the 130,000 student school system.
The board did not have to look far for its new superintendent. In September 1970, Area Superintendent S.
John Davis was chosen following a nationwide search to serve the remaining 33 months of Dr. Watts' four-year term. During the mid-1970s, Davis had twin difficulties dealing with the start of demographic crash as well as a population shift. The student population dropped from a high of 145,385 in 1974-75 school year to an eventual low of 122,646 in 1982-83. Additionally, families migrated from established eastern and central parts of the county to newer developments in the west and south, leading to the unenviable task of Davis having to request the closings of some schools while needing to build entirely new ones elsewhere.
In a 6-5 vote, the school board voted in May 1976 to re-institute textbook rental fees, hoping to raise an additional $1.3 million to close a projected budget shortfall. The plan was scrapped two months later, in July, when the board was able to find a $1.4 million surplus. In 1978, Fairfax County began countywide enforcement of its 15-year-old standardized six-point letter grading scale, which also had a ten-point spread at the bottom of the grading range. The grading scale, originally set in 1963, provided that a score of 100-94% was an A, 93-87% a B, 86-80% a C, and 70-79% a D, with any score below 70% an F.
The county school board adopted a $279 million budget in February 1979 which included a 5.15% cost of living raise for the system's teachers and other employees. However, this increase was only slightly more than half of the inflation rate, which was at an annual rate of 9.9% that month, and far short of the 9.4% increase FCPS employees had sought. In April 1979, the Fairfax Education Association, the professional association representing teachers in the county, adopted a work-to-the-rule action, which meant that teachers would not do any work outside of the 7.5 hours per day they were contracted for. Additionally, the FEA gave a vote of no confidence to Superintendent Davis. The vote of no confidence was considered the main factor in Davis' decision to resign from Fairfax County Public Schools on May 18, 1979 and accept an appointment as Virginia Superintendent of Public Education from Governor, despite having to take a $5,000 per year pay cut. Following Davis' resignation, the Fairfax County School Board appointed Associate School Superintendent William J.
Burkholder as interim superintendent. In November 1979, the School Board named superintendent L. Linton Deck Jr. As superintendent following a four-month search. Deck had been a divisive figure during his 6 1/2 years in Orange County, with some residents glad to see him go, while others praised him as a strong and professional leader. Deck inherited the problem of needing to close underutilized schools that had first plagued Superintendent Davis. 29 elementary schools, mostly in the eastern part of the county, were studied for possible closure, but Deck's recommendation in April 1980 was for eight schools to be closed, five more than the review panel had suggested.
The following month, the school board voted to close seven of the eight schools at its May 22, 1980 meeting, a move which was met with angry hisses and boos from parents in attendance. The work to the rule action by Fairfax County teachers which had begun in April 1979 was finally ended in May 1980. Superintendent Linton Deck accepted a new four-year contract as Superintendent of Fairfax County Public Schools in January 1981. Shortly before accepting his new contract, Deck proposed making up a $2.75 million portion of his proposed $395 million 1982 school budget by instituting textbook rental fees for students.
Although permitted by Virginia law, the plan, which included charging textbook fees from $22 for elementary school students up to $30 per year for high school students, was jettisoned in the face of strong criticism. Controversy over Deck's handling of an investigation of recruiting violations by the athletic department, his censure by the Fairfax Education Association for a mishandled school closing, unhappiness with his personal leadership style, which was characterized as 'aggressive' and 'abrasive', and pressure from the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors angry at Deck's proposed budget led to the school board forcing Deck to resign on June 24, 1982, only 1½ years into his four-year contract. The Board appointed William J. Burkholder as acting superintendent.
At its April 25, 1991 meeting, the school board approved a plan where the county's intermediate schools, which had for the previous 31 years only served seventh and eighth grades, would add sixth graders and become middle schools. Three intermediate schools, Glasgow, Holmes and Poe, added sixth grade classes. In 1993, the four-year-old teacher merit pay was suspended due to budget cuts, and the school board voted to phase the program out completely over the next four years at its March 11 meeting. From 1965 to 2006, the county school system was headquartered at 10700 Page Avenue in an of the county completely surrounded by the.
In 2006, FCPS moved all of its operations from the Burkholder Center, as well as from several other school-owned and leased offices, to the office building on Gatehouse Road. The school system has expanded to include over 196 schools and centers, including 22 high schools, 3 secondary schools, 23 middle schools, and 141 elementary schools. Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) also operates a fleet of over 1520 school buses, which transport 110,000 students every day. They operate on an operating budget of $2.5 billion, through numerous funding sources.
Today, FCPS is the largest school system in Virginia, and the 10th largest in the United States. It also boasts an average on-time graduation rate of 91.3%, along with an average SAT score of 1659.
