Hayfield Secondary School | |
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Address | |
7630 Telegraph Road Alexandria, Virginia 22315 United States |
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Coordinates | 38°45′00″N 77°08′40″W / 38.74994°N 77.14450°WCoordinates: 38°45′00″N 77°08′40″W / 38.74994°N 77.14450°W |
Information | |
School type | Public, secondary school |
Motto | Birds Fly, Hawks Soar |
Founded | 1968 |
School district | Fairfax County Public Schools |
Principal | Martin Grimm |
Teaching staff | 205.38 (FTE) |
Grades | 7–12 |
Enrollment | 2871 (2012- 2013) |
Student to teacher ratio | 13.98 |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Orange and white |
Athletics conference | National District Northern Region |
Mascot | Hawks |
Rivals |
Thomas A. Edison High School South County High School Robert E. Lee High School |
Feeder schools | Gunston Elementary School Hayfield Elementary School Island Creek Elementary School Lane Elementary School Lorton Station Elementary Rose Hill Elementary School |
Website | School website |
Hayfield Secondary School is the oldest secondary school in the Fairfax County Public Schools system of Virginia. It opened its doors in 1968 and graduated its first seniors in 1971.
The land that Hayfield Secondary sits on was at one time part of George Washington's Mount Vernon estate. Because of a small natural spring underneath the school, the land served as a hay field. The land itself changed hands numerous times, until 1956 when developers constructed the nearby Hayfield Farm Community, the first of many housing developments in the region. Hayfield Secondary opened its doors to middle school (7th and 8th grade) students as well as 9-10th grades during the 1968-1969 school year, while still under construction. Floyd W. Worley was the first Principal.
The school is erroneously mentioned in Remember the Titans as being "all white." While at the time of the desegregation of the City of Alexandria's T.C. Williams High School, a large majority of Hayfield's students were white, it was racially integrated from the day of its first opening in 1968, drawing the majority of its students of color from the children of military men and women at nearby Fort Belvoir, home to the U.S. Army's Corp of Engineers. The desegregation encouraging word "Diversity" even headed a section of the '73 yearbook, the fifth volume of the "Harvester."
As the region which it serves grew, overcrowding became a major issue at Hayfield, and by the late 1990s it routinely exceeded its intended capacity with 4000+ students. A renovation of the school began in 2002 and was completed in 2005. Further helping to relieve the pressure on Hayfield was the opening of South County Secondary School, also in 2005. However, due to overcrowding at South County in its second year of operation and under-utilized capacity at Hayfield, Hayfield accommodated more students again from a boundary change with South County approved for the 2007-2008 school year.
Hayfield is a secondary school, meaning it serves grades 7 through 12, but the high school and middle school students are generally kept segregated. The middle school has an honors program and the high school offers both honors and Advanced Placement courses. As of Spring 2007, the number of exams on which a score of 3 or higher was achieved (on a scale of 1-5) rose to 57% from 46% the previous year, the best results found on record for Hayfield.