Woodbridge High admin cuts beloved hair after students set test score record

by Sergio Bichao on Jun 3rd | Email

Woodbridge High School vice principal Martin Scarano loves his hair. (Staff photo: Joe McLaughlin)

...But he loves his students more. (Staff photo: Joe McLaughlin)

It wasn’t a pep rally for the football or basketball teams. The deafening shouts, cheers and banging drums in the Woodbridge High School auditorium were for the junior class, whose students scored an all time high on the state test they took in March.

About 95 percent of the nearly 400 Woodbridge High School students who took the High School Proficiency Assessment this year scored either proficient or advanced proficient on both the math and language arts portions. School officials noted the dramatic rise from last year’s scores – 87.4 percent in math and 90.5 percent in language.

“That’s just phenomenal,” Principal Arthur Lee Warren said.

The HSPA is “a big deal,” as school administrators put it. Students need to pass it in order to graduate high school and the state uses test results to gauge a school’s performance through the federal No Child Left Behind Law, or NCLB.

It’s such a big deal, WHS vice principal Martin Scarano promised the 11th graders in September that he would cut off his hair if the class passed the 90 percent benchmark.

Scarano loves his dark brown locks. He’s never gotten a buzz or crew cut from the barber. Until Thursday.

The students roared as one of Scarano’s co-workers tied up his curl and snipped it off. Math department director Ed Braunsdorf sheared the rest of the hair with clippers.

“I can’t say how proud I am of you,” he told the students. “Make sure the sophomores and freshmen realize the importance of this test. You set the bar very high.”

Drum roll, please, for a proud moment at Woodbridge High School. (Staff photo: Joe McLaughlin)

One of the students, Tasneem Hossain, scored a perfect 300. Next year he will have his own reserved parking space in the crowded school lot.

Scores also improved in the township’s other two high schools, Superintendent John Crowe said.

At JFK Memorial High School, preliminary scores show 92.5 percent of the juniors passed math while 95.4 percent passed language arts. Last year, 90.2 percent passed math and 86.2 percent passed language arts.

At Colonia High School, 92.6 percent passed math, an improvement from 83.3 percent last year. In language arts, 81.1 percent passed this year, whereas 85.2 percent did last year.

Most Woodbridge students are scoring above the state averages, New Jersey School Report Cards show. Scarano said WHS scores have improved every year for the past five years.

Warren said “a team effort” by students, faculty and parents are the reason for the success. Teachers and peer tutors were available before, during and after school to help students prepare. About 95 percent of the junior class took advantage of the programs, Warren said. Scarano said administrators are already looking at 10th grade scores to see which students will need targeted tutoring next year.

English Department chair Sonya Zarestky cuts the first lock from Vice Principal Martin Scarano's full head of hair. (Staff photo: Joe McLaughlin)

Scarano and Warren also praised NCLB for encouraging school improvement.

“We feel the No Child Left Behind has brought us closer to our students and made us a better school,” he said.

“We’ve always thought we had a great school but now with the test scores coming out, people outside the building will realize what we are doing here.”

(Staff photo: Joe McLaughlin)