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School Board of the City of Virginia Beach names Dr. Donald Robertson Jr. superintendent

The School Board of the City of Virginia Beach voted to name Dr. Donald Robertson Jr. as superintendent at its meeting Jan. 23. A native of Hampton Roads, Dr. Robertson began his career as a math teacher with Virginia Beach City Public Schools (VBCPS) in 1988 and progressed in leadership roles including assistant principal of Bayside High School, principal of Salem High School, chief strategy and innovation officer, chief schools officer, chief of staff and acting superintendent. 

Logo Virginia Beach City Public Schools Charting the Course

Hundreds of Virginia Beach City Public Schools (VBCPS) students will participate in the 16th Annual African American Male Summit on Jan. 20 at Frank W. Cox High School. Boys in grades six through 12 will share ideas with each other and with adult community members on topics such as student leadership, community involvement, relationship-building, and physical and mental well-being.

FACE Welcome Center

The Family and Community Engagement Center for Virginia Beach Public Schools provides a space for the school system to interface with parents, students, and the public for the betterment of student education. Constructed as an addition to the existing Plaza Annex, this new building houses a variety of student support functions including pre-school assessment, occupational and physical therapy, planning innovation, and student leadership. The existing Plaza Annex is unique, as it is an adaptive reuse project. The old Plaza Elementary School was no longer needed, and rather than letting it sit unused, the building was adapted to become office and meeting space for VBCPS – thus becoming known as Plaza Annex.

As part of this project, the Professional Development Center inside the existing Plaza Annex was renovated to provide state-of-the-art meeting space for the school system. The Professional Development Center (PDC) is located in what was previously the cafeteria for Plaza Elementary, creating an interesting design challenge to make this space functional without the need for heavy re-construction.

The Family and Community Engagement Center’s design was inspired by a modern version of an industrial warehouse – complete with undulating brick facades, large windows and accented with translucent fiberglass sandwich panel entry canopies.

On the interior, a clerestory window brings light into what would have otherwise been a dark stairwell. Porcelain tile and accent brick provides a durable but attractive interior environment for visitors and staff.