AIS Magazine Spring 2016

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Spring 2016


CIRCUITRY In third-grade science, students practice building switches and using buzzers as part of the “Morse Code Mania” project. The girls construct circuits — closed paths around which an electric current can flow — with a clothespin, wire, battery, battery holder and buzzer. Once their circuits are working, with the buzzer connected to a switch, the girls deploy Morse code to communicate simple messages to each other. Photo by Jim Roese Photography


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| FEATURES |

Change in Course New Modes of Teaching Are Transforming Education The rise of innovation has brought “big shifts” to the educational landscape for independent schools, and Agnes Irwin educators are navigating the terrain with new ideas for source material, novel teaching methods and unexpected classroom practices. BY WANDA ODOM

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Contents

| DEPARTMENTS | 5 6 9 16 18 22 24 26 28 40 66 68

What’s Online Big Picture Digest Inquiry l Faculty Focus

Limelight l Student Profiles Visual & Performing Arts Athletics CAG Timeline Class Notes Milestones From the Archives

Where the Authors Are Lower Schoolers Lean Into the Role of Writer Creative writing involves reading as much as having an imagination, and our youngest students learn this lesson through crafting their own stories about loose teeth and imaginary creatures. BY WANDA ODOM

36 TOP: KAREN MOSIMANN LIFESTYLE PHOTOGRAPHY / BOTTOM: AMANDA MAHNKE

Balancing the Books Middle School Invests in Early Financial Education Financial literacy is crucial for confidence in managing money, budgeting and eventually investing — which is one reason such topics are woven into multiple disciplines across the Middle School curriculum. BY AMANDA MAHNKE

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Flipped Classroom Offering a New Approach to Teaching Doing homework in class isn’t always a bad thing, as Dr. Tom Weissert and his AP Calculus students have come to appreciate through a teaching model that allows for greater opportunities to collaborate on problem solving. BY WANDA ODOM

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RECALCULATING Lower School Math Club, where fourth graders can spend 30 minutes each week playing number games, creating string art and learning tricks with addition and subtraction, acquaints students like Marina Anderson (center) with the joy of math. Read more in Limelight, page 21. Photo by Joyce Smith


From the Head of School

Leading into the Future EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Wanda Motley Odom Director of Marketing and Communications

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Amanda Mahnke Social Media & Media Relations Manager

CONTRIBUTORS Alison Brant CAG Program Coordinator

Corin Breña Webmaster & Digital Communications Manager

Cindy Hooper Bell ’79 Development Liaison

STUDENT CONTRIBUTORS Anna Kramer ’16 Sophie Gaddes ’16 LAYOUT Sandra Parker Ulikowski

OPPOSITE: JOYCE SMITH / RIGHT: KAREN MOSIMANN LIFESTYLE PHOTOGRAPHY

Brand & Creative Design Manager

PHOTOGRAPHY Amanda Mahnke, Karen Mosimann Lifestyle Photography, Jim Roese Photography, Nadia Slocum ’16, Joyce Smith, Sandra Parker Ulikowski THE AGNES IRWIN SCHOOL Ithan Avenue and Conestoga Road Rosemont, PA 19010-1042 Grades PreK–4 Tel: 610-525-7600 Grades 5–12 Tel: 610-525-8400 Fax: 610-525-8908 FRONT COVER In Jodie Zielinski’s English III class, students collaborated on the word choices for their vocabulary quiz on Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. Brianna Harris ’17 helped illustrate the exercise, one example of major shifts happening in education. Read more in “Change in Course” on Page 30. Photo by Amanda Mahnke

Much has been written about the glass ceiling’s impact on female leadership, and with greater emphasis today on gender equity, one could argue that the dearth of women leaders in corporate America and other arenas is just a vestige of old biases. Isn’t it only a matter of time before as many CEOs answer to Joanne as to John? Surely, younger generations express less gender bias about leadership. Alas, a recent report entitled Leaning Out: Teen Girls and Leadership Biases, conducted at Harvard University, shows that gender bias is commonplace among teenagers. It states that “teen girls both hold biases and suffer from biases that may corrode their relationships and sense of justice, sap their confidence in their leadership potential, and dampen their desire to seek leadership positions, especially in high-power fields.” The report, based on surveys of nearly 20,000 teenage girls and boys, recommends that girls regularly interact with strong female role models, solidify their confidence, and participate in leadership programs. Helping girls incorporate “I am a leader” into their identities has become an important focus at Agnes Irwin, largely through the work of our Center for the Advancement of Girls. Leadership identity development, in addition to leadership skills, is important for girls so they truly perceive themselves as leaders. Unlike a set of skills, leadership identity is more likely to carry into adulthood. I am a witness to acts of leadership by our girls every day. They carry themselves with the pride and confidence that comes from truly owning their identity as a leader; and from knowing that at this school, they will be supported in their journey toward any leadership goals they set. Lower School students have taken charge of monitoring the health of the campus stream, part of an important watershed in our area, as a result of their Living Leadership program. I was inspired by the passionate advocacy of our seventh grade girls as they organized a movie night under the stars to honor two classmates last fall. And in Upper School, the Council for the Advancement of Girls drew 150 peers to its third “for girls, by girls” conference to explore advocacy, self-awareness, and leadership skills. I believe that experiences such as these ensure that Agnes Irwin girls, and the women they become, are poised to break through that glass ceiling. And with their leadership identities firmly in place, it will be no time before there are as many leaders answering to Joanne as to John. Wendy L. Hill, Ph.D.

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About This Issue The Big Shifts More than ever, schools must find ways to cultivate a OUTLOOK

habit of innovation in teaching, according

Forward to New Practices

the National Association of Independent

to Patrick Bassett, former president of Schools (NAIS). To do so, educational institutions will need to embrace changes

Centuries ago, the ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus established a name for himself with the proverb “No man ever steps in the same river twice.” His reading of the world, which popular culture has recast into the corollary notion that “the only thing that is constant is change,” was not simply an inescapable observation, but an undeniable opportunity for celebration. The changes afoot in education today fall squarely into both categories, but the latter designation offers schools precisely what they need: the license to boldly innovate and continually evolve, keeping the currents of excellence flowing through academic program, teaching practice and co-curricular activities. Agnes Irwin has much to celebrate in this vein, as we report in this Spring 2016 issue of Agnes Irwin magazine, with a growing embrace of project-based learning initiatives such as Seventh Grade Culture Week, in which students build sustainable communities, and the Kindergarten Invention Convention, which highlights the imaginative problem-solving of our youngest girls. In addition, non-traditional approaches to teaching, such as the flipped classroom, and different ways of grading academic performance, such as rubrics, are freeing students to achieve deeper understanding and knowledge of subject matter, and a greater love of learning, in order to astutely analyze the world around them. Faculty are experiencing a liberation of sorts as well, to explore new trends in curriculum, pedagogy and professional enrichment, and to continually push at boundaries to unleash the very best in their students. —Wanda Motley Odom, Editor-in-Chief

that reflect the skills and values the 21st century will demand and reward, Bassett has said. The following are major shifts happening in education, as identified by the MacArthur Foundation.

#1 From Knowing to Doing: It’s not just content — skills are equally important.

#2 From Teacher-Centered to Student-Centered: Class discussion is student-led.

#3 From Individual to Team: Working in groups is the norm.

#4 From Consumption of Information to Construction of Meaning: Students focus on real-world problem-solving activities, rather than hypothetical ones.

Take Two

Students in Jodie Zielinski’s English III class were excited to be chosen as the focus of our cover photo shoot for the Spring 2016 issue. Several girls volunteered to pose before the lens, including Olivia Carey ’17. For the actual cover, we overlaid handwritten text from the actual vocabulary list developed by the students. Photo by Amanda Mahnke

#5 From Schools to Networks: Online courses are used to expand curricular offerings.

#6 From Single Sourcing to Crowd Sourcing: Educator chat groups share lesson plans.

#7 From High-Stakes Testing to High-Value Demonstrations: Out with the written exam; in with the design-thinking project.

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What’s Online We recently introduced Portraits of AIS, a new webpage featuring interviews with students of all ages, faculty and alumnae. New profiles are added periodically. Take a look at agnesirwin.org/portraitsofais.

VIDEO STORIES Uniqueness of AIS: Community is at the heart of every student’s experience at AIS. Here, just as much importance is placed on creating a caring and nurturing environment as on supporting students’ academic achievement. See how AIS strikes the balance in all three divisions with a look at what makes Agnes Irwin unique.

Favorite Things at AIS: We asked students at each grade level to share some of their favorite things about AIS. Hear what current students had to say about their experience at Agnes Irwin, as well as alumnae reflections on how AIS prepared them for the world beyond.

Leading for Change: L4C is an annual “by girls, for girls” conference, which features panel discussions and workshops focused on leadership, activism and other topics affecting women. In this video, Agnes Irwin student organizers, participants and presenters speak about their experiences at this year’s conference, held at AIS on Saturday, Oct. 31.

BLOG GIRLS IN THE WORLD: At the start of 2016, we asked Agnes Irwin teachers and staff to share some of their favorite reads from the previous year. What book made an impact, had a good message or was just a really great story? In this post on the school blog, 23 teachers and staff members shared their best recommendations. View it at blog.agnesirwin.org.

TOP SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS FACEBOOK

TWITTER

INSTAGRAM

She Had Us at “Hello” 232 likes, 86 shares, 21 comments

Making Time to Give Back 2 retweets, 3 likes

A Bird’s-Eye View 201 likes, 4 comments

Fifth grader Leila Rodriguez performed an amazing rendition of Adele’s “Hello” at the Middle School performance assembly in January. A video of the act set a new school record for most-ever Facebook shares!

Upper School students volunteered region-wide on Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service, including at the National Greyhound Adoption Program in Philadelphia.

We have Lexy Pierce ’06 — and her drone — to thank for this stunning photo of campus from above.

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Big Picture SPECIAL STUDIES PROGRAM

La Vida en Cuba Nadia Slocum ’16 captured this colorful scene of shops in Old Havana’s downtown last spring during a two-week trip to Mexico City and Havana, Cuba, as part of Agnes Irwin’s Special Studies Program. “With my camera by my side, I set a goal for myself to capture all that I could,” said Slocum, now taking an independent study with photography teacher Sarah Rafferty. Slocum said she was inspired by the buildings’ vibrant colors and architectural character. “I love to capture leading lines whenever I can. Allowing the buildings to line up on an angle makes the street look like it is stretching infinitely. It was really cool to see the old Ford models as they drove by with their exotic colors and markings as people walked in and out of stores. Everything and everyone in Cuba is extremely busy, vocal and vibrant.” The image originally appeared in the Winter 2016 issue of Impulse, the Upper School’s arts and literary magazine.

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Spring Speaker DR. FRANCES E. JENSEN Author of The Teenage Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults Renowned neurologist Dr. Frances E. Jensen will explore what the scientific community has learned over the last decade about the vitally important brain development that occurs during the teenage years. Drawing on research and her own clinical experience, this internationally respected neurologist — and mother of two boys — offers a revolutionary look at the science of the adolescent brain, providing remarkable insights that translate into practical advice for both parents and teenagers.

Tuesday, May 3 7:00 p.m. The Agnes Irwin School

This free event is open to the AIS community, family and friends. To reserve your seat, please RSVP at agnesirwin.org/SpringSpeaker2016 A Wellness Initiative of the Center for the Advancement of Girls


Spring 2016

Digest LOWER SCHOOL

| MIDDLE SCHOOL

| UPPER SCHOOL

ATHLETICS

Varsity Teams Battle to a Tie on AIS/EA Day Agnes Irwin’s Upper School Varsity athletes fought to a draw during the games of the 11th annual AIS/ EA Day in early November, with victories in soccer and cross country earning them the right to share the banner with Episcopal Academy for this school year. The AIS soccer and cross country teams won hard-fought competitions, while tennis and field hockey came up short after their own spirited matches. With the tie, EA kept the banner for half of the school year; Agnes Irwin will receive the banner in late spring. “We’re tremendously proud of our athletes and the heart they put into this annual rivalry. Our girls showed ‘no fear’ and proved that they are talented and dedicated competitors,” said Athletic Director Sheila Pauley, referencing the AIS slogan for this year’s AIS/EA Day T-shirt. The soccer team held a 2-0 lead at the end of the first half and dug in to hold off an EA surge during the second half. The Owls’ defeat of Episcopal’s soccer squad was significant, as EA won the lnter-Ac League championship in girls soccer earlier in fall. Likewise, Varsity cross country took the second, third and fourth best times to build a team lead that EA could not overcome, even with having the fastest runner. Agnes Irwin last won the banner in 2013. — Wanda Odom

“ We’re tremendously proud of our athletes and the heart they put into this annual rivalry. Our girls showed ‘no fear’ and proved that they are talented and dedicated competitors.”

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Digest | LOWER SCHOOL

FOCUS GROUP

READ ACROSS AMERICA

Art Museum Seeks Out PreK Teachers

Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss!

In December, PreK teachers Kathy and Paul Seaton were invited to participate in a focus group for early childhood educators at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The group’s purpose was to assess the program “Museum Looks and Picture Books.” Each year, PreK visits the PMA after reading a specific picture book; girls explore works of art related to concepts in the book and make an art project to take home. Along with educators from various preschool settings, the focus group examined skills used during the visit and made suggestions for additions to the program.

For Read Across America, a national celebration of Dr. Seuss’s birthday, Lower School welcomed several guest readers to class, including Lower School Director Donna Lindner. Other guest readers included Head of School Dr. Wendy Hill, children’s author Nikki Maloney and members of the Radnor Township Fire Department. Lindner read Red: A Crayon’s Story to Susie Hagin’s fourth grade class.

10 The number of

minutes spent in yoga during weekly “Let’s Care” class.