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Special education FCPS took over the education of students with mental disabilities from a parent-organized cooperative in 1953. The parents had begun the program in 1950, using whatever space could be found to educate their children, but eventually asked FCPS to take control of the program. Special education classes for mentally disabled students were expanded in 1955 to four classes for 'educable' (those with a mental age above 7) children at Groveton, Lincolnia, Oakton and Luther Jackson schools, and a class for 'trainable' (those with a mental age of less than 6½) children at Groveton. Debate over grading policy Fairfax County Public Schools was known for their use of a 6-point grading scale. Before May 7, 2009, 94–100% received an A, 90–93% was a B+, 84–89% was a B, and so on. In 2008, a parent group raised concerns about whether the FCPS method of computing grades and applying weights for advanced courses was adversely affecting FCPS applicants for college admissions, honors program placements, and merit-based scholarship awards.
On January 2, 2009, Superintendent announced his decision on the issue, recommending changing the weights of advanced courses but maintaining the six-point grading scale. Dale stated there was no conclusive evidence the six-point grading scale is disadvantageous for the students of FCPS. Fairfax County Public Schools worked with the parent group to conduct a joint investigation into the issue. On January 22, 2009, the FCPS School Board directed Superintendent Dale to report back to it with a new version of the grading scale by March 2009. The Board also approved changing the weighting for Honors to 0.5 effective with the 2009–2010 school year and for AP and IB courses to 1.0 retroactively.
After investigation, the Fairfax County School Board approved a modified ten-point scale, complete with pluses and minuses. The new scale went into effect at the beginning of the 2009–10 school year. 93–100% is an A, 90–92% is a A-, and an 87–89% is a B+, and so on. Controversy over disciplinary policies Fairfax County Public Schools disciplinary policies for drug offense came under community scrutiny starting in 2009, after two students separately committed suicide after being subject to school disciplinary proceedings. Both 17-year-old Josh Anderson of, who died in 2009, and 15-year-old Nick Stuban of, who died in 2011, had been suspended from their schools for marijuana-related offenses. The school district also suspended at least one student for possession of her own prescription medication.
Although then-Superintendent maintained that the disciplinary policy did not constitute 'zero tolerance,' the suicides nevertheless prompted the school board and the state legislature to revisit school disciplinary policies. After a year-long study, the school board voted to relax punishments for marijuana possession and add parental notification requirements for students facing serious disciplinary sanctions. Fairfax Villa Elementary School – 2016 FCPS High Schools' Rankings on 's America's Top Public High Schools. Adult Detention Center. Boys Probation House. Foundations (formerly Girls Probation House). GRANTS (GED Readiness and New Technology Skills).
Gunston School at South County. Hillwood School at East County.
Independent Study Program. Merrifield Day.
Nontraditional Career Readiness Academy (NCRA): West Potomac, Edison, Spring Village, and Falls Church. Sager School. Shelter Care II (formerly Less Secure Shelter). Transition Support Resource Center (TSRC): Annandale, Bryant, Fairfax, Marshall HS, South County HS, South Lakes HS, Robinson SS, Westfield HS Former schools. 2001 RE.
2001 EF. 2002 RE. 2002 FE. 2003 RE. 2003 FE. 2004 RE.
2004 FE. 2006 RE. 2006 FE. 2007 RE. 2007 FE. 2008 RE.
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2008 FE. 2008 CE. 2009 CE. 2009 RE. 2010 CE. 2010 RE. 2011 CE.
2012 CE. 2013 CE.
2013 RE. 2015 CE. 2015 RE. 2016 CE.
2017 CE. 2018 CE Transportation is divided into several different offices. Area 1, Area 2, Area 3, and Area 4 are regional offices servicing different regions of the county.
Area 1 serving the farthest south, Area 2 central south, Area 3 central north, and Area 4 serving the farthest northern region. In addition to the regional offices there is also a Central office which oversees all lower offices and a Training Center.
The final office is Routing and Planning which creates bus routes. Routing and Planning which is also known as Area 7, maintains its own fleet of vehicles. The white vans and cars from Area 7 transport special needs students to special public and private schools throughout the county.
Three garages service the buses. Alban, Newington, & West Ox. See also. Retrieved January 1, 2016. Fairfax County Public Schools (Press release).
13 February 2015. Retrieved 1 November 2015. Retrieved 17 December 2012. Fairfax County Public Schools. October 23, 2012.
Retrieved December 17, 2011. Retrieved on November 28, 2012. Fairfax County Public Schools.
Retrieved on November 28, 2012. 'Gatehouse Administration Center 8115 Gatehouse Road Falls Church, VA 22042'. Fairfax County PublicSchools. Archived from on 11 November 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
Retrieved 2017-07-14. ^ Gott, John K.; Hogan, Katherine S. (January 1976). Root trio stealth pro 7c. 'Chapter II: Fairfax County Public School - A Brief History'. In Wrenn, Tony P.; Peters, Virginia B.; Sprouse, Edith Moore. ^ Wrenn, Tony P.
