Falls Church City Public Schools

Falls Church City School Board - Work Session - June 23, 2026

1 h 7 min · 24 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Falls Church City School Board - Work Session - June 23, 2026

Descripción

The Falls Church City School Board closed out the school year June 23 with advisory committee reports, the district's five-year International Baccalaureate evaluation, and adoption of FCCPS's first Use of Artificial Intelligence policy. Committee chairs walked the board through a year of work: the Business in Education committee facilitated more than 200 student-business partnerships and launched the Biz Buzz newsletter; Advanced Academics tracked a rise in advanced-academic identification to roughly 25 percent of students in grades three through eight; and Health & Wellness reported on the intersection of AI and student wellbeing. Chair Kathleen Tysse shared that the Falls Church Education Foundation has returned $326,579.72 to the schools this year, the largest investment in the foundation's history, including $100,000 for the Family Assistance Fund. Dr. William Bates presented findings from February's in-person IB evaluation, which praised FCCPS's well-resourced classrooms, strong instructional leadership, and psychologically safe school culture, and offered five division-level recommendations. The board also approved the FCEF office lease, a collective bargaining agreement and side letter with the Falls Church Education Association, and adopted policies on the use of AI, the school attorney, and safe storage of prescription drugs and firearms. Listen for the full discussion. Falls Church City Public Schools | www.fccps.org [http://www.fccps.org]

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episode Falls Church City School Board - Work Session - June 23, 2026 artwork

Falls Church City School Board - Work Session - June 23, 2026

The Falls Church City School Board closed out the school year June 23 with advisory committee reports, the district's five-year International Baccalaureate evaluation, and adoption of FCCPS's first Use of Artificial Intelligence policy. Committee chairs walked the board through a year of work: the Business in Education committee facilitated more than 200 student-business partnerships and launched the Biz Buzz newsletter; Advanced Academics tracked a rise in advanced-academic identification to roughly 25 percent of students in grades three through eight; and Health & Wellness reported on the intersection of AI and student wellbeing. Chair Kathleen Tysse shared that the Falls Church Education Foundation has returned $326,579.72 to the schools this year, the largest investment in the foundation's history, including $100,000 for the Family Assistance Fund. Dr. William Bates presented findings from February's in-person IB evaluation, which praised FCCPS's well-resourced classrooms, strong instructional leadership, and psychologically safe school culture, and offered five division-level recommendations. The board also approved the FCEF office lease, a collective bargaining agreement and side letter with the Falls Church Education Association, and adopted policies on the use of AI, the school attorney, and safe storage of prescription drugs and firearms. Listen for the full discussion. Falls Church City Public Schools | www.fccps.org [http://www.fccps.org]

24 de jun de 20261 h 7 min
episode Falls Church School Board Regular Meeting - June 9, 2026 artwork

Falls Church School Board Regular Meeting - June 9, 2026

The Falls Church City School Board closed out the 2025–26 school year at its June 9 regular meeting. The board gave first-reading approval to a new artificial intelligence policy, a collective bargaining agreement covering certified staff, and a financing agreement for two new propane school buses. The evening opened with Business in Education awards honoring six community partners, followed by recognition of the district's student representatives, including a resolution celebrating outgoing student liaison Aiden Harper. Discussion on the AI policy ran long, with the board refining language on human oversight of grading and discipline decisions and folding consequences for misuse into the student code of conduct. Dr. Terry Dade closed with reflections on a strong first year and a thank-you to staff heading into summer break. Listen for the full discussion on collective bargaining, the bus purchase, three first-reading policies, and end-of-year board comments. Meeting materials are available on BoardDocs.

10 de jun de 20261 h 25 min
episode Falls Church School Board Regular Meeting - May 12, 2026 artwork