GROWTH SPURT

AIS to Host Robotics Tournament Last year, the fourth grade Robotics Club had 17 members. Now in its second year, the club’s ranks have grown to 37. Thanks in part to such interest and enthusiasm, the Lower School has opted to organize its own robotics competition, to be held after school on April 27. Students brainstormed designs during lunch and playtimes over the winter and are now working on models for the competition, which will be overseen by a panel of judges — including a few from outside of Agnes Irwin. JUST DUCKY

MAKE WAY FOR A BIG BIRD Second grade teacher Joe Flood often invites parents to school to read a few books to his class. Second- and third-grade dad Brendan Howard visited in fall to read about ducks — and he showed up dressed for the part! After his reading, Howard waddled his way to third grade teacher Kim Walker’s class... and gave an impromptu lesson on air pressure, batteries and the motor used to inflate his duck costume. 10

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LOWER SCHOOL | Digest

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FIELD WORK

A ROCKIN’ GOOD TIME Fourth graders enjoyed a visit Jan. 19 from geologist and Temple University professor Alix Davatzes, a former NASA scientist who studied the Martian surface and now travels the world examining rocks that are billions of years old. She brought some of these

rocks with her, and the girls had the opportunity to handle one of the world’s oldest-known types of fossils! Davatzes also brought in and explained her field gear and shared with students what life is like as a field geologist. Students were excited to learn about the exotic locales science can take them!

HANDS-ON SCIENCE

Fulcrums, Force and Axles AIS second graders recently learned about simple machines in Julie Haines’ science class. They experimented with levers and fulcrums of different lengths and heights, testing their models to see which created the best trajectories for paper “snowballs,” and studied force with balloon jets. They also learned about how cars need axles to make their wheels spin. They built and decorated derby cars, which they then gifted to the PreK.

AUTHOR VISIT

True Tales and Other Stories Local author and illustrator Monica Carnesi visited Lower School on Nov. 18. Carnesi wrote Sleepover with Beatrice and Bear and Little Dog Lost, which follows the true story of a brave dog named Baltic who wandered onto a frozen river and was found two nights and 75 miles later by a ship out in the Baltic Sea. In her presentations, Carnesi shared photos of the real Baltic, along with readings from her story about the dog. For third and fourth grades, she also discussed the writing process, emphasizing that revision is key. “When you write, you don’t just write once — you write over and over until you get it right,” she advised.

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MAKIN’ MUSIC

Librarian Illustrates Book Lower School librarian Berrie Torgan-Randall recently illustrated Stop! Don’t Move Those Feet, a picture book based on a popular song by local children’s musician Sandi Eckberg. Stop! features colorful drawings of animals learning important lessons about crossing the street. Eckberg, a teacher and director at the music enrichment organization Makin’ Music, visited Lower School in January and hosted a sing-a-long for students during Friday assembly to celebrate the book’s launch.

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Digest | MIDDLE SCHOOL

TEACHING & LEARNING

COMMUNITY SERVICE

LEADERSHIP

A RECORD NUMBER

Lessons from a Child’s Toy

All Work and No Play... How can play enhance the Middle School classroom? English teacher Leslie Hahne explored this question over the summer with a professional growth grant on Play-Based Learning: Incorporating Games and Picture Books into Middle School Instruction and Assessment, and created a binder of educational games for use by Middle School faculty. She uses the games in fifth and sixth grades to enhance grammar retention and assess learning in nontraditional ways, but each game can be adapted for skill practice in a variety of disciplines.

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The story of the accidental invention of this classic children’s toy is part of the first leadership lesson in the 30-page Student Council Handbook developed and written this summer by Middle School deans Cathy Lynch and Katie Cooper.

Middle School students collected a grand total of 1,701 cans during its annual two-week can drive in November, setting a new record. Sixth-grade students were responsible for the entire process, which ranged from making announcements at assemblies, creating posters and daily counting of the cans to packaging them all. They delivered the cans to the Upper Darby Food Bank on Nov. 18. The director said that this was the largest donation from a single school in the food pantry’s history.

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The number of rounds to winnow 10 players to two finalists in the annual Middle School geography bee.

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The number of rounds to produce a winner. Eighth grader Cheney Williams prevailed with the correct response to: What is the official language of Libya, Yemen and Mauritania? Answer: Arabic.


MIDDLE SCHOOL | Digest

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MUSICAL

“Oh, the Places You’ll Go!” In early January, more than 45 seventh and eighth graders began working hard to learn lines, songs and dances, create props and costumes, and explore the ins and outs of lights and sound for Seussical, Jr., performed March 4-5. Seussical, Jr. is a compilation of Dr. Seuss characters and stories that focus on Horton the Elephant, who tries to protect the speck-sized world of Whoville from naysayers and dangers, despite the fact that he is the only one who can hear them. The 31 talented cast members were led by four eighth-grade stage managers and were assisted by a creative and dedicated backstage crew.

WELLNESS

TABLE TALKS This past winter, eighth graders participated in conversations called “Table Talks,” a lunchtime forum for the class to come together in small group discussions and engage in deeper conversations about well-being, community and other topics of interest. Students have the opportunity to focus on stress, friendship, kindness and other concerns. The conversations are an extension of the Wellness curriculum and the work of Student Support Services, to ensure balance between their academic and emotional development.

SUSTAINABILITY

Solving Real-World Problems in Science Class In late March, David Christiansen’s eighth grade Earth and Beyond science class divided into groups of five with one mission: design a ranch (including house and gardens) that sustainably provides water, food, building materials and energy — and manages waste — in a particular climate. The students, having spent the four weeks leading up to spring break learning about clean water, organic farming, renewable energy and waste management, spend the remainder of their spring term researching, designing and building their ranches. At the unit’s culminating event, a science symposium on May 13, each group will present its model to visitors. In lieu of a final exam, each student and team is assessed on design, model, presentation and story. The goal is to have the girls synthesize and use information they have been learning all year to solve a real-world problem.

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Digest | UPPER SCHOOL

CHRIS HERREN

Former NBA Star Shares Story of Recovery More than 800 community members gathered at Agnes Irwin on Jan. 12 to hear the riveting personal testimony of former NBA guard Chris Herren, whose battle with drug and alcohol addiction derailed his professional basketball career and twice brought him to the brink of suicide. Herren is now one of the nation’s most sought-after speakers on the perils of substance abuse. “If I can help just one student, that’s worth it to me,” Herren, sober since 2008, told the audience. He spoke to Agnes Irwin and Haverford School students on Jan. 13 at Haverford; afterward, Agnes Irwin students met in small groups to discuss his message.

THEATER

Curiouser and Curiouser! The Agnes Irwin Repertory Company tried something a little different for its winter play: an improvised production. In Wonderland — and Alice’s Adventures in It, students wrote the loose script by running through scenes together and bouncing ideas off one another in the style of “storybook theater.” Said student Sophie Gaddes, who played the White Rabbit, “I underestimated the talent, comedic timing and quick wit of my peers. There’s something about watching your friends act out hilarious scenes that’s made even better by the knowledge that they created them themselves. Since we were given the license to make up our own script, it feels raw, unprepared and oftentimes side-splitting.”

STUDENTS CELEBRATE ENGINEERING Upper School recognized National Engineers Week Feb. 22–26 and celebrated through hands-on workshops — building bridges, constructing balloon-powered cars — and lunch conversations with female engineers, who visited campus to share their experiences.

3,500 The pounds of force sustained by a wooden beam built from 2x4s by AIS engineering students. The beam was tested at the Villanova Material Testing Lab during a class trip in January, and was an extension of work the students completed as part of the Agnes Irwin engineering course, but on a much larger scale.

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HONOR BOARD

Having “The Talk” How would you respond if a classmate planned a party and invited everyone except for you? Members of the Upper School Honor Board had lunch with third and fourth graders on Feb. 9 to help them problem-solve scenarios like that one. The Honor Board works to promote honor and integrity throughout the school as a whole, and part of the Honor Board students’ work is to talk with Lower Schoolers about the importance of honor, both within and outside of the school community, through skits, games and meetings. During the lunch chats, Upper School students helped the younger girls think through how to speak up in a respectful way when someone upsets them.


UPPER SCHOOL | Digest

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INSPIRATION

World Record-Breaker Promotes Clean Water Projects

PROJECT PURPLE

Students Continue Herren’s Work

In 2010, 22-year-old rower Katie Spotz entered the record books by completing a 3,038-mile solo trip across the Atlantic Ocean — and in the process, raised more than $150,000 for safe drinking water projects. Spotz has partnered with H2O for Life, a nonprofit service­-learning organization, to inspire students to help partner schools from the developing world gain access to clean water, improved sanitation and hygiene education. Spotz shared her inspirational adventures with Upper Schoolers in an assembly on Feb. 26, reminding students that everyone can tackle bigger problems than their own and make a difference in the lives of others, while becoming energized global citizens and activists for change.

Following Chris Herren’s powerful Jan. 13 presentation to students on the perils of substance abuse, student leaders launched Project Purple Week, an initiative of The Herren Project, which aims to empower youth and encourage positive decision-making to navigate life’s challenges. Various initiatives throughout the week of Feb. 1 helped raise awareness of issues associated with drug and alcohol use, and the week wrapped up with a Project Purple shootout at the JV basketball game on Friday night.

ADVOCACY

STUDENTS ATTEND DIVERSITY LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE

Six Upper School students headed to Florida in December to attend the National Association of Independent Schools’ Student Diversity Leadership Conference. SDLC is a multiracial, multicultural gathering of Upper School student leaders from across the United States, and focuses on self-reflecting, forming allies and building community. After returning, students shared several ways they plan to incorporate their training into life at AIS, and facilitated faculty and staff discussions around diversity and inclusion at Agnes Irwin.

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Inquiry

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|

Faculty Focus

Questions with Melanie Slezak

last summer developing curriculum for the Lower School’s Leadership Toolkit. What was the result?

Slezak: I worked to create activities for each of the nine traits in the Leadership Toolkit. The toolkit, and the symbols inside, are the foundation for our leadership lessons. The activities I compiled are ways to enhance and deepen the girls’ understanding. They are hands-on, fun and can be used with individuals or small groups. We know our girls are leaders, but these activities give them intentional opportunities to practice and demonstrate their growing leadership identities. I also worked with Dr. Lisa Dissinger, our Lower School psychologist, to align the 4Cs of the “Let’s Care” curriculum with the Leadership Toolkit. It has been a wonderful collaboration and the girls are learning important vocabulary and skills that connect friendship and social skills with leadership.

Kindergarten teacher Melanie Slezak has spent nearly 30 years as an early childhood educator, and has been one of the first friendly faces that legions of Agnes Irwin students came to know when they ventured into formal education. In that time, she says, much has changed with the advance of technology, but the core of what she does has remained the same: teaching girls to love learning.

— Wanda Odom

Q: How has technology affected your classroom practices? Slezak: Technological advances have had a definite im-

Q: What do you enjoy most about being a kindergarten teacher? Slezak: I truly enjoy everything! I am constantly energized by the excitement, curiosity

and wonder that kindergarteners have for learning. Year after year, the girls enjoy coming to school and consistently give their best effort to learning. In kindergarten, every day is different, which keeps me thinking and active.

pact on my classroom. Most are very positive. I use iPads and computers for small group lessons, which the girls enjoy because they get immediate feedback and are active Q: How has teaching kindergarten changed over your career? participants in their learning. The Internet provides me with access to unlimited informaSlezak: Surprisingly, many aspects of teaching kindergarten have tion, lessons, activities, projects and stayed the same. Every year, I strive to teach the girls strong foundationresearch. I’ve learned to incorporate al skills and advance them forward from where they began. This remains OTHER ROLES: technology into my classroom while an important piece of the girls’ educational journey. It is important to me also teaching lessons in a traditional that the girls know I care about them and believe in them. The part that Participatory Action classroom environment. I am very has changed the most is the importance of differentiating my instruction Research Committee excited about incorporating more deto meet the needs of the wide variety of learners in my class, and the ad(Development of the sign thinking and project-based learnvances and role of technology in my classroom. My students are already Leadership Toolkit ing in the coming months. I believe it navigating advanced technological devices: five- and six-year-olds today and L3 curriculum) is our responsibility to engage our stuhave access to the world in a way that children of two decades ago didn’t. Member of the dents in a way that teaches them to be Q: What is your greatest challenge each day? Admission Committee global citizens. Technological advancSlezak: My greatest challenge is managing time so that I can get to es increase students’ accessibility to Member of the Teaching every subject without causing the girls to feel rushed. Our curriculum the world every day and create active and Learning Committee includes a rich variety of activities and lessons, along with special classes learners. such as art, music, library, physical education and Spanish. Member of the iWonder

Q: What is your favorite activity with students? Slezak: One that I especially love is teaching writing. Watching the girls develop their skills, and seeing their ideas unfold, is gratifying and exciting. They truly grow to believe they are authors!

Q: What makes kindergarten at Agnes Irwin special? Slezak: I have to say that the relationships are what make Agnes Ir-

win kindergarten special. Watching the girls develop and nurture their friendships, the friendships I have with my colleagues and the partnerships I have with parents are extraordinary. To me, this goes beyond the kindergarten and is the unique foundation of an Agnes Irwin education.

Q: Through a Professional Growth Grant, you spent 16

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Lab development group Member of the Science Teachers Committee Member of the Math Teachers Committee Member of ADVIS Technology Group Summer at AIS teacher Tutor

Q: What fun fact about you would surprise people? Slezak: I was an exchange student in Honduras in 1976. I took several years of French in high school and didn’t know one word of Spanish when I was assigned to Central America. I truly learned Spanish by immersion. While there, I went to an all-girls school, learned to care for coffee bean and mango plants and got used to seeing tarantulas on a regular basis.