Fairfax County History Commission. Retrieved 28 December 2017. ^. ' (abstract). Retrieved on June 4, 2016. ^ Duke, Daniel Linden (2005).
Albany: State University of New York Press. Guinn, Muriel (16 February 1958). The Washington Post. Retrieved 30 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Sep 20, 1955.
Retrieved December 2017. Check date values in: access-date=. ^ Daniel Duke. Education Empire Pg. 18 July 2005 Suny Series, Educational Leadership. Washington Post archives Feb 19, 1956.'
Bill would ban US Aides from School Boards'. Grundman, Grundman. Check date values in: date=. Bowie, Carole H. (29 August 1960). The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 September 2015 – via Proquest.
(Subscription required ( help)). Chapman, William (2 September 1960). The Washington Post.
Retrieved 30 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Bowie, Carole H.
(2 November 1960). The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). The Washington Post. 5 April 1961.
Retrieved 19 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). The Washington Post. 5 December 1967. Retrieved 20 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)).
Jacoby, Susan (19 September 1968). The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). ^ Klose, Kevin (2 May 1969). The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 September 2015 – via Proquest.
(Subscription required ( help)). Klose, Kevin (10 January 1969). The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Curry, William N.
(29 May 1970). The Washington Post. Retrieved 6 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). The Washington Post. 16 June 1970. Retrieved 21 September 2015 – via Proquest.
(Subscription required ( help)). Bredemeier, Kenneth (20 June 1970). The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). The Washington Post.
24 September 1970. Retrieved 21 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Grubisich, Thomas (12 May 1977). The Washington Post.
Retrieved 28 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Rosenfeld, Megan (14 May 1976). The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)).
Hansard, Sara E. (23 July 1976). The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). ^ Locke, Maggie (19 October 1978).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)).
Locke, Maggie; Selden, Ina Lee (9 February 1979). The Washington Post. Retrieved 30 September 2015 – via Proquest.
(Subscription required ( help)). Knight, Athelia (25 April 1979). The Washington Post. Retrieved 30 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Knight, Athelia; Selden, Ina Lee (27 April 1979).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 30 September 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)).
Knight, Athelia (1979-05-07). The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-09-30. Frankel, Glenn; Selden, Ina Lee (19 May 1979). The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 September 2015 – via Proquest.
(Subscription required ( help)). Selden, Ina Lee (1979-05-25).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-09-30. Dougherty, Kerry (1979-11-20). The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-04. Dougherty, Kerry (1980-01-17).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-04. ^ Dougherty, Kerry (1980-04-10).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-04. Dougherty, Kerry (1980-04-24). The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-10-04. Dougherty, Kerry (23 May 1980).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 October 2015. Dougherty, Kerry (29 May 1980). The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 October 2015. Dougherty, Kerry (12 June 1980).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Dougherty, Kerry (9 January 1981). The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
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Dougherty, Kerry (27 January 1981). The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
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Moore, Molly (25 June 1982). The Washington Post. Retrieved 3 November 2015. Moore, Molly (26 June 1982). The Washington Post.
Retrieved 3 November 2015. Baker, Peter (26 April 1991). The Washington Post.
Retrieved 18 October 2015. Brown, DeNeen L. (12 March 1993). The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 October 2015. Fairfax County Public Schools.
February 24, 2001. Retrieved on April 3, 2009. ' December 18, 2005, at the.'
Retrieved on April 3, 2009. Glod, Maria (16 March 2006). The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 September 2015. Retrieved 18 August 2015. ^ Smith, Marie (19 August 1955).
The Washington Post. Retrieved 30 October 2015 – via Proquest. (Subscription required ( help)). Chandler, Michael Alison; Birnbaum, Michael (2009-01-03). The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
Dale, Jack (January 8, 2009). Fairfax County Public Schools School Board eGovernance System. Retrieved January 24, 2009. ^ Sabo, Linda (January 23, 2009).
Fairfax County Public Schools School Board eGovernance System. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
Retrieved 18 August 2015. George, Donna (February 20, 2011). The Washington Post. Retrieved February 22, 2011. Fisher, Marc (5 April 2009). Washington Post.
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Retrieved February 22, 2011. Carey, Julie (9 April 2013). Retrieved 25 July 2015. Carey, Julie (23 January 2012). Retrieved 25 July 2015. Shapiro, T.
Fairfax County Public Schools After School Program
Washington Post (7 June 2013). Retrieved 25 July 2015. Mathews, Jay (May 18, 2008). Retrieved September 9, 2008. As noted in the FAQ, the ranking is based on Jay Mathews' experience, does not account for how well students do on the test or thereafter. '2013 America's Best High Schools'.
Employee Resources
Missing or empty url= ; access-date= requires url=. Pace, Gina (May 18, 2008). Retrieved November 30, 2009. Matthews, Jay (June 9, 2009).
Careers
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