Parents rally, ask board for new school boundaries

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It’s probably safe to say that parents living in Sheffield Manor won’t want their children going to Stonewall Jackson High School when the county opens its 11th high school at Kettle Run and Vint Hill roads in 2011.

Roughly 200 of them showed up at the Prince William County School Board meeting Wednesday night to say so.

All of the plans submitted the Prince William County School Board would have students living in the Bristow-area subdivision attending Stonewall Jackson High School, which is several miles away, said John O’Leary, a Sheffield Manor resident who brought a petition of signatures from roughly 400 of the 673 homes in Sheffield Manor.

“All exclude Sheffield Manor residents from the Bristow community,” O’Leary said of the plans for the new high school that is meant ease overcrowding at Battlefield and Brentsville District high schools.

The parents, with students in Victory Elementary School, Gainesville Middle School and Marstellar Middle School, said Stonewall Jackson High School was not part of their community and they didn’t want their children going there.

Sending students to Stonewall Jackson High School would disrupt the community and split the friendships their children had made through elementary and middle school, they said.

“It’s simply not in the best interest of our children and defies common sense to pull this group of children that attend Marstellar and send them off to a separate high school, away from the peers with whom they shared their early formative years,” Colleen Osinski told the school board.

The parents said it made more sense to send their children to the new high school because it was closer to where they lived.

Mario Umana said he and his wife moved to the Linton Hall corridor a couple of years ago and found that they rarely go to the Manassas area.

“Our community is the Linton Hall Gainesville Community. That’s where we do our community life. We have learned in the last two years that our community is not the Manassas area. It is this other area and we want to keep belonging to this community and to have our children attend high school in this community,” Umana said.

Kirby Kennedy spoke of keeping the community together. 

“Please allow our children to maintain their sense of community and continuity with the rest of their Linton Hall neighbors,” Kennedy said.

Kevin Mahoney of Sheffield Manor also asked the board to consider drawing new boundaries. 

“The community is where you live. It’s where you shop. It’s where you play ball. It’s where you worship. It’s more than any single subdivision,” Mahoney said. 

Kristina Dixon said she didn’t want to be split from her friends once she started high school.

“Learning is not the only part of what school is about. It is also about friends and community, so I am here tonight to ask that you consider keeping Sheffield Manor neighborhood within the Bristow community,” the 11-year-old Kristina told the board. “By attending Stonewall Jackson High School, I feel that we would break up a tightly knit community, also many great friendships.”

Juliana Akhavan said her friends didn’t want to be separated when they went to high school either, and got 102 signatures from the neighborhood students to prove it. 

“We the students of Sheffield Manor want to let you know that we want to attend the 11th high school at Kettle Run,” the 10-year-old told the board.  “By attending this school, we will continue to have a connection between our community and our school. This will also allow us to be closer to home and spare us from a long bus commute. It will also save on fuel cost and pollution.”

Manassas Bureau Chief Keith Walker can be reached at 703-369-6751.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by gra8flrn on May 13, 2009 at 10:32 pm

I did not imply anything.  I copied bristowmoms comment. didn’t catch the typo.  I would never say that. I just think that we should all work together as a community.  I live in Sheffield and my backyard backs up to Victory Lakes and we have great neighbors.  My children play with a lot of children from Victory and I have a lot of friends in Victory.  I would like my children to feel the same sense of “community” that I had growing up in McLean.  It is great to go to High School with the same friends you went to elementary school with and I realize that with every reunion. It really is important. 

That is all I was saying.

Flag Comment Posted by 4thekids on May 13, 2009 at 9:16 pm

Wow, where to begin. 
This article is written about Sheffield Manor, how is anyone dogging Victory Lakes over this?
gr8tflrn, did you mean to imply that Victory Lakes feels they are SUPERIOR to everyone?
Bristowmom, you sound like a Sheffield Manor resident, are you sure you can speak for where Victory Lakes would like to be zoned?
It seems as though not only is this article chock full of inaccuracies, the comments are equally absurd.
Perhaps a greater condemnation of the American school system in general.

Flag Comment Posted by gra8flrn on May 12, 2009 at 11:29 pm

“Victory Lakes residents think they are by far inferior to all communities because they think they have “money” and their kids are too good to go to Stonewall.“

What a horrible thing to say.  Creates seperatism. There will always be some “sour grapes in the bunch”.  this doesnt need to be on a personal level.  We need to keep this community TOGETHER!