JOYCE SMITH

“Watching the girls develop their skills, and seeing their ideas unfold, is gratifying and exciting. They truly grow to believe they are authors!�


Limelight

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Student Profiles

Clara Laveran LOWER SCHOOL

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JOYCE SMITH

T

he first year at a new school can be a little intimidating. Some students might hesitate to plunge into school life, but not fourth grader Clara Laveran: as a new student this year, she jumped right in. Clara was the brains behind this year’s inaugural Fourth Grade Talent Show, which took place in January. “One day I asked a bunch of people when the talent show was going to be, and they said we didn’t have one,” Clara explained. Surprised by this fact, she set about making it happen, drafting a letter to Lower School Director Donna Lindner to request permission to organize a talent show. After a few attempts to deliver the letter (“Mrs. Lindner has a lot of meetings!”), she approached Carol Hillman, Lindner’s assistant, to schedule a time to meet. Clara and classmate Ananda Leahy presented their case to Lindner, who scheduled the show for one of the Lower School’s regular Friday assemblies. Clara went home, created signup sheets and began spreading the word. When the date rolled around, fourth graders astounded their schoolmates with magic tricks, dance, gymnastics and music — including a parody of British pop star Adele’s “Hello” by girls masquerading as Star Wars characters, and Clara’s duet, with classmate Ella Springer, of “Not Pretty Enough.” Clara says the talent show is her favorite memory from this school year so far — although portraying Pocahontas for her Notable Women in Wax project is a close second. It’s not too much of a surprise that this energetic 10-year-old’s favorite memories involve performance: she hopes to someday be an actress and singer. In the meantime, Clara is a bright and determined student with a great sense of humor, said fourth grade teacher Susie Hagin. Clara described her studies as “challenging, but fun.” She especially enjoys math, which, she said, is made more interesting by hands-on projects. “Instead of always working in our math book, we do crafts and have math journals and activities to find the factors and prime and composite numbers. Mrs. Hagin teaches it in a really fun way.” — Amanda Mahnke


Shreya Mathawan MIDDLE SCHOOL

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JOYCE SMITH

he inner workings of machines have fascinated Shreya Mathawan since she was a little girl. “I like knowing how things tick,” explained the eighth grader, who, after three years in the Middle School Robotics Club, joined the Upper School robotics team this year. Shreya is the sole Middle School girl on the Upper School team. She joined on the advice of a Middle School club advisor, who thought she was ready for a bigger challenge. “It’s definitely more intense,” Shreya said. Each year, the team has six weeks to design, build, program and test their robots to meet the FIRST® competition’s engineering challenge. During that finite window, the team meets every day after school for two hours, as well as all day on Saturdays, and sometimes on Sundays and holidays. The huge time commitment makes determination and a passion for robotics essential, Shreya said. A high level of patience is also a must, she noted, recalling a time she had to disassemble a pulley system five times in two days. Shreya’s desire to understand the mechanics of systems has also made her a curious and devoted student — who says the teachers at Agnes Irwin are part of what makes it such a great school. There are times, however, that she may be hesitant if she doesn’t immediately comprehend the lesson at hand, she admits. Last year during the annual seventh grade Culture Week, Shreya’s assignment as her biome’s scientist was to create a biomass: a mixture of cow manure and water that functions as a renewable source of energy for farmers. “It was disgusting,” she attested. And yet, the project is one of Shreya’s favorite memories. It took her a while to come around to appreciating the experience, she said, but added, “I really liked figuring out how this renewable source of energy, that I never knew about, worked.” Environmental issues are an area of interest for this aspiring entrepreneur, who says she wants to create her own company. “I want to take things that are unwanted and turn them into a new source of energy. I want to program things — I want to build things that will help people.” — Amanda Mahnke

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Sabina Smith UPPER SCHOOL

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he opportunity to learn in an allgirls environment is what Sabina Smith ’17 appreciates most about Agnes Irwin. “It allows me to pursue anything I want to do and not be afraid,” said the junior class president, who served as class representative her freshman and sophomore years. Now in her sixth year at Agnes Irwin, Sabina says the community has provided her with the support she needed to find herself and the flexibility to explore and realize her passions. She spent last summer in Costa Rica with a program called Duke TIP, taking classes in tropical diseases and Costa Rica’s public health system. Robotics and STEM are major interests, and she is co-head of the school’s World Affairs Club. “It’s important to look at problems differently, and where you find intersections in topics, you find new possibilities,” she said. “Here, it’s easy to be interested in many different subjects — and within school clubs, you are exposed to different opinions and varying perspectives.” Contemplating how global events affect people in her community has inspired an ambition in her to achieve positive change. What especially excites her is exploring the intersection of her two favorite topics, science and world affairs. In college, she plans to pursue a major in public health, anthropology or epidemiology. After that, she hopes to go to medical school to continue her education in the area of public health, and is interested in nonprofit work and research as potential career opportunities. Sabina said Agnes Irwin has helped shape and expand her idea of leadership. When she first delved into student government, she thought leadership meant organizing events. Now, she said, “I think effective leadership is about considering how others are feeling, truly understanding their needs and then addressing them. “When you look outside of our community, you often see men in leadership positions,” Sabina added. “Here, you see girls in leadership positions. AIS makes it clear that everyone has the potential to lead and impact others.” — Corin Breña

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Math Club LOWER SCHOOL

protractor and to divide some numbers to determine how far apart each nail needed to be for her pattern. “It’s a really fun way to learn, and it’s not in a book,” said Olivia, who has also learned how to play cribbage, which she feels is “a very unusual game. It’s hard.” Games are a mainstay of Math Club, said Hill, who has hosted the weekly activity for several years. In the fall, the girls start off learning simple concentration games like “24.” Using a limited number of cards in a deck, players must select two cards that, when added or multiplied, equal 24. If that happens, the player wins the round. If not, the cards go back on the table. The best of three adds up to a win. “These are games they can take home and do on their own that practice minimal number facts,” said Hill, adding that the number of participants this school year is the largest she has seen in recent years. Prizes boost attendance, she said, as

does inclement weather. Her standard prize is an eraser. After spring break, the girls learn math “tricks,” such as asking a person to think of a card in a playing deck and then correctly guessing it, that they will take on the road when they visit a local nursing home as part of community service. Ava Anderson sees the appeal of Math Club very simply: “It teaches you the different tools (needed) to measure, and you count stuff.” Ava concurred, but with a caveat related to the string art project: “Sometimes you nail your fingers, but it’s still fun.” — Wanda Odom Some of the 20-plus club members include (left to right) Maya Messick, Sarah Ernst, Dakota Puriefoy, Henriette Schminke, Ella Springer, Olivia Stephan, Sydney Puriefoy, Eliana Aaron and Grace Ivancich.

JOYCE SMITH

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he hammering in Pedie Hill’s fourth grade classroom is deafening. More than a dozen girls are sprawled on the floor, leaning over cloth-covered wooden boards as they drive flathead nails just so far into the arc of a large circle pattern. They are careful to place each nail at exact intervals, 10, 15 or 30 degrees apart. Welcome to Math Club in Lower School! Here, fourth graders can spend their lunch recess each Wednesday practicing mathematics in cool ways that seem more like playing than learning — which is actually what’s occurring. “You figure out how many different ways that math is in your life, and how you can make math fun,” said Eliana Aaron when asked what she enjoys about participating in Math Club. “You can make it into a game.” Olivia Stephan likes that club activities involve art projects like string art, which required her to use a compass, a

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Visual & Performing Arts

MUSIC

| THEATER | STUDIO

INTERSECTION

Computing the Art in Mathematics

AMANDA MAHNKE

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n the study of science and math, there is no more fundamental skill than the ability to solve polynomial equations. For Dr. Bahman Kalantari, a professor of Computer Science at Rutgers University, an equally important fact is that students can use such mathematical expressions to create visually arresting images as wondrous as the works of famous artists. He believes that knowledge can capture the imaginations of students and inspire wider study of mathematics. Kalantari is the creator of polynomiography, algorithmic visualizations of the solution to a polynomial equation “using the mathematical convergence properties of iteration functions. “Polynomiography connects art, mathematics, science and technology,” Kalantari told a morning assembly of Upper School students in January. “It’s a game of hide-and-seek with a bunch of dots on a painting canvas.” Through computer software called Poly-Z-Vision, Kalantari can input a polynomial equation, run the program and produce simple to complex designs, symmetrical or asymmetrical, two-dimensional or 3D, on a computer screen (shown at right). “You can make images that you can’t really tell how they were generated,” he said, “creating wonderful pictures by design or by accident.” 22

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Kalantari showed polynomiographic images alongside great works by Klee, Picasso, Klimt and Sol LeWitt, and the resemblances were striking. His presentation was a centerpiece of Arts Week in the Upper School, and this year’s theme explored the intersection of mathematics, science and visual arts. For more than a dozen years, the Visual and Performing Arts faculty and the student-led Arts Board have organized a week of events and activities for all Upper School students to celebrate written, visual and performing arts. Other planned speakers were Dr. Iman Martin ’99, an epidemiologist and an officer in the elite Epidemic Intelligence Service of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), who used pictography to bridge language barriers in her efforts to combat Ebola outbreaks in Africa; and Virginia-based sculptor Rebecca Kamen, who tries through her multimedia works to capture and re-imagine what scientists see through their research. Senior Laura Pansini, who is studying calculus this year, said she was definitely impressed by what Kalantari could do with an equation. “I got to see a whole different side of math. It was really interesting how he combined art, science and math to create something so interactive and fun,” said Pansini. “As a student, I think it was really cool to see that math can be more than just numbers.” At the Upper School assembly, Math Department Chair Cindy Brown introduced Kalantari with the preface that “one of our special events for Arts Week also includes math,” urging students to give a cheer. Brown said that the value of Kalantari’s work lies in its ability to inspire students. “It shows that beyond the skill-building that we sometimes concentrate on in school, there’s a whole bigger world out there where math can interact with other subjects and, in this case, create beautiful art,” said Brown. “It’s something that just sparks the girls’ imaginations.” Kalantari’s goal in promoting polynomiography is to better engage students in learning math and potentially spur higher levels of achievement in math among American students, who at the high school level ranked 27th out of 34 industrialized nations in Western Europe and North America in

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BRIEFS math proficiency in 2012. “It beautifies mathematics, it connects students to the subject, and it inspires students … on their own to ask questions that are deep. It’s a way of teaching. An equation that is abstract and maybe meaningless becomes something lively,” Kalantari said. “It makes a profound impact.” “I think eventually… such a medium could enter K-12 education,” said Kalantari. “There might not be a course called polynomiography. But why not do a little bit of this in math class?” — Wanda Odom

Exquisite Corpses Studio Art III students have dabbled in cadavre exquis, a technique that emerged during Surrealism in 1925. Emulating a parlor game, each artist draws a human or animal body part — head, torso, legs — before passing the folded paper onto a classmate. The result? Ink drawings of odd figures.

REFLECTION

First All-School Art Show If there’s one thing that inspires nostalgia in “Lifers” — i.e., seniors who, like myself, have spent the entirety of their academic career at Agnes Irwin — it’s the art classes. “The puppets!” one girl squeals when I mention Lower School artwork. “And remember we made those papier maché birds? And the self-portraits?” She flops back in her seat and shakes her head. “Wow. Those were the days, man.” Those were, indeed, the days. But I’d argue that, for many, those days have continued well into their Upper School careers. The proof was in Agnes Irwin’s firstever All-School Art Showcase, which had its opening reception on Feb. 2. From Jan. 27 to March 4, artwork from every Lower and Middle School student, as well as work from every Upper School student who takes an art class, was on exhibit throughout the Middle and Upper School buildings. From the first grade’s self-portraits outside the Student Life Center, to the Middle School’s “Junk Rethunk” project in the Arts & Science wing, to the Upper School’s photography, ceramics, wire sculpture and large watercolor displays, our halls were overflowing with vibrancy, creativity and beauty. The show not only gave students the opportunity to demonstrate their talent, but it also exemplified the success of the artistic journey here at Agnes Irwin. First, we’re taught to explore, to make mistakes, to discover. Then we begin to harness our abilities, honing the skills necessary to achieve the desired product. And finally, the support and wisdom of our teachers, coupled with the multitude of innovative projects we are challenged with, lift us to the artistic heights we never gave up on reaching for. — Sophie Gaddes ’16

She’s ArtStanding! Our Arts Facebook page has a new feature: ArtStanding Student of the Month. Among them are: Caroline Richardson ’17, for her apprenticeship at Philadelphia’s Fabric Workshop, and Rachel Huang ’18, a violinist with the youth orchestra Philadelphia Sinfonia.

Scotland Bound? RepCo has been invited to submit a proposal to perform at the American High School Theatre Festival, an international showcase of the best in high school theater, held each summer at the Edinburgh Festival, the world’s premiere arts fest.

Right: Self-portrait by Emma Harmelin ’27

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Athletics SQUASH

Working and Playing Hard Wins Top Rankings

In January, two AIS squash players had a unique opportunity: Katherine Glaser ’20 and Margaux Comai ’21, ranked among the four top players in their age groups nationally, traveled to England to compete in the British Junior Open championships against the world’s best. Glaser, who placed 17th at the Open — losing only once, to the world’s top U15 player — started learning squash at age nine. She joined Agnes Irwin’s Middle School team in sixth grade, a year of firsts for the school: the squash courts opened, Alex Stait joined as Director of Squash and the Middle School team went to nationals. Now in her second year playing “up” on the Upper School Varsity team, the eighth grader says her

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“Everyone is different. I know what individually makes each of them tick, so I do my best to help them feel they have someone behind them who cares.”