Falls Church School Board Regular Meeting - May 12, 2026

A big night in Falls Church City — the School Board's May meeting packed more than four hours of consequential decisions, honest conversation, and community celebration into one session. It opened the way the best meetings should: honoring the people who make FCCPS work every day. Four staff members were recognized as Employees of the Year, with tributes that were equal parts heartfelt and hilarious. Brannon McLaughlin of Jessie Thackrey Preschool — dubbed the school's "sticker queen" and "resident life coach" — was named Academic Support Staff of the Year. Roberto Fuentes, the quietly dependable custodian who "was trying to hide out in the back," took Operations Support Staff of the Year. Josh Singer, the IB Diploma Coordinator who keeps Meridian's "IB world spinning on its axis," was named Professional Specialist of the Year. And Kieran Shakeshaft, the Henderson history teacher known for showing up to class in full Black Death regalia, earned the Teacher of the Year award — with one board member's son summing it up simply: "Obviously he won. He's the GOAT." From there, the board dug into its full agenda. Dr. Jennifer Santiago delivered the district's equity and belonging report, including a candid discussion of achievement gaps, the new racial accountability framework, and the power of school-based equity teams. Chief Operating Officer Alicia Prince walked the board through the results of a long-overdue transportation audit — and fielded sharp questions about walk zones, bus safety, propane versus electric buses, and what it actually means to enforce a one-mile standard in a 2.2-square-mile city. Then came the main event: the adoption of the FY2027 budget. After months of community input and a new collaborative process with City Council, the board voted to approve the operating, food services, and community services budgets — with Chair Tysse calling it a budget they could all be proud of. The meeting closed with forward-looking work on AI: a data-rich presentation on where FCCPS teachers actually stand on AI readiness, followed by Dr. Dade sharing what students themselves said in their own research and town halls. Spoiler: they think Turnitin is broken, they see AI as an equity issue, and they unanimously agree that using it on summatives is cheating. Falls Church City Public Schools | fccps.org

13 de may de 20264 h 30 min
episode Falls Church City Public Schools | School Board Special Meeting | May 5, 2025 artwork

Falls Church City Public Schools | School Board Special Meeting | May 5, 2025

The FCCPS School Board convened a special meeting on May 5, 2025 to discuss the FY27 budget in light of new information from the Falls Church City Council's budget markup the previous evening. Board Chair Kathleen Tysse opened the meeting with positive news: the city's transfer to FCCPS is expected to increase by approximately $350,000, and the longstanding revenue-sharing agreement between the school district and city government appears likely to hold for this budget cycle. Superintendent Terry Dade and Chief Financial Officer Alicia Prince presented staff recommendations for allocating the additional funds across two categories: $180,000 — Maintenance of Effort: Addressing rising costs including health insurance (budgeted at 10%, came in at 13%), escalating fuel costs for school buses, and contractual increases. $174,000 — Facilities Improvement Contingency Fund: Originally designated for the Capital Improvement Plan, this funding will be held in reserve to respond to findings from an upcoming Facilities Condition Assessment (FCA). The assessment is currently out to bid, with building evaluations planned for this summer and results expected by approximately October 1. Board members also received an update on the Meridian High School concession stand renovation, which is under contract and set to be completed by November 1. The Board will hold a public comment period before a final budget vote, currently scheduled for Tuesday, May 12, following the City Council's formal transfer vote on May 11.

6 de may de 202618 min
episode FCCPS School Board Work Session | April 28, 2026 artwork

FCCPS School Board Work Session | April 28, 2026

Note: Audio distortion affects the first five minutes of this episode. The remainder of the session is clear. Artificial intelligence took center stage at Tuesday's FCCPS School Board work session — and the community showed up ready for the conversation. The FCCPS AI Advisory Committee, led by Chair John Black, delivered a months-in-the-making framework for how the district should approach AI governance: not a blanket ban, not uncritical adoption, but a thoughtful policy architecture that governs how AI is used — not just which tools are permitted. The board then heard from five advisory committees, each bringing a distinct community lens. The Special Education Advisory Committee drew a clear line: AI must never be used to generate IEPs or 504 plans or influence eligibility decisions — while affirming its real potential as an assistive and instructional tool for neurodivergent learners. The Advanced Academics committee raised concerns about cognitive offloading, AI hallucinations, and automated grading. The Business and Education, Health and Wellness, and ESOL committees each weighed in with perspectives that, despite coming from very different places, landed in remarkably similar territory: human-centered learning, AI as supplement not substitute, and teachers who are genuinely prepared to lead the way. The second half of the session turned to cell phone policy implementation at Meridian High School, with Principal Peter Laub presenting two options for next school year and sharing ground-level observations that suggest the cultural shift is already taking hold.

29 de abr de 20262 h 0 min