Tabb is the only local school, and the only one in Virginia, on the list of 29 across the country that will have their units eliminated because they haven’t met minimum student enrollment standards for the program, according to a statement from Navy officials.
“The students are disappointed, but they understand,” said Tabb High Principal Angela Seiders.
For host schools with enrollment of 1,000 or more, the minimum NJROTC enrollment is 100. For schools with less than 1,000 students enrolled, a minimum of 10 percent of the total enrollment is required.
Both York and Tabb were on probationary status for low enrollment at one time, but York’s numbers moved up above the minimum requirement, said district Chief Academic Officer Stephanie Guy.
School officials made efforts to shore up enrollment. Offering P.E. credits through the virtual high school to free up a spot in students’ schedules yielded just five more students, Guy said.
Officials are considering starting a Navy National Defense Cadet Corps unit at Tabb as an alternative to the NJROTC program, or allowing Tabb students to participate in York NJROTC, Guy said. They are examining the benefits and cost of implementing NNDCC.
A decision is expected sometime this fall.
Benefits of NJROTC include teaching students leadership skills, unity, how to be a team player and lifelong skills, Seiders said.
“That’s why (students) think it’s so important,” Seiders said. “But they understand enrollment’s down and they understand the economy. They want to keep those skills at Tabb High.”
For the rest of the article, go to Options in the works for Tabb NJROTC