SPRING 2016

early start in the sport likely helped her to excel. “Having someone show me at a young age what an amazing sport squash is… is something I’ll have with me forever.” Developing a good foundation and a love for the game is part of what Stait aims to do for all his Middle School players — and it’s working. Agnes Irwin’s Middle School Varsity squash program is currently ranked third in the country. A week after nationals in January, the team won the Mid-Atlantic Squash Association tournament, besting national champion Baldwin and No. 2-ranked Episcopal Academy. This season, Agnes Irwin’s Middle School JV team is undefeated. “Our middle school program,” Stait said, “has risen in the past three years to become one of the best in the country.” With that success has come increasing popularity for the sport at AIS and newfound competition for a place on the team: More than 40 girls tried out this year. An hour of training every day — court sprints, ghosting drills that teach fast footwork, practice games — is part of the key to success, along with the physical training girls undertake individually. The game is mental, too. Remaining calm and unflustered is vital, explained Comai. “When you lose a match, you can’t dwell on it — you have to move onto the next one.” There is very little difference between the top teams in terms of physical skill, Stait contends. Much more of the game is psychological, and as coach, he works hard to support each girl. “Everyone is different. I know what individually makes each of them tick, so I do my best to help them feel they have someone behind them who cares.” Along with that support comes some tough love. Stait says he is stricter with Middle School players than Upper School


girls, in part to help them develop good habits they will carry on as they play squash at a higher level. “There is no allowance for bad behavior or bad timekeeping. We’re really trying to create a culture in the way they train, play and behave.” At the same time, Stait recognizes the need for fun in a busy training schedule and works levity into Middle School practices weekly. One of Comai’s favorite team activities is “Fun Fridays,” during which girls play silly games, compete in left-handed tournaments and win prizes. “Most of the time they’re playing squash, they’re working hard to improve — but it’s important to remember they’re still kids,” Stait said. — Amanda Mahnke

In January, two AIS squash players had a unique opportunity: Katherine Glaser ’20 and Margaux Comai ’21, ranked among the four top players in their age groups nationally, traveled to England to compete in the British Junior Open championships against the world’s best. Glaser, who placed 17th at the Open — losing only once, to the world’s top U15 player — started learning squash at age nine. She joined Agnes Irwin’s Middle School team in sixth grade, a year of firsts for the school: the squash courts opened, Alex Stait joined as Director of Squash, and the Middle School team went to nationals. Now in her second year playing “up” on the Upper School Varsity team, the eighth grader says her early start in the sport likely helped her to excel. “Having someone show me at a young age what an amazing sport squash is… is something I’ll have with me forever.” Developing a good foundation and a love for the game is part of what Stait aims to do for all his Middle School

COLLEGE SIGNINGS

OPPOSITE TOP: ANDREW FLAHERTY TOP, RIGHT, BOTTOM LEFT: AMANDA MAHNKE / BOTTOM RIGHT: DEJA LEWIS-NWALIPENJA ’16

Athletes Take Sports to Next Level This year, 10 senior athletes committed to continuing their athletic careers at the collegiate level, representing 15 percent of the Class of 2016. For these athletes and their families — including eight who will play in Division I — the commitments represent the culmination of years of dedication: hundreds of hours spent in training, practice and games, at camps, on club teams, all while keeping up with their academic studies and other pursuits. “We are extremely proud of this group of student-athletes and all they have accomplished,” said Athletic Director Sheila Pauley. “To have 15 percent of the senior class recruited speaks volumes about their work ethic and commitment to their sport.” For student-athletes who want to be recruited, the school’s College Counseling staff members “are available to be integral intermediaries from the beginning,” said Associate Director of College Counseling Meg Scott. “Every sport is different,” Scott said, “but being recruited means getting on a college coach’s radar.” Players can either put themselves in places where they can be scouted — like a sports showcase or camp — or contact a coach directly to express their interest. “It’s a two-way street,” Scott said. Before commitments are made, Athletics and College Counseling staff help students evaluate potential schools through a variety of resources: program rankings, tips on juggling conversations with several schools and worksheets on which students can compare the various requirements for

college athletes at each of the schools they’re considering. “We really want them to be thoughtful about this,” Scott said. The work isn’t over once students commit: College Counseling staff connects with coaches and admissions officers, helps students with course selection and more. “We talk extensively with (Athletic Director) Sheila Pauley about how best to support each each student-athlete,” Scott said.” — Amanda Mahnke

CLASS OF 2016 RECRUITS Emily Fryer (Brown University, lacrosse) Camille Smukler (Amherst College, tennis) Ginny Ulichney (Tufts University, volleyball) Sarah Platt (University of Virginia, lacrosse) Laura Pansini (Princeton University, lacrosse) Rosie Kalis (Miami University, field hockey) Kristin Burnetta (Harvard University, lacrosse) Hannah Keating (Harvard University, lacrosse) Kate White (Dartmouth College, lacrosse) Claire Micheletti (Colgate University, soccer)

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BRIEFS Alex Blomstrom ’18

Talented underclassmen have contributed to the successes of this season’s Varsity basketball team, which include a win at the Westtown Tournament on Dec. 19. Guard Alex Blomstrom ’18 notched her 100th three-pointer in a Feb. 2 win against Baldwin, and the same week she was featured in a Delaware County Times article about her leadership on and off the court. The sophomore is one of the top shooters in Delaware County.

Record Swims at Easterns

At Easterns in February, the Varsity swim team broke eight school records — almost unheard of for one meet. All of the new record-setting swims were impressive, but the 400-yard Freestyle relay team of Myka Thomas ’18, Ana Mashek ’18, Maddie Aguirre ’19 and Riley Flick ’17 trimmed the most time — swimming six seconds faster than the previous record.

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CAG

RESEARCH

| PARTNERSHIPS | PROGRAMS

CENTER FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF GIRLS

In Recognition of Women

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Shortly after her college graduation, Wang joined the U.S. State Department, serving overseas in postings in the Philippines and Afghanistan. In the two years since returning from Afghanistan, Wang has served as a watch officer in the State Department Operations Center (the U.S. government’s international crisis center) and currently serves in the communications office under State Department spokesman Jack Kirby. When asked by Agnes Irwin Upper School students about her experience as a woman in the Foreign Service, Wang emphasized a nuanced outlook. She noted that “the thing about sexism today… is that it’s a little bit inadvertent sometimes. Afghans treated me differently because I was a woman. Whether or not that was sexism, I couldn’t say. I was just unusual.” While posted in Afghanistan, Wang was involved in the creation of an organization for Afghan women journalists. Wang discovered that the women educated in Afghan schools after the fall of the Taliban in 2001 “were really inspiring. They were like Irwin’s girls. They weren’t shy.” She formed a special bond with the young journalists, finding that education “makes a huge difference.” “One of the things you learn to do at Irwin’s is you learn to learn,” Wang said, crediting the school for the writing and speaking skills she used to further her success as a working professional in the international and political sphere. Sophie Gaddes, a senior and editor of the school newspaper, The Wick, found connections to her own interests in Wang’s story. “[Wang’s] dedication to legitimizing journalism for women as a career in Afghanistan really inspired me,” she said. “It showed a commitment to spreading freedom of thought and opinion around the globe.” To senior Ellie Damstra, “Learning about the story behind how [Wang] got involved with the State Department…sparked a potential future interest in a similar career.” Wang’s exceptional career path befitted a speech in honor of International Women’s Day, as it granted Agnes Irwin students a rare opportunity to connect with an exceptional woman experienced in geopolitical affairs. Her visit was organized by Agnes Irwin’s Center for the Advancement of Girls, which distributed purple carnations to students, faculty and staff in recognition of the day. — Anna Kramer ’16

AMANDA MAHNKE

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n March 7, The Agnes Irwin School recognized International Women’s Day with a speech by alumna and State Department official Mimi Wang ’05. When speaking to the Upper School, Wang introduced students to the challenges and rewards of her life as a woman officer in the United States Foreign Service. Recognition of International Women’s Day began in Eastern Europe in the early 20th century, in honor of the first all-female union, the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. In the western hemisphere, International Women’s Day was recognized as an official United Nations’ holiday by its General Assembly in 1966. Typically, celebrations are held on March 8 each year and are marked with a themed day at U.N. headquarters, speeches and gifts of purple flowers to women and girls around the world. Wang, who also spoke to fourth graders and in a Middle School assembly, attended Yale University and graduated in 2009 with with a major in history and secondary major in International Studies.


IDENTITY

Workshop Series Aims to Shape Leaders How would you move a marble across a classroom, roughly 20 feet, with a plastic straw, some string, a paper clip and a balloon — without touching it? In February, more than 60 fifth-grade and sixth-grade girls from Agnes Irwin and other area schools faced that very challenge in a morning dedicated to collaborative leadership as part of the Center for the Advancement of Girl’s leadership development program for middle schoolers. Catherine Steiner-Adair, a clinical psychologist and author, speaks to us about leadership development through an anecdote we in CAG refer to as the “pizza story.” She recounts that when you ask a 10-year-old girl what she wants on her pizza, she will proudly assert her preferences: pepperoni, mushrooms, olives; when you ask a 13-year-old girl the same question, she says she’s not sure; and when you ask a 15-year-old girl, she defers: “I’ll have whatever you’re having.” It is precisely that sort of progression to indifference and insecurity that CAG hopes to combat through the three-part workshop series Real Girls. Real Voices. Real Impact. At the February workshop, What Do You Want on Your Pizza?, girls eagerly launched into the “Marble Mover” activity in teams of five and six. Gradually, the girls found their voices, shared ideas and worked together to accomplish the goal. After the activity, the groups collectively named the actions, characteristics and skills that advanced the goal and allowed them to succeed: determination, openness, careful listening, creativity, positivity and teamwork. Using Steiner-Adair’s observations as a foundation, CAG set out to create a program that would require girls ages 10-12 to not only actively identify and practice their own strengths as leaders, but also discover their own “leadership identity”: to pinpoint what they think makes a leader and to consider how they themselves fit that perception. The goal is threefold: First, we want girls to hold onto their voice as they

grow. Second, we hope that they will use their voice to advance their values and interests. Third, we believe that in doing so, the girls will develop a strong, unique leadership identity that they will confidently assert in and beyond their communities. Held in October, the first workshop, How Do You See Your Selfie?, addressed the importance of owning the values that inherently influence a leader’s voice and shape who girls are as leaders. The second workshop focused on how girls work with others to tackle challenges, solve problems and accomplish a group goal. CAG will host a third and final workshop this spring that will focus on girls’ leadership in STEM. We are looking forward to collaborating with Head of School Wendy L. Hill, who will share her passion for all things related to leadership and STEM. — Alison Brant

AMANDA MAHNKE

BRIEFS White Paper Published The Center recently published a white paper summarizing its first STEM think tank and conference, hosted in March 2015. The document outlines the key topics discussed, such as barriers to girls’ success in STEM education and fields. It can be found at agnesirwin.org/CAG under the Research section.

CAG Presents at Forum CAG staff members Alison Brant, Sarah Anne Eckert and Mariandl Hufford presented at the National Coalition of Girls’ Schools Global Forum on Girls Education in New York City on Feb. 8. While Brant and Eckert shared their work in ‘INSPIRE!’ roundtable sessions, Hufford was a panelist for a discussion on the ways research can inform practice in girls’ schools.

Students Talk Courage The Council for the Advancement of Girls jumped at the chance to lead an Agnes Irwin Daisy Troop meeting in March. The girls talked to the Daisies about what it means to be courageous and strong by reading a story, creating their own superhero masks and superhero poses and acting out skits to demonstrate courageous and not-socourageous actions.

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Timeline INVENTION CONVENTION

Solving Problems of a Pint-Sized World One morning every school year, more than 20 inventors stand patiently at tables in the Laura Thomas Buck ’49 Pavilion, explaining intricate contraptions to Lower School students and families. Their creations are built to solve pintsized problems: a “goose guard” that prevents geese from getting too close at the park; a tunic zipper-upper; a “sunscreener,” comprised of a yardstick and attached sponge, so the user can apply sunscreen to her own back. The devices “help solve quintessentially kindergarten problems,” says kindergarten teacher Melanie Slezak, because — well — the inventors are kindergartners.

FEB. 16 So, what exactly is an invention? And what makes a good one? Students learn that an invention is brand new, makes life easier and better, and can help solve a problem. Sometimes an object might address one of these areas, but not all of them — for example, vegetables are not an invention, as some of Molly Bergh’s students were initially surprised to learn.

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Over six weeks, the students learn what inventions are and what they do, then design and build their own. The project culminates in a grand reveal at the Kindergarten Invention Convention, held this year on March 22. — Amanda Mahnke

Students prepare for the project by reading I Am Inventing an Invention and What Do You Do with an Idea? in class, among other books that librarian Michelle Burns has collected. The stories help introduce students to the idea of inventing and what it means to create something that has never been created before.

FEB. 17 Teachers provide an example of a simple household object and ask students: How does this invention make life easier or better? Students jump at the chance to explain how a slotted spoon makes life easier by helping drain the water out of a can of peas. “Did the invention make life easier?” Slezak asks, prompting a chorus of enthusiastic yesses.

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TOP RIGHT: FREEPIK.COM / BOTTOM RIGHT: AMANDA MAHNKE

EARLY FEBRUARY


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FEB. 22–MAR. 4 At home, girls brainstorm ideas for their invention, decide what materials they’ll need and create a plan to build it. Parents are encouraged to help their daughters develop an idea, but allow her to take ownership of it. “An important goal for the girls is to learn the process of creating an invention. We also want them to be aware that if their invention solves a problem for them, it most likely solves a problem for others, too,” Slezak said. By March 4, students must bring written plans to school, sometimes with an accompanying illustration. Teachers can help adapt proposals if necessary.

MAR. 4–17

FEB. 8–MAR. 4

AMANDA MAHNKE

Students are tasked with looking around their homes and finding a simple invention that makes life easier, to help them begin thinking about the inventing process. For two weeks, a different student brings in a household item to show to the class. Grace Ryan shares that someone invented headphones to help block out noise, and also so someone can listen to music quietly.

Girls spend two weeks building their prototypes at home. Some simpler projects, such as doll organizers, the girls can build themselves. Others require some help from mom or dad: a “toy picker-upper” with netting attached to a scooter, or the EZ Shelf, which works on a pulley system so its user can grab hard-to-reach items. The girls also name their inventions, such as “The Toothbrush Helper” or “Sarah’s Handy Dandy Lamp.”

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MAR. 22

Teachers introduce the mission: students must create an invention that solves a problem they have. Slezak and Bergh display photos of previous kindergarten inventions to help girls develop their ideas. Last year, Emanuela Cacciavillani invented slipper compass flashlights, which the girls decided would be useful for those afraid of the dark.

Six weeks later, the inventors’ hard work pays off, as they display and describe their inventions to fellow Lower School students and their families. “The girls are so proud of their inventions,” Slezak said. “This is something they really do remember.”

