Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) also operates a fleet of over 1520 school buses, which transport 110,000 students daily. They operate on an operating budget of $2.5 billion through numerous funding sources. FCPS is currently the largest school system in Virginia and the tenth-largest in the United States.
On March 10, Fairfax County Public Schools announced that they would close on March 13 and March 16 to begin the transition to online classes if the school system would need to shut down. On March 15, it was announced that all schools and school administration buildings in Fairfax County would close until April 10.
Justice High School. / 38.85694°N 77.15000°W / 38.85694; -77.15000. Justice High School (formerly known as J.E.B. Stuart High School) is a high school in the Lake Barcroft census-designated place, Virginia. [3] [4] The school is part of the Fairfax County Public Schools district.
May 16, 2024 at 9:46 PM. Virginia’s largest school district is scrambling to find millions of dollars to close a shortfall in the upcoming school budget. If they don’t, Fairfax County will ...
Fairfax County Public Schools pushed back on Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s conservative policies. The school board faces a serious test in the Nov. 7 elections.
May 2, 2024 at 1:12 PM. FAIRFAX COUNTY, Va. - Fairfax County officials are on the scene of a school bus fire on Fairfax County Parkway. Fairfax County school bus fire. Officials arrived on the ...
Westfield High School is a public high school in unincorporated Fairfax County, Virginia, United States, west of the Chantilly CDP. It is a part of Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS), serving students from the communities including Chantilly and Centreville as well as areas with Herndon addresses in grades 9–12. Opened in 2000, it is the ...
Originally constructed to take the place of the Lee-Jackson High School, Mount Vernon High school first opened in November 1939. [3] [4] With the opening of the school, Lee-Jackson principal G. Claude Cox moved to Mount Vernon, becoming the school's first principal, and Lee-Jackson became an elementary school. [5]