Flag Comment Posted by Bristowmom on May 11, 2009 at 7:59 am

For those of you out there posting comments about how Sheffield Manor shouldn’t go to Stonewall Please explain to me why Victory Lakes, who we share roads with, who we live right next door to is zoned to go to the new highschool in Plan C????  What makes it ok for them to attend Kettle Run but not Sheffield Manor?  The only reason they were included in Plan C was because they met with Gil Trenum and threw a “hissy fit”.  Victory Lakes residents think they are by far inferior to all communities because they think they have “money” and their kids are too good to go to Stonewall. 

I think everyone is missing in the point here.  Yes, we would like to go to the new high school BUT if we can’t then we would ALL (including Victory Lakes), like to be zoned for Stonewall.  They need to stop dividing up neighborhoods.

I was at this board meeting and NOT one resident from Sheffield Manor EVER said anything bad about Stonewall Jackson.  It’s a great school with a great IB program.  Our arguement is not about this, our arguement is that we want to stay with our community and go to school with our community, period.

Flag Comment Posted by Firestorm on May 10, 2009 at 8:49 am

Mom, where do your children go to school now and how come they will not know other children from middle school?

I am not sure your argument is valid.  Maybe you want them to go to school in your own neighborhood with their ‘own kind.‘  It’s ok to just admit it.

Flag Comment Posted by HoodwinkdByPWCS on May 08, 2009 at 5:34 pm

“Firestorm”: Looks like a few people weren’t very subtle here: http://pwceducationreform.wordpress.com/2009/05/07/11th-high-school-proposed-boundary-plan/

Flag Comment Posted by Boushwa on May 08, 2009 at 4:20 pm

Yes, so I believe the “riff raft” comment was said because the way the article was written. It makes it sound like SJ is a bad place to go. It’s weird because I work in Herndon and nearly everyone at work talks trash about Manassas.

I grew up in Manassas Park and now live by the Manassas Mall, a few blocks from SJ. Outside of a couple bad street corners, Manassas is alright by me! I can’t speak for the schools as I went to MPHS when it was all trailers… it wasn’t great then. LOL

Flag Comment Posted by What's in a Name? on May 08, 2009 at 3:29 pm

I could be wrong, but isn’t Sheffield Manor already zoned for Stonewall Jackson?  Of course, they could be transferring in for Stonewall’s outstanding IB program.

As for children not knowing other children, well, that’s a silly argument. We’re talking HS students, not bashful kindergartners. Besides, with some 400 families signing the petition out of 673 homes, I’d say the kids from Sheffield will be attending Stonewall with quite a few of their friends from middle school.

Just as point of reference, my family lives in mid-county, and our children attend Benton Middle School. Kids from Benton are districted into four different high schools: Forest Park, Hylton, Brentsville and Osbourn Park. In fact, this will continue to be the case as PWC’s 12th HS—located in mid-county—has been pushed back until at least 2015. Conclusion: Benton MS kids have been separated from their teams, church friends, neighborhoods, classmates, etc. for as long as the school has been open.

Oh, and just for the record, my children are in the OP district, but they do not attend OP. Instead, we enrolled them at, wait for it, Stonewall Jackson High School, so that they could participate in the school’s wonderfully challenging IB program.

One child is a graduate of SJHS Class of 2006 (and a rising college senior), while the other will graduate next month as a member of the SJHS Class of 2009 who will attend college in the fall.

Stonewall Jackson High School students, teachers, and administrators are second to none, as I’m sure the parents of Sheffield Manor will soon come to realize. I hope the will put their considerable talents and energy to good use as members of the the SJHS PTA and Boosters.

Flag Comment Posted by MomofFive on May 08, 2009 at 8:11 am

That’s not the case at all Firestorm. Stonewall is a good school. But our children will know nobody else at that school. The 11th HS is in Bristow, however many Bristow residents aren’t slated to attend based on the proposed boundary. My children play sports and attend scouts with children from the neighborhoods along the Linton Hall corridor. We go to middle school with kids all along the Linton Hall corridor. Then at the high school level, my children will be split away from their peers and go to a school with 2,000 kids they don’t know at a school that takes 2-3 times longer to drive to. It just doesn’t make sense. It’s not elitist. We want our kids to go to school where we live and play. We want our kids to have the best chance of being well-adjusted, and that place is at a school with their peers.

Flag Comment Posted by Firestorm on May 08, 2009 at 12:37 am

This is all not so subtle code for ‘I don’t want MY child to go to school with the riff-raff.‘  Too bad no one just comes right out and says it.

Elitism at its best.  I am not so sure I blame them though.

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