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CHANGE IN

COURSE

New Modes of Teaching Are Transforming Education

AMANDA MAHNKE

by Wanda Odom

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tudents spend a lot of time laughing and talking to each other in Dr. Sarah Anne Eckert’s 11th grade United States History course. They also huddle together in small groups on the floor, instead of sitting at desks, and no one has cracked a textbook all semester. Such behavior is normal in Eckert’s class, which involves a decidedly different teaching approach than the stand-and-deliver lectures that have been standard practice for high school history instruction for many decades. Eckert’s approach — using primary source documents, student-driven discussions and project-based learning — represents one of the “big shifts” that the have been taking place in education in recent years, changes that the MacArthur Foundation, one of the nation’s largest philanthropic foundations, has said represent “schools of the future.”

“We are learning how important it is for students to engage in cooperative learning, and I think that students are also learning that,” said Eckert.

AMANDA MAHNKE

At first, her U.S. history students were hesitant about her approach, but they have become more at ease working together in small group discussions of the original source material she provides, instead of relying on her to lecture. Eckert noted that for decades, the traditional classroom practice has been for students to sit and listen to the teacher — so for many of them “this is still new.”

The Big Shifts The MacArthur Foundation, in recent work on the future of education, has identified major changes in the field of education that it says schools will need to consider to keep up with the innovation required of 21st century institutions. (See page 4 for a summary of these major shifts in education.) These “paradigm-shifting revolutions,” as the National Association of Independent Schools calls them, are transforming education. Chief among these shifts is project-based learning, a teaching method in which students gain knowledge and skills by working for an extended period of time to research or investigate a complex question or problem, and then develop an answer or solution. The others include shifts from a teacher-centered to student-centered classroom, reliance on teamwork instead of individual work, the construction of meaning instead of the consumption of information, the use of networks and partnerships to augment expertise, and the use of crowd sourcing in lieu of single-source textbooks. A seventh shift identified by the MacArthur Foundation complements the others: increasing use of assessments and measures of progress that require students to demonstrate what they have learned through means other than the regurgitation of information for written tests.

An Incubator for Innovation Middle School science teacher Jennifer White is among those helping to lead the revolution at Agnes Irwin, which earlier this school year established a cross-divisional committee to research and evaluate trends in education, curriculum and pedagogy and develop recommendations regarding changes in teaching methods and practice. “We are still in the very early stages,” said White, one of six faculty members, along with three division heads, eight department chairs and two senior administrators, who serve on the Teaching and Learning Committee (TLC). Its charge, from Head of School Dr. Wendy L. Hill, is to serve as an incubator for innovation. One of the committee’s first actions was to form three working groups with three particular topics to explore: the integration of project-based learning into the curriculum, the balance between teaching skills versus content, and “who are the girls we are teaching today,” said White. Central to understanding how best to shift teaching practice, she explained, is to intimately know the audience — how today’s students are informed and socialized, with whom and what they process information. Assistant Head of School Mariandl Hufford, who chairs the committee and is also Director of the Center for the Advancement of Girls (CAG), said that in addition to an increasing use of project-based learning across several disciplines, the school has shifted its approach to discussions about academic program: evaluating the trends in teaching a specific subject such as mathematics or science in a vertical fashion, PreK to 12th grade, and engaging all teachers of a particular subject in the dialogue. “In this process, teachers have become the drivers of the vision for their disciplines,” said Hufford, noting that program discussions started last spring with the Mathematics Department and

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“The purpose of the retreats is to take a look at what we’re doing, take a look at where we might improve so that we are helping girls to learn as much as they can and to do it as well as they can,” said Mathematics Department Chair Cindy Brown. One of the persistent issues in mathematics instruction is overcoming the lack of confidence with which many girls approach the study of math. “Girls kind of get the idea that they are either math people or they’re not math people. We wanted to try to dispel those errors in thinking,” said Brown, who has led four follow-up discussions among math teachers. The talks have led to Lower School teachers incorporating animated ClassDoJo videos into their classroom work to promote “a growth mindset” and to reinforce the idea that girls can be strong math students. But Brown said it will also take a shift in societal attitudes, and to some extent paren-

tal ones, to quash popular notions that math is more for boys than for girls. “No parent ever says, ‘I wasn’t good at reading, so you don’t have to learn how to read,’” said Brown. Her team has developed a vision statement for the mathematics program at Agnes Irwin that involves getting every student to understand that “mastering mathematics concepts means working hard and managing frustration and confusion,” and that “math stamina” will lead to success.

New Tools & New Methods The most common ways in which the big shifts in education are being incorporated in teaching practice at Agnes Irwin are through project-based learning initiatives, student-driven classroom discussions, alternative academic assessments and non-traditional source materials. “I often start class with a discussion question or questions and allow students an opportunity to write about the question for a few minutes,” said Upper School English teacher Hillary O’Connor. “Sometimes they share among themselves, sometimes not, but they then lead the discussion with their answers.” O’Connor, whose practice is one example of the shift from teacher-centered to student-centered approaches, said that at the start of the year, she models the type of discussion she wants, identifying major plot points, important characters and key themes or quotes. “As the year progresses, I allow them to lead the routine on their own.” In Jodie Zielinski’s English III class, juniors recently created the vocabulary list for a quiz on Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, each combing through the book to find 20 words they felt that they did not immediately know. They were to define four, and in class the following day, each student listed her words (without definitions) on the board. “We then had more words than needed for the quiz,” Zielinski said. To shorten the list, the class crossed out duplicates. Then, “students argued for what words could be crossed off the list.” Essentially, Zielinski said, “this allowed students to define, and in a sense own, some words, and to tell their classmates, ‘Look, you know this word, too.’” In the end, the students made the final list, and the process allowed them to consider word context, prior knowledge, and sentence examples, all before defining the list and studying it. “Students learned, or were reminded they already knew, more words than those selected. An active — versus passive — engagement with vocabulary took place.” Like some other teachers, Dolores Verdeur decided to give students in her 11th grade English class a collaborative project to com-

In Jennifer White’s fifth grade science class, students engage in project-based learning activities like this one. Rosa Huffman’s cardboard prototype is comprised of a wheel and axle cart and a double pulley. As she explains in the project, the cart starts on the ground, and as the worker pulls down on the double pulley, the cart moves forward to the counter. “As the cart reaches the counter, the load is slowly lifted out of the cart.”

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continued in November for the Science Department and in February for the Visual and Performing Arts Department. The gatherings involved a three-hour kickoff retreat to look at the most recent trends in educational research and professional development and in the ways girls learn a particular subject best. The teachers have continued to meet regularly, by department, to explore themes such as how to cultivate a growth mindset in students and ways to generate stronger threads across divisions.


plete, instead of a traditional test or essay, at the conclusion of their unit on Transcendentalism. Working in groups of two or three, they were asked to propose changes to an aspect of their own educational experience, as inspired by their reading of essays by Henry David Thoreau and the two-act play The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail, and their viewing of the Academy Award-winning film Dead Poet’s Society. Students were required to conduct independent research to define effective education, to research sources that would be useful in implementing a proposal, and to identify the steps necessary to make that change, Verdeur said. “They needed to write up their proposals, including how a character in the play and the film would regard their ideas. Finally, they presented their project to the class.” Verdeur added that she might forward their final projects to the Teaching and Learning Committee.

Overall, Verdeur said, the project gave students experience in collaboration, research, critical thinking and writing, and oral presentation skills — as well as a chance to feel that they’re engaged in an academic endeavor with the potential to affect their own real-life experience. Modern Language Department Chair Rita Davis said current tools such as the Internet “have infused the curriculum with an abundance of resources that are made available” through increased connectivity with other educators around the world. Davis uses an online map with links to school cafeteria websites in different parts of the Francophone world to give her eighth grade students an overview of the range of school lunch offerings abroad. The interactive map shows cafeterias in Morocco, Senegal, Tahiti, France, French Polynesia, Switzerland and Martinique. “Isn’t it incredible? In a split second, the students are halfway around the world, and cultural comparisons are right at their fingertips,” said Davis, referring to the meal options, descriptions and images that the girls can view online. She found the map through an online resource for French teachers, where educators share information, noting that crowd sourcing of curriculum and lesson plans is increasingly the norm. As a homework assignment, one of the girls’ first tasks, using their selected cafeteria abroad, was to identify a food with which they were unfamiliar; then they had to compare their chosen cafeteria’s offerings with those at Agnes Irwin, listing similarities and differences. “They really seemed invested in this process,” said Davis. “I know they say a picture is worth a thousand words, but they came back

to class totally enlightened by what they learned.” An unexpected byproduct of the exercise, said Davis, was that the students came away with an understanding that other countries put a premium on healthy eating habits. Eckert, the Upper School history teacher, agrees that the changes in classroom practice mean more enjoyable practices for students and educators alike. She has been able to design her U.S. history curriculum based on primary source documents gathered from a Stanford University group of history educators. Using some of their lesson plans as anchors, Eckert has constructed a unique course that fits her goals. “I always knew I wanted to teach in a question-based format because U.S. history keeps getting longer and the time period in which to teach it remains the same. I have to make cuts; I have to drop things. I found using a standard curriculum too difficult,” she said. “Now I have a great model.”

WHAT THEY’RE READING In their work, members of the Teaching and Learning Committee have been reading a variety of books, articles and blogs and listening to podcasts to better understand the changing landscape for schools today. Below is a sampling of the resources that have informed their conversations. • Creating Cultures of Thinking: The 8 Forces We Must Master to Truly Transform Our Schools, by Ron Ritchhart • Creative Schools: The Grassroots Revolution That’s Transforming Education, by Ken Robinson and Lou Aronica • “Goodbye Jobs, Hello ‘Gigs’: How One Word Sums Up a New Economic Reality,” Podcast by Geoff Nunberg, National Public Radio, Jan. 11, 2016 • “How Not to Talk to Your Kids: The Inverse Power of Praise,” New York Magazine, Aug. 3, 2007 • Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, by Carol Dweck • Most Likely to Succeed: Preparing Our Kids for the Innovation Era, by Tony Wagner and Ted Dintersmith • “Move Over, Millennials, Here Comes Generation Z,” by Alex Williams, The New York Times, Sept. 18, 2015 • Out of Our Minds: Learning to be Creative, by Ken Robinson • PBL in the Elementary Grades: Step-by-Step Guidance, Tools and Tips for Standards-Focused K-5 Projects, by Sara Hallermann, John Larmer and John R. Mergendoller • “Schools of the Future: The Big Shifts,” TedX Talk by Patrick F. Bassett, past president of National Association of Independent Schools • The Smartest Kids in the World: And How They Got That Way, by Amanda Ripley • The Teenage Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults, by Frances E. Jensen • What’s Math Got to Do with It?, by Jo Boaler

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Lower Schoolers Lean Into the Role of Writer by Wanda Odom

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olly Bergh’s kindergartners are prone to telling terrified of toothpaste (even louder laughter). My tooth is not happy stories — not the type that would prompt a “tsk (doubled-over laughter). My tooth is afraid of everything,” Hoehl tsk” from the teacher, but the sort that often read, amusing herself as she showed the accompanying drawings. cause their classmates to erupt in raucous laughThe suspect tooth had fallen out the previous weekend. ter, gleeful applause or high-pitched squeals of “that’s so sweet.” So As with first and second graders, the kindergartners write daily are Shailla Bari’s first graders and Joe Flood’s second graders. and build their repertoire through personal narrative, or “I Did” At a young age, these students are learning that one of the first stories; informational writing, “All About, or How To” stories; and steps toward becoming an author is having an imagination, and that “In My Opinion” stories. “Every week, they share one piece of work being a good writer also involves learning to read well. It’s a lesson they have done,” said Bergh. “They get to stand in front of the class. that starts on the first day of kindergarten and relies on research and They are so proud of themselves.” practice developed over the course of 30 years by educator Lucy In November, the girls start learning sight words, which they will Calkins through the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project see frequently in children’s books and whose structures do not fit at Columbia University. into the phonetics rules for sounding out words. The girls learn 60 “Girls are natural storytellers. It might take a little while to shape of them by the time they finish kindergarten. Bari calls them snap their thoughts into publishable stories, but they they have great words in first grade, and the list grows; by second grade, the girls ideas and wonderful imaginations at this age,” said Flood, who, along know them by the weightier moniker of no-excuse words. with Bergh, has participated in the intensive Mastering such words and having phonemic summer workshop for teachers held by the awareness — the ability to hear, identify and Reading and Writing Project. manipulate the sounds of vowels, consonants On Day One of Bergh’s class, the girls are and spelling patterns such as wh, ee or ur — help asked to talk about a moment in their lives that the girls develop reading and writing fluency. they would like to share, and then draw a pic“What’s wonderful about our writing proture. Before they do, Bergh tells and writes her gram is that the writing is not given as a own story to model what she wants the girls to prompt,” said Bari. “It comes from within. They do. Their moments are simple: going to the may write about whatever they are interested learn that grocery store with Mom or reading a book to in — and because it’s authentic, they are so their brother. The girls then try to write down motivated to write.” reading and letter sounds associated with their stories. Every day, first graders practice one of the writing are “When they come into kindergarten, we are Daily Five: writing, reading to self, reading to hoping that most of girls know what an alphasomeone, listening to reading or word work, connected. bet letter looks like and the sound associated which includes learning phonics rules, consowith it. They have to know that an L looks two nant and vowel sounds, spelling patterns and They learn that ways — the capital L and the lowercase l — but other cues. The aim is comprehension, accuthere is one sound associated with that,” said racy, fluency and building vocabulary, an you learn to Bergh. emphasis that continues in second, third and write beautiful She guides the girls as they work through the fourth grades. process with prompts such as, “What letter “Mentor text” also plays a crucial role in literature by sounds do you hear when you say, ‘My mommy helping students develop fluent reading and read me a book’?” Bergh directs the girls to writing, said Bari, explaining that students reading beautiful review the alphabet chart in their writing foldstudy authors and their styles for examples of ers if they don’t know the letter associated with how to write well. literature. a particular sound. The chart has pictures “The girls learn that reading and writing are attached to each letter that represent its sound. connected. They learn that you learn to write SHAILLA BARI The girls end up with phonetically spelled beautiful literature by reading beautiful literasentences like “mY faml liks to go ot to et” (My ture,” Bari said. family like to go out to eat.), which was written In second grade, where control of sentence by Natalie Burman in All About My Family. Burman also wrote that structure is fairly solid, the girls focus on Daily Edit, learning various her mom likes to bake cakes, her brother likes to play soccer, her dad mechanics of writing such as spelling, punctuation and capitalizalikes to work on his food truck, and she was having a play date. tion. They also work on time sequence, coherent passages, topic One winter day, Emilia deForest Keys and Katie Hoehl had their sentences and concluding text. classmates in stitches with their stories All About Mincies, imagi“What I like about this writing process is that it is by nature difnary beings, and All About My Loose Tooth. ferentiated — each girl is working at her own level,” said Bari, noting “Mincies like lollipops. Mincies live in oval houses. Mincies look that students can demonstrate skills as they master them. “But what like crayons when they are little,” read deForest Keys, perched on a I am really pleased with is the imagination and the excitement that stool next to Bergh, who helped her decode as she read. Classmates, is going on in the class. I realized very early on that the girls weren’t seated before them on the floor, listened eagerly. just jabbering away. They were sharing ideas and there was a lot of “My tooth wears underwear (uproarious laughter). My tooth is learning going on without me directing it.”

