Burnette Scarboro

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Burnette Scarboro
Image of Burnette Scarboro
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Community activist
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Burnette Scarboro was a candidate for at-large representative on the Fairfax County School Board in Virginia. The general election was held on November 3, 2015.[1] Burnette Scarboro lost the general election on November 3, 2015.

Biography

Email [email protected] to notify us of updates to this biography.

Scarboro is the founder of the South County Youth Network, a nonprofit group that develops after-school drug and violence prevention programs. She was appointed as the director of the Northern Virginia District PTA in March 2014. Scarboro has three children who graduated from district schools.[2]

Elections

2015

See also: Fairfax County Public Schools elections (2015)

The Fairfax County School Board is a 12-member board elected to serve four-year terms. Three seats are elected at large and nine seats are elected by district.[3] All 12 seats were on the ballot on November 3, 2015.

At-large incumbents Ryan McElveen, Ilryong Moon and Ted Velkoff faced Robert Copeland, Omar Fateh, Jeanette Hough, Manar Jean-Jacques, Peter Marchetti and Burnette Scarboro for three seats. While Moon and McElveen won re-election, Velkoff was defeated, placing fourth to challenger Hough.

Braddock District incumbent Megan McLaughlin, Hunter Mill District incumbent Pat Hynes and Providence District incumbent Patricia Reed faced Katherine Pettigrew, Mark Wilkinson and Dalia Palchik, respectively. Dranesville District incumbent Jane Strauss competed against challenger Peter Kurzenhauser. McLaughlin, Hynes, and Strauss won re-election; the fourth incumbent, Reed, lost to Palchik.

The races for both the Mount Vernon District and Sully District seats featured newcomers after neither incumbent filed for re-election. Karen Corbett Sanders defeated W. Anthony Stacy in the Mount Vernon race, while Karen Keys-Gamarra lost to Thomas Wilson in the Sully District race. Lee District incumbent Tamara Derenak Kaufax, Mason District incumbent Sandra Evans and Springfield District incumbent Elizabeth Schultz all ran unopposed and won re-election to their seats.

Results

Fairfax County School Board, At-large, General Election, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Ilryong Moon Incumbent 17.2% 84,364
Green check mark transparent.png Ryan McElveen Incumbent 17.0% 83,160
Green check mark transparent.png Jeanette Hough 16.3% 80,035
Ted Velkoff Incumbent 15.3% 74,948
Robert Copeland 15.2% 74,454
Manar Jean-Jacques 11.6% 57,043
Peter Marchetti 2.6% 12,809
Omar Fateh 2.3% 11,062
Burnette Scarboro 2.2% 10,676
Write-in votes 0.3% 1,458
Total Votes 490,009
Source: Virginia Department of Elections, "2015 November General", accessed November 3, 2015

Funding

Scarboro reported $225.00 in contributions but no expenditures to the Virginia State Board of Elections, which left her campaign with $225.00 on hand as of October 28, 2015.[4]

Endorsements

Scarboro did not receive any official endorsements in this election.

Campaign themes

2015

Ballotpedia survey responses

Candidate Connection Logo - stacked.png

Scarboro participated in Ballotpedia's 2015 survey of school board candidates. The following sections display her responses to the survey questions. When asked what her top priority would be if elected, the candidate made the following statement:

If elected, my top priority is work on eradicating the achievement gap. In my opinion it is not good enough to close nor narrow the gap. There are numerous gaps so the first to tackle is the academic gap.[5]

—Burnette Scarboro (2015), [6]
Ranking the issues

The candidate was asked to rank the following issues by importance in the school district, with 1 being the most important and 7 being the least important. This table displays this candidate's rankings from most to least important:

Education policy
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Click here to learn more about education policy in Virginia.
Education on the ballot
Issue importance ranking
Candidate's ranking Issue
1
Balancing or maintaining the district's budget
5
Expanding career-technical education
2
Closing the achievement gap
4
Expanding arts education
6
Improving college readiness
3
Improving education for special needs students
7
Expanding school choice options
Positions on the issues

The candidate was asked to answer 10 questions from Ballotpedia regarding significant issues in education and the school district. The questions are in the left column and the candidate's responses are in the right column of the following table:

Question Response
What is your stance on implementing Common Core standards?
"VA does not implement Common Core standards."
Should your district approve the creation of new charter schools?
"Yes."
Should the state give money to private schools through a voucher system?
"No."
Are standardized tests an accurate metric of student achievement?
"No."
How can the district ensure equal opportunities for high and low achieving students?
"Transformative teaching is but one strategy that a school district can use to ensure equal opportunities for high and low achieving students."
How should expulsion be used in the district?
"Practices such as positive behavior strategies should be used before expulsion is considered."
If a school is failing in your district, what steps should the school board take to help the students in that school?
"The school board should put into action mandatory school assignments for principals and veteran teachers. Complacency is not an option. The school board should work closely with human resources in developing or strengthening the language in job descriptions to make sure everyone understands that we exist to EDUCATE all children, regardless of their zip codes. In addition, failing schools cannot and will not exist in our school district."
Do you support merit pay for teachers?
"Merit pay for "Master Teachers"."
How should the district handle underperforming teachers?
"Offer additional training options."
How would you work to improve community-school board relations?
"Based on my experience as a school-community coalition coordinator, stronger relationships must be developed because both entities are needed to survive. I've asked this question during my entire campaign: what do you know about the current at-large school board members? Or, have you seen them in your community? The answers received clearly indicate that there are no relationships in ALL communities. I am not impressed by candidates knocking on doors to get votes; for me, if elected, one must really knock on doors to build relationships in the community and with the schools located within the community."

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Burnette Scarboro' 'Fairfax County Public Schools'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Virginia Department of Elections, "List of Candidates," September 9, 2015
  2. Burnette G. Scarboro for School Board, "Home," accessed October 14, 2015
  3. Fairfax County Public Schools, "School Board: Overview," May 14, 2015
  4. Virginia State Board of Elections, "Campaign Finance Reports," accessed October 27, 2015
  5. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  6. Ballotpedia School Board Candidate Survey, 2015, "Burnette Scarboro's responses," October 29, 2015