AMANDA MAHNKE

The girls

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stocks l bonds l micro-loans l deductibles l mortgages l co-pays l managing money l investing l stock nvestments l evaluating loans l building confidence l financial skills l financial literacy activities l check regsters l banking l paychecks l withdrawals l deposits l financial transactions l balance l projections l bills l insurance plans l conversations l taxes l calculating simple interest l sales tax l restaurant tips l interest positives and negatives l problem solving l return on investment l microfinance l start-up funds l women entrepreneurs l financial specialist l currency exchange rate l funding education l business l expenditures l urning a profit l business plans l calculating material and production costs l advertising expenses l logistics l budgeting l stock market l down payments l loans and investments l learning and reinforcing real-world skills l Girls Grantmaking l NextGenVest l building on strong foundations l developing knowledge about nance l inspiring behavior l strong personal financial habits l establishing positive attitudes toward personal finance l stocks l bonds l micro-loans l deductibles l mortgages l co-pays l managing money l investing l stock investments l evaluating loans l building confidence l financial skills l financial literacy activities l check registers l banking l paychecks l withdrawals l deposits l financial transactions l balance l projecons l bills l insurance plans l conversations l taxes l calculating simple interest l sales tax l restaurant tips interest l positives and negatives l problem solving l return on investment l microfinance l start-up funds l women entrepreneurs l financial specialist l currency exchange rate l funding education l business l expenditures l turning a profit l business plans l calculating material and production costs l advertising expenses l logistics l budgeting l stock market l down payments l loans and investments l learning and reinforcing eal-world skills l Girls Grantmaking l NextGenVest l building on strong foundations l developing knowledge about finance l inspiring behavior l strong personal financial habits l establishing positive attitudes toward personal finance l stocks l bonds l micro-loans l deductibles l mortgages l co-pays l managing money l investing l stock investments l evaluating loans l building confidence l financial skills l financial literacy activities l check registers l banking l paychecks l withdrawals l deposits l financial transactions l balance projections l bills l insurance plans l conversations l taxes l calculating simple interest l sales tax l restaurant tips l interest l positives and negatives l problem solving l return on investment l microfinance l start-up funds l women entrepreneurs l financial specialist l currency exchange rate l funding education l business l expenditures l turning a profit l business plans l calculating material and production costs l advertising expenses l logistics l budgeting l stock market l down payments l loans and investments l learning and reinforcing real-world skills l Girls Grantmaking l NextGenVest l building on strong foundations l developing knowledge about finance l inspiring behavior l strong personal financial habits l establishing positive attitudes loans

Balancing the Books Middle School Invests in Early Financial Education

by

AMANDA MAHNKE

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S

tocks, bonds, micro-loans, deductibles, mortgages, coa check?” pays: How many of these terms did you understand as “Insurance?” guesses Gigi Spragg. a 10-year-old? Vaganos nods, then launches into a discussion of insurance plans Financial literacy, or the understanding of how a perand co-pays. As Vaganos gestures to another student to draw a card, son makes, manages and invests money, is critical for she continues: “As you see, small stuff like this can happen — so it’s lifelong success — and the sooner students learn it, the better, says important to have some extra money saved always.” Middle School math teacher Ellena Vaganos. This activity is often the first introduction students have to some “To me, a girl should be able to go out and buy her own car, be of these concepts, said Vaganos. The goal “is really to start convercomfortable investing in stock or evaluating a loan,” Vaganos said. sations around these topics. Like, what exactly is a co-pay? How do Introducing these concepts early — giving students an opportutaxes work?” nity to explore, succeed and fail in a safe space — is vital to building These practical topics continue into sixth-grade math, where the confidence in financial skills. So once during each eight-day class ideas they were given a taste of the previous year are incorporated rotation cycle, fifth graders take about 15 minutes out of their math into the curriculum. They learn how banks work, how to calculate studies to engage in conversations around managing money. simple interest, sales tax and restaurant tips, and how interest can In November, fifth grade math classes begin a financial literacy be good or bad. “The lessons run the gamut,” Anthony explained. activity — created together by Vaganos and fellow Middle School The concepts reappear in the problem solving they do as they math teacher Dawn Anthony — in which each approach pre-algebra and algebra, as well as student is given a copy of a check register and in Seventh Grade Culture Week, in which mi“As you see ... $2,000 in a fictitious bank. Throughout the cro-loans and return on investment are a main year, students earn a “paycheck” and make focus. Seventh graders begin the week with a stuff like this withdrawals and deposits after selecting presentation by Anthony on microfinance and can happen — cards, “Game of Life”-style. the way KIVA helps provide start-up funds to “So, who wants to write out our paycheck women entrepreneurs in developing counso it’s important for today?” Vaganos asks her fifth graders at tries. the start of one February class. After a rusEach of the seven biome groups examines to have some tling of papers and a flurry of raised hands, the KIVA website and identifies two women to Leslie Forman is chosen to go the whiteboard. whom they would like to make a $25 loan. Anextra money She writes out the date (2/24/15), a dethony then meets with the financial specialist saved always.” scription of the transaction (Pay Check), the for each group to talk through its selections deposit amount ($700), and the account’s and consider factors such as how the currency new balance ($2,945) on the board, where a check register is proexchange rate might lead to a slight loss on investment. Moreover, jected. though, “a main goal is to make loans that help the entire commuNext, Lilly Press is selected to choose an orange card from a nity,” Anthony explained. Students think through how funding edpile. She reads it and groans. “You go to the emergency room to get ucation for a child or helping a woman purchase a cow might have stitches and the bill is $175.” different, but equally positive effects. “What?” exclaims another student. “That’s a lot.” In Vaganos’ eighth grade algebra class, students use the recur“So, let’s talk about that,” Vaganos interjects. As Lilly walks to ring example of a T-shirt business and its expenditures to probthe board to record the bill and the account’s new balance, Vaganos lem-solve. This year, students asked if they could actually create asks: “Is there any other way we could pay for this besides writing that business and try to turn a profit. So, with a small loan from Middle School Director Lynne Myavec, the girls are working to develop a business plan, calculate material and production costs, advertising expenses and other logistics, then produce and sell 30 T-shirts in the spring. While financial literacy-related topics are highlighted most frequently in math class, topics like budgeting, the stock market, down payments, loans and investments are also discussed in history, science, English and theater. Throughout all of these classes, girls are learning and reinforcing real-world skills, which they continue to explore in Upper School through classes like Wellness, as well as clubs like Girls Grantmaking and NextGenVest, led by Associate Director of Finance Carole Melvin. There, they build on the foundation laid in Middle School. Developing knowledge about finance is important, Melvin said, but there’s more to financial literacy than that. “It is also about inKirsten Regan adds “TV Repair” to the class checkbook projected spiring behavior, strong personal financial habits, and establishing on the whiteboard, subtracting $80 from the account balance. positive attitudes toward personal finance.” Fifth grade math classes takes part in this collaborative financial literacy activity once every eight-day class rotation.

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>>>

O F F E R S A N E W A P P R OAC H TO T E AC H I N G BY WANDA ODOM

STUDENTS IN DR. TOM WEISSERT’S AP CALCULUS COURSE ALWAYS DO THEIR HOMEWORK IN CLASS. BUT, THAT’S NOT A PROBLEM.

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or “homework,” that is usually done at kitchen tables or in bedemphasis, and he can insert graphs and other diagrams as well as rooms or family rooms. change the color of his writing to highlight a particular point. (He is “The traditional structure in math is that you have material that partial to blue and purple.) you need to lecture the students on to show them what it is, explain Weissert has links to all of the lectures, organized in units, on his how it works, and do some example problems so that they can AIS teacher webpage, along with his syllabus for the course and the themselves dive into problems to understand how it works,” said solutions to all the problems students will be required to work Weissert, who said he found himself giving essentially the same through. Students appreciate that they can listen to the lectures lectures at the board year after year. multiple times on their own, he said. They “In math especially, the material doesn’t have in-class tests every three to four units, “That’s when change very much. It’s pretty much the same with the goal of being prepared to take the every year — unlike in an English class, where College Board’s AP Calculus exam. the real questions you can teach different books to get the same During class, the girls generally work idea across. These are the same ideas all the together in pairs to solve problems associated come up, like, time. with the lecture material they viewed the pre“So I thought, why don’t I record those, let vious night. One pair might ask another how ‘How do I get the students watch those at home and then in they handled a tough question. “Sometimes, if through the classroom do the homework problems it’s a particularly pernicious problem, one stutogether,” Weissert said, adding that the student will go to the board and the whole class this problem?’” dents work in twos or threes as well as with will talk through it. She becomes the instruhim. “That’s when the real questions come up, ment to write on the board,” Weissert added. like, ‘How do I get through this problem?’” What Weissert appreciates most about the Weissert has recorded 48 lectures to cover the content in AP flipped classroom method is that he has the opportunity, as do the Calculus and prepare the students for Advanced Topics in Math, if students, to focus on collaborative teaching and learning instead of they choose to take that course during senior year. Producing the delivery. “Students can be more responsible for their own learnlectures was labor-intensive, requiring two-and-a-half times the ing,” he said, adding that he believes the approach can positively preparation time of a lesson given at the blackboard. affect student engagement with higher levels of math. First, Weissert had to research methods and learn about the But the flipped classroom also requires maturity on the part of technology best-suited to producing his lectures in the format that students, and the self-discipline to not only watch all of the videos, he wanted; he watched the lectures of other teachers, some of but also to refrain from copying the available answers in lieu of whom filmed themselves in lecture halls, and experimented with working through problems. the transitions and animations of text that can be applied in Micro“I am relying heavily on students’ personal responsibility,” soft PowerPoint, but the students disliked that approach. Weissert said. He settled on software for the iPad called Doceri, a professional interactive whiteboard and screencast recorder with sophisticated tools for hand-drawn graphics. Doceri allowed Weissert to create videos in which his handwriting comes into view as his voice explains what the students are watching. “They see it appearing on the screen as if I were writing at that point. I found that to be a key and important element for students,” said Weissert. “Over the years, they have been trained to watch the teacher’s hand writing on the board.” With the videos created through the software, students can hear Weissert as his writing appears on the screen, which reinforces comprehension and understanding. His lectures live on his YouTube channel, where he uploaded them directly from his iPad as soon as he finished them. Each lecture required him to write down his content, review what he wrote for clarity and then read it aloud as an overdub of the written material. The software allows him to use a pointer on the screen for

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AMANDA MAHNKE

FOR THE LAST THREE YEARS, WEISSERT HAS FOLLOWED A TEACHING PRACTICE KNOWN AS “FLIPPED CLASSROOM,” WHERE STUDENTS LISTEN TO HIS RECORDED LECTURES OUTSIDE OF SCHOOL AND COME TO CLASS THE NEXT DAY PREPARED TO DO THE EXERCISES,


Alumnae CLASS NOTES

Spring 2016

| MILESTONES

| ARCHIVES

Lindsay McCown DuBarry ’66

An Owl for Life One of the earliest memories that Lindsay McCown DuBarry ’66 has of Agnes Irwin is when, upon enrolling in seventh grade, she was surprised to be placed in a remedial writing class — of one. She also recalls singular faculty and staff: science teacher John Bennett bringing chemistry alive, department head Joanne Neel insisting upon excellence in history and, of course, Assistant Head of School Elsa Hartman measuring the length of everyone’s tunic. She laughs about the memories now. “It was certainly a different time.” DuBarry has truly been an “Irwin’s girl” for life. After receiving her biology degree from Rosemont College and marrying her husband, Joe, she worked at the Wistar Institute as a tissue culture technician. After starting her family, DuBarry knew Agnes Irwin was the only choice for her daughters. “I just loved Agnes Irwin so much,” DuBarry said. “It launched me so well-prepared to go into the world. I knew it was where my daughters should go.” While daughters Meredith DuBarry Huston ’93 and Sandra DuBarry Laflamme ’95 were enrolled, DuBarry was a stay-at-home mom who was a familiar face on campus, volunteering for and chairing practically every school event and working, for a brief stint, in the Alumnae Office. Twenty years later, she still makes frequent visits to the school — now to see granddaughters Shaw Huston ’24 and Gardner Huston ’25, current Lower School students and third-generation Owls. DuBarry’s life is a testament to the fact that sometimes you don’t discover your talents right away. In 2003, she took a drawing class on a whim, and to her surprise, it came quite naturally to her. Her last art class had been in seventh grade with Louise Murtagh. Now she is an accomplished oil painter who has participated in many shows, won several prizes and sold some of her work. “Who knew?” DuBarry said. “Before then, there just wasn’t a lot of time to stop and think that I wanted to pick up a paintbrush. … My family jokes that something must have happened to me.”

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“I just loved Agnes Irwin so much. It launched me so well-prepared to go into the world. I knew it was where my daughters should go.”

Two of her favorite pieces are a painting of a three-story dairy barn owned by daughter Sandra Laflamme and “Cow Communion,” which won a prize at a Wayne Art Center show in 2012. She is entering her third year as co-chair of the center’s Plein Air Festival. DuBarry also has played tennis for more than 40 years. As her daughters approached their graduation, she began working for the Arthur Ashe Youth Tennis Center, where she served for seven years as a jack of all trades: bookkeeper, fundraiser, database manager, party planner and more — all skills she had honed volunteering at AIS. Now she and her husband enjoy playing golf; she has a handicap of 14. To round out her activities, she has been singing with The Counterparts, an a cappella group, for more than 25 years. “I know that started at Irwin’s. I think it all started when Lisa Griffin Drake and I sang in four-part harmony with Mr. (Richard) Ross and Mr. Bennett for an assembly.” She considers herself lucky to have had AIS as her launching pad for her many pursuits and to have an ongoing connection with the school. Fifty years after graduating, “I am still roaming the halls there as a grandparent,” DuBarry said. “I don’t know that I will ever leave!” — Amanda Mahnke


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

1940-49 Ella Russell Torrey ’43,

who worked at the United Nations for many years, including as an aide to former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, is still speaking at United Nations education conferences on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

1950-59

Jerry Parke Kinkead ’52

writes, “After 44 years in the same comfortable house, I have moved to ‘The Home’ — known more familiarly as Dunwoody Village Retirement Community in Newtown Square, PA. I am hanging pictures and rearranging furniture, as this is the ‘last resort’ — my home for the foreseeable future (that is, for forever). It was difficult to leave my house in Wayne, PA. A house, after all, is not just doors and windows and floorboards. Moving away meant leaving behind the imprint of the days, of the voices, of footsteps on the stairs and conversations in the kitchen. I will continue to nurture the nostalgia, as I believe it is good for the soul — even as I enthusiastically tackle this new adventure. My first challenge is a watercolor class. I will never catch up with my talented sister, Renny Parke Wood ’57, but I am enjoying the process.” Margaret Tryon Bennett ’54 writes,

“Nancy Lamason and Margo Bennett hosted a luncheon for local mem-

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1. Devy Rose Bruch Eyler ’55 and Capt. Armand Tise Eyler, USN Ret. on their wedding day 2. Kristine Quammen Bartholomew ’59 in her garden terrace in Morroco 3. Joan Colgan Haas ‘59 and family celebrating the 80th birthday of her husband, Jim, at the Barrington Yacht Club

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However she was there and we were glad to have her with us. The Class of 1957 is a unique group. Over these almost 60 years, we have been fast friends and many of us live in this area. Lynn drives from Brooklyn, NY and despite the distance, she claims the trip is always worth it to be with this funny, eclectic and caring group of women.” Kristine Quammen Bartholomew ’59 lives in 1.

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1. Members of the Class of 1957 gather for lunch at the home of Sandy McMullin. Front row (l-r): Nina Scheidt Connor, Sandra Keefe McMullin, Renny Parke Wood; back row (l-r): Susan Thayer Wilmerding, Katharine Zantzinger Okie, Helen Clothier Ballard, Elizabeth Stouffer Thompson, Margaret Justice Scholl and Lynn Keebler Miner. 2. Leslie Liversidge Tozier ‘59 getting her ears pierced

bers of the Class of 1954 in early October. Present were Lucy Bell Newlin Sellers, Emily Webster Heebner and Pauline Carrigan Charles. An offshoot was that several of us gathered and went to The Franklin Institute several weeks later. We missed those who could not join us.” Josephine Chapman Borthwick ’54 writes,

“Hi. Since I last wrote for the magazine, I have been a busy lady. I decided to go into business painting whimsical portraits of children and pets for Christmas. My daughter became my manager, which has added a lot of fun to the project. She takes care of the advertisements both here at the Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo, FL and in Darien, CT. All I have to do is paint pic-

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tures, which I thoroughly enjoy. It was very successful so we have expanded to the rest of the year. On the athletic front, I still play lots of golf and have become pretty good at croquet. In August, I won the North Carolina state croquet championship in the second of five flights. I still walk my three doggies, all of whom are ancient now. I have two talking parrots as well. My orchid-growing hobby of 40 years with two small greenhouses is thriving. Life is good!” Devereaux Rose Eyler ’55

married Captain Armand Tise Eyler, USN Ret. on Oct. 17, 2015. The wedding took place on Jekyll Island, GA. 140 friends and family celebrated at the Jekyll Island Club. The couple first dated in 1954 while

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Captain Eyler was a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy. Tise accompanied Devy in May 2015 to AIS to enjoy her class’s 60th Reunion and meet Devy’s classmates. Jane Maxwell Twitmyer ’56 loves being a

“cranky old lady” railing about climate change and renewable energy in “Dark Virginia.” Margaret Justice Scholl ’57 writes, “Life is

wonderful for Don and me (Peg). We are in the process of building another home on our daughter and son-inlaw’s property where we will be maintenance-free. We are still traveling to new places. I am in touch with numerous AIS classmates, which is wonderful. We are really bonded. I am involved

with and supporting several nonprofits. This is our opportunity to give back!” Renny Parke Wood ’57

writes, “On Dec. 16, 2015, Sandy Keefe McMullin had a group of AIS classmates for lunch at her beautiful spot in Dunwoody Village. In addition to Sandy, those in attendance were Nina Scheidt Connor, Renny Parke Wood, Susan Thayer Wilmerding, Katharine Zantzinger Okie, Helen Clothier Ballard, Elizabeth Stouffer Thompson, Margaret Justice Scholl, Lynn Keebler Miner and Katheryne Kerr Ferguson Rogers. Helen started having these gatherings occasionally at Christmas time. Sadly, Helen’s dear husband, Ian, died in early December so she could not host.

Morocco on an oasis in a small Berber village. She gets into Marrakesh occasionally and comes home for a few weeks in the summer, staying with her sister-in-law Jeanne Bartholomew Van Alen ’61. Kristine stayed on in England for a few years after her husband, Page, died (they had been living there), until she made the bold move to Morocco. She is an avid gardener and decorator — her house looks like a spread in World of Interiors! She has numerous cats, dogs and birds for company, and is an avid reader (thanks to Kindle!). Joan Colgan Haas ’59

writes, “Jim and I are doing well, and finally managed to get the entire family together last August for his 80th birthday. Still doing lots of volunteer work and some travel, including a month in Florida. Also tried skydiving on my birthday and loved it!” Louise Twining O’Malley ’59 writes, “My


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

granddaughter, Mercy O’Malley ’15, is in her first year at Vassar College and loves it. She and the a cappella chorus sang at the White House among a lot of other venues. She’s in the tumbling group, too; Mike and Aideen O’Malley ’97 drove up to Schenectady for one performance. Mercy wants to study international business and work abroad. She’s a whiz at languages. Ronan Michael Campion Matthews O’Malley is 14 months old and cute as a button. Starting in October 2014, I’ve undergone a mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation. On March 16, I’m having the final touch-up surgery. Hopefully, that’s it. I’ve decided not to do the hormonal treatment. I now have curly hair! I need a vacation! Does anyone still have a place at the shore?” Leslie Liversidge Tozier ’59 lives in Lon-

least twice a year since I can rent a scooter, which gives me full freedom both aboard ship and in ports. Our son and his family (he has two daughters) live nearby and we see them a lot. Our daughter and her family (she has four sons) live about two hours away but we see them quite a bit, too. After 35 years, I’ve just retired from my position as senior tax advisor with H&R Block. Bill retired last year and now that we are both ‘free,’ we are busy enough to wonder how we ever found time to go to work.” Lee (Natalie) Spahr Bush ’61 writes, “Bix and I are

enjoying retirement from our former jobs as athletic directors, teachers and coaches. Our three children, Nari, Kelly and Rick, are also enjoying careers in teaching and coaching in New Hampshire, Delaware and Maryland. We

properties were taken over by religious entities. I now spend nine months of the year in Florida — still playing to a 26 golf handicap — and the summer months in Eagles Mere, PA. I continue as secretary for my HOA and have recently been appointed to the Communications Committee at Highland Woods Golf & Country Club in Bonita Springs, FL. In June 2015, I took a two-plus week trip to Seattle, WA; Victoria, Canada (to see the gardens) and then on to

have seven wonderful grandchildren, ages nine to 21 years. Our two oldest are in college playing on golf and field hockey teams. It is such a joy watching all seven of them growing into such fine, productive young adults.” Julianna Ernst Geer ’61

just returned from Ocean Reef Club in Key Largo, FL where she shares a house with her brother and nephew. Julie and her husband Tag are both well and looking forward to their 55th wedding anniversary. They have six healthy grandchildren. Julie is still playing tennis and golf.

Vancouver, where I boarded the Rocky Mountaineer for an amazing trip through the Canadian Rockies, stopping in Whistler, Quesnel, Jaspar, Lake Louise, Banff, Kamloops and back to Vancouver. The awesome beauty of Mother Nature is forever imprinted in my mind. This June, it’s an Alaskan cruise and then Las Vegas for slots, shows and a side trip to Bryce Canyon and Zion National Park. Hope you all have a wonderful celebratory gathering for the 55th.”

Edwina F. Vauclain ’61

writes, “There is not much new to my ‘résumé’ since reaching the 50-year mark of being the last class to graduate from the Wynnewood location. Funny how both the Lower and Middle/Upper School

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don. She is a competitive rider in affiliated eventing, keeps four horses, and founded a limited company marketing horse- and rider-related merchandise. She has two daughters and five grandchildren. At 74 years young, Leslie has just gotten her ears pierced for the first time!

1960-69

Bonnie Allen Shertenlieb ’60 says, “Husband Bill

and I still travel at every opportunity. I have mobility issues now and therefore we cruise at

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1. Edith Lamb Hollister ’66, known as “Cookie” to her grandson, Kyle, 6 2. Lifelong friends Nancy Davis Rosan ’62 and Ellie Stengel Fink ’63 3. Winkie Wheeler ’68, Hannah Stringer Manry ’67 and Mel Lewis Bonder ’67 gather at Bonder’s home after the ASEA Regional Conference

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Susan Clark Ogden ’62

writes, “Currently, I am at Bank Street School for Children (NY), a part-time graduate student (tutor) and a volunteer. Although I consider myself a sailor, kayaker and ‘yogini,’ all ‘facilities’ are less available. I wear summer and winter hats gardening (weeds to miniature orchids), playing tennis, book group, reading and driving (with informative tapes) to and from Connecticut on weekends. A new modem and an iPhone 6 will add an upgrade to my ‘wonders’ of technology. Joyfully this year, I also traveled to Maine, Pennsylvania and then California for my nephew’s wedding and a visit with a godchild. During the year, I flew three times to Colorado to visit my daughter Mary Tyler Johnson ’90, her husband, Jesse, and their children Reeve, 9, and Morgan, 5, both in school! In Massachusetts, I saw my daughter Cecily Tyler ’92 at the John F. Kennedy School of Government in Cambridge and my son, Wat, and his wife, Britt — proudest owners of a puppy! I seem to take longer to do anything! And, while my news is growing less interesting, I am on a long-term hunt for a smaller, simpler, easier place to live. Any ideas or thoughts on downsizing? I also find change and newness daily players in my life. I am hoping that you all find The Agnes Irwin School a common bond for us, and a real excitement as

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1. Barbara Page ’62 (left) and Nancy Davis Rosan ’62 at the Taj Mahal 2. Susy O’Kane ’62 and her family in Cancun. 3. Wedding photo of Lindsay Lewis Holmwood, daughter of Mel Lewis Bonder ’67

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a continuously-leading school. Since we were at school, AIS has grown. It continues to be and is, over the past years, and the 54 years or less that we were there, a truly competitive, remarkable and vibrant community.” Susy Pitman O’Kane ’62

shares that it has been another wonderful year in Seattle. The highlight was a month spent in Cancun. To celebrate her 50th anniversary, her son and family joined her for part of the time. It was a time she will never forget. Susy writes, “If any of you from the Class of ’62 are in Seattle, our home is your home.” Ellanor Stengel Fink ’63

has been friends with Nancy Davis Rosan ’62 since they were neighbors in Haverford, ages five and six, and now live five minutes apart from each other in Chevy Chase, MD. Ellie writes, “She has always been my best friend, supporting and encouraging me in good times and bad, and we are now able to spend lots of time together — if I can catch her when she isn’t traveling, tutoring children, or babysitting grandchildren. Old friends are the gift that keeps on giving!” Jill Berguido Gill ’63

writes, “I decided to retire from my private tutoring business in December 2014. This turned out to be a fortunate decision, as I learned at the end of January 2015 that I had


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

Carol Montgomery ’71

good Behavioral Health Foundation in Philadelphia. In his two years with the Foundation, he has earned a reputation as an expert on stigma and has presented to dozens of audiences about stigma and evidence-based stigma reduction methods.”

A Career on Center Stage Carol Montgomery ’71 readily embraces the title of “leader,” but says that she didn’t learn leadership skills in some of the ways students often do, such as playing a sport or participating in student government. It was her time spent as a singer and soloist in the Bel Cantos and the Upper School chorus at Agnes Irwin that brought her command of leadership to the fore. “To learn how to hold one’s own in front of an audience and communicate in a way that is understood and has impact is a skill that began with Mrs. Carter,” said Montgomery, referring to Susanna Carter, who directed the Bel Cantos and Upper School Glee Club for many years. Montgomery honed that skill in college, graduating from Temple University’s Boyer College of Music with a Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance, and has employed it repeatedly throughout her professional life – particularly in the field of marketing. Even her dogs are affected by her vocal training, she said, adding, “When I say, ‘heel,’ they get it.” Montgomery has spent the bulk of her business career in corporate marketing and public relations, and over the years has developed the ability to drive revenue effectively in “a social business climate that requires that sales, marketing and partners come together with a higher degree of relationship marketing with their customer base than every before.” Her expertise includes social media strategy and its global implementation, thought leadership, branding, content development, customer acquisition and relationship management. “What I enjoy most is the ability to create something from nothing, which is an art in itself,” said Montgomery, who began working in marketing in the Silicon Valley

Blair Bartol MacInnes ’63 writes,

in the 1980s. As a marketing executive, she has been involved in telecommunications and health care as well. She considers her biggest achievement to be “the ability to stay true to myself while articulating my ideas and thoughts through clear communication, whether in business or my personal relationships.” Her interests include music, travel, animal rights and human rights advocacy, as well as spiritual pursuits. “For me, the value of life is found in how one permeates the various dynamics of life – as an individual, the family, the animal kingdom, the planet, mankind and as a spiritual being. I want to play a positive role in all these areas at any level I can,” Montgomery said. — Wanda Odom

“What I enjoy most is the ability to create something from nothing, which is an art in itself.”

cancer in my left breast, when I had my first 3-D mammogram. The cancer had been caught in the earliest stage and my treatments, which took place between February and mid-October 2015, were not as debilitating as I had thought

they would be. A second 3-D mammogram on Dec. 1, 2015 found no evidence of cancer in either breast. I am feeling fine now. My husband, Bruce, continues to preside as director/ curator of historic Harriton House in Bryn

Mawr, PA. In addition to giving tours of the house and outbuildings and teaching classes in colonial crafts, such as blacksmithing, sheep shearing, and colonial gardening, he also cares for a thoroughbred racing horse, two sheep,

two milking cows and five egg-laying hens on the estate. The animals were given to Bruce by his Amish friends, who live in Lancaster County. My son, Tim Clement, is the Fellow on stigma reduction at the Thomas Scatter-

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“The other night, trying to battle sleeplessness, I tried naming all the girls in our class when I left in 1960. I think I got just about everyone... and this from someone who cannot remember why I am standing in front of the refrigerator! AIS was a very important place for me. Gordon and I are happily downsized in Morristown, NJ. Family get-togethers are in Vermont with all the ‘boys,’ their wives and my nine grandchildren, some of whom are now teenagers... about the same age I was when I was caught having a blueberry pie fight in the middle of Lancaster Pike. Once or twice a year, I see Judy Barnett Frazier and Polly Spahr Clement. Always a joy.” Louisa Stephenson Sandvig ’63 celebrated

her 70th birthday in Isle of Palms, SC in October 2015 with her children, grandchildren and husband! Louisa writes, “It was a wonderful weekend filled with lots of energy.” Elizabeth M. Cooke ’66

writes, “Two years in retirement and I’ve found wonderful oppor-

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Alumnae | CLASS NOTES

tunities of which to be involved in my community. I teach literature for a week here and there to amazing immigrants/refugees from Africa and the Middle East (an adult education program), and I run writing workshops for men and women in the county jail nearby. Such a gift for me! I spend whatever time I can with my granddaughters in Maine and twice a year with my grandson in California. My youngest daughter, Ting, 19, is a joy. Yoga, swimming, hiking, knitting, reading,

and of course writing fill my free time! Life is good.” Linda J. Golden ’66

writes “My boutique is going on 25 years and I still love it, although retail gets harder and harder. I am traveling to Paris twice a year and enjoy traveling to other exotic places when I have time. My significant other, Richard, has retired from the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center and he is starting to enjoy not working. We love going to opera and theatre and playing with

Oliver, our Maltese. I look forward to our big Reunion this year and can’t wait to catch up with everyone.” Edith Lamb Hollister ’66

writes, “I’m trying answer to the question: ‘What have I been doing for the past 50 years?’ At first, I thought to suggest that the school dig up my answer from 25 years ago, because nothing has really changed: work, eat and sleep. Then, it occurred to me that the best of times has been the last 25 years, so here’s an

update: Dunham and I celebrated our 46th anniversary last September. This coming September will see 50 years since we met. In 2001, we moved from our wonderful, old, circa-1790 farmhouse to a neighborhood just over the hill from my childhood home in Chester Springs, PA. Except for Dunham’s time in the Air Force, I had never had neighbors. And, who would think we’d end up on Tally-Ho Lane. Yes, we are still beagling. If you count in-utero, this is

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1. Grandsons of David and Barbara “Winkie” Collins Park ’71, who are all under age 4. 2. Class of 1975 Book Club at Matador restaurant in Wayne, PA, in December 2015 (l-r): Gay West-Klien, Donna Albani, Elisa “Lisa” Boyer Moneymaker, Martha Sharples, Caroline “Line” Farr, Sarah “Sally” Lange, Lucy Cooper Karlsson, Debbie Diehl Becker and Lylee Van Pelt. 3. Robin Leslie Clark ’70 with grandchildren. 4. Children of C. Kirven Ringe Talone ’76: Kacy, 27 and Danny, 23.

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hunting season number 68. Dunham has been with SEI Investments for more than 35 years. I am still working as a self-employed CPA, focusing on taxes. Six years ago, I sold my office condo in Exton, PA, built a wing on the backside of our house and moved my practice lock, stock, employees and golden retrievers to Tally-Ho Lane. Now, my favorite winter pastime is to listen to the traffic, weather and the school closing reports. My view from my office window to the west is our own property and the neighbor’s hayfield — bestever working conditions! This past February, a colleague of 24 years died suddenly. All her clients have elected to stay with me, so I’m busier than ever. My son Jim and his wife, Bev, are approaching their 10th anniversary this June, which brings me to the best part of the ‘what’s happened in the last 50 years.’ My favorite grandson, Kyle, is almost six years old. What fun it is to be a grandparent! He calls me ‘Cookie,’ the nickname given to me by my grandfather when I was an infant. Our nearest and dearest use it, and now Kyle, who is finishing kindergarten this spring. Kyle is a fifth-generation beagler in the family. We’ve also become a family with a shed full of kayaks and canoes. Marsh Creek is nearby and we often go out in the early spring through fall mornings before the crowd


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

appears. I am looking forward to catching up with the Class of 1966. We’re fewer than 38 now, but I’m hoping many will return this spring.” Martha Lewis Bonder ’67

writes, “We celebrated our daughter Lindsay’s wedding to her Swedish love, Dennis, on April 19, 2015 in Sarasota, FL at the beautiful Powel Crosley Estate. It was a wonderful wedding week of activities and fun in the sun for the 65 of us who gathered to celebrate this wedding. Classmate Hannah Stringer Manry joined in the celebration. The ceremony was bilingual and the reception was a mix of Swedish tradition and American fun. Lindsay and Dennis returned to Stockholm where they have lived for six years. My husband, John, and I are happily retired (so to speak) and living at Hershey’s Mill in West Chester, PA. We both still work as tour escorts; I am scheduled to escort a nine-day trip to Iceland this summer — it will be my sixth trip there. As avid golfers, we take advantage of the golf course right outside our doorstep. I’ve been playing on the team for the past eight years and am team coordinator for both WGAP teams. It’s one of the true joys in my life. We spend part of July and August in Belgrade Lakes, ME, where we enjoy great golf and lakeside living at the family compound. I

recently stepped down from the presidency of ECHOES Around the World, a nonprofit that supports two schools and a medical clinic in Uganda and the St. James School in Philadelphia, and am enjoying my co-founder, director emeritus status! It’s given me time to pursue a new career in network marketing to share my personal experiences with ASEA. That connection has brought both Hannah Stringer Manry and Winkie Wheeler ’68 prominently back into my life. Once again it’s time to be challenged and grow — something I hope will never end. Looking forward to celebrating our 50th next May with all fellow ’67s.” Lois Bateman Grieshober ’67 is expect-

ing her third grandson as son Andrew, and his wife, Jess, are expecting their first baby in late June. Cousins Molly, 4, and James, 17 months, are excited about the arrival of a baby cousin. Deborah Fritz Noble ’67

says, “It’s been a great 2015 with the birth of a granddaughter in December and a grandson in October to join his brother. I guess I’m a late starter as I’m working three jobs — all of which are fun and rewarding. I go to work with a smile on my face!”

1970-79

Gail Evans Guthridge ’71

writes, “You’re only as old as you feel and I’m

grateful to feel like a senior at Irwin’s... until I check the mirror! Our oldest son is married, lives in Pittsburgh and works in the home health care field. He and his wife have made me grandmom of Noah (almost three) with another boy due in July. It’s wonderful. My second son works for a custom home and restoration builder in Harrisburg, PA. He is newly married to an anesthesiologist at Hershey Medical Center, and our daughter lives locally working as a recreation director at a skilled nursing facility. I’m very active at my church and still like to work out to ward away the extra pounds. I’ve kept in touch with many Irwin classmates. Happily married 35 years this September! Would love to see as many classmates as possible for Reunion. I still have room at the inn! Come see us!”

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Barbara Collins Park ’71

writes, “My husband, David, and I now have five grandsons under the age of four! They are happily retired on Prince Edward Island and enjoying volunteering, traveling and maritime life.” Jean Nalle Wolitarsky ’71

says, “I still live around the corner from Irwin’s in Villanova, PA. My life continues to be busy with family, tennis and travel — European adventures, summers in the Adirondack Mountains and escapes from

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1. Jean Nalle Wolitarsky ’71 and husband, Jim, in the Netherlands 2. Daughters of Christiane Hemingway Jones ’72, Erin Jones Higgins and Samantha Jones Kelleher, with new granddaughter, Adeline Glee Higgins

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Betsy Whitman Winder ’76

Rising to Life’s Challenges We often speak of teaching Agnes Irwin girls to be resilient, strong and compassionate, and to learn how to manage any situation that life gives them. Betsy Whitman Winder ’76 has always been determined. She says that this was fostered from the moment she arrived at AIS in third grade and was encouraged to do her best, from the classroom to musical performances to the playing fields. She credits teachers Susanna Carter, Charles Brown, Ed Gardner, and Joan Keyser for pushing her hard while promoting a love for their subjects. The love for sports, music and even math that Winder developed at AIS continues in her life today. But do these qualities really hold up when tested with life’s most difficult challenges? Winder faced that test when her daughter, Stirling, was diagnosed with osteosarcoma in 2004 at age 18. Stirling was in her freshman year at the University of Vermont, playing on the Varsity field hockey team. Despite hospitalizations and frequent trips to Boston for medical care, Stirling continued to be very involved at UVM, holding student leadership positions and graduating in four years. As one learns about Stirling’s battle with cancer, it becomes obvious that she adopted many of her mother’s qualities! According to Winder’s longtime AIS friend and Stirling’s godmother, A.K. Van Alen Frazier, “Throughout Stirling’s treatments and surgeries, Betsy remained positive, persistent and proactive. Neither she nor Stirling felt sorry for themselves despite numerous setbacks. With Betsy’s love and guidance, Stirling thrived in spite of her cancer, achieving her goal of becoming a neonatal intensivecare nurse.” Winder said that if they had lived in Philadelphia, her daughter would have attended AIS, even though she believes she was already an Agnes Irwin girl: “Enthusiastic, willing to help others, a team player, working her hardest at everything, never giving up... all with a beautiful smile.”

winter to South Carolina. One of my greatest pleasures is being a grandparent of four, ages 10, 8, 6, and 4, all of whom live nearby. Keeping up with grand-

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daughter Brooke Wolitarsky ’25 brings me back to Irwin’s for holiday concerts, Mayfair and, of course, Grandfriends’ Day. How things change and still remain

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“Enthusiastic, willing to help others, a team player, working her hardest at everything, never giving up...”

the same! Irwin’s continues to be a strong thread in my life.” Christiane Hemingway Jones ’72 shared that

2015 was a banner year!

But every ounce of Winder’s strength, enthusiasm and resilience was tested when Stirling died in 2012 after an eight-year battle with cancer. According to Winder, she had lost not only her daughter, but also her best friend. Of the time following her daughter’s death, Winder said, “I remember thinking how angry Stirling would be at me if I didn’t stay strong. If I had retreated or crumbled in the corner after she died, she would probably have said, ‘Mom, get up! You have things to do!’ It was literally through her strength that I got mine. And perhaps the reverse was true of her as we went through her ordeal together.” — Cindy Hooper Bell ’79

First, her older daughter, Erin Jones Higgins, gave birth in July to Chris’ first grandchild, Adeline Glee Higgins (whose middle name was chosen in memory

of her great-grandmother, Glee Mitchell Kelly ’50). Meanwhile, her younger daughter, Samantha, married Steve Kelleher in December 2015 on a


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

beautiful winter day in Charleston, NC. Ellen H. Funk ’73 was

married to Ann M. O’Keefe on August 30, 2014 in Averill Park, NY, Ann’s hometown, with over 100 friends and family in attendance. A second celebration was held in Radnor, PA on Sept. 13, 2014, with over 120 in attendance to celebrate the union. The couple had been together for 23 years. Laurie Leslie Finlayson ’74 writes, “On

Nov. 7, 2013, my son, LCpl David Leslie Finlayson, died of sudden cardiac arrest while on a five-mile training run with his Marine battalion in Hawaii. He was 25 years old. In his honor, we founded a nonprofit corporation, The Lion

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Heart Heroes Foundation, to bring better cardiac screening to the military. Current heart screening for those who enlist in the Armed Services consists of filling out a family history questionnaire and listening with a stethoscope. They are not given an EKG, which can detect cardiac abnormalities, when they go through their medical exams. Our foundation is now working with the Navy to research the effectiveness of EKG screening of recruits. We also encourage everyone to learn CPR and how to use an AED. On average, a seemingly healthy young person suffers a sudden cardiac arrest every three days in the United States, and it’s the leading cause of death in

exercising young athletes. Unless a normal heart rhythm is restored within minutes, death is the end result. AEDs should be located in every school. I hope that AIS has several! Please visit lionheartheroes.org and ‘like’ us on Facebook for more information.” Ann Schimminger Marcus ’75 and hus-

band, Howard, joyfully celebrated the marriage of their daughter, Sarah Marcus Hansen ’06, to Matthew Hall Hansen on May 30, 2015. Gay West-Klien ’75

shared that the Class of 1975 is enjoying a serendipitous Renaissance. Sarah Lange, Lauren Hurtubise McKinney and Suzanne Madeira Coffin have recently

joined the class book club, which was started by Alida “Lylee” Van Pelt, Leslie Somers Rahling, and Lucy Cooper Karlsson. The book club meets about every six weeks to discuss the particular book that has been suggested over lots of good food and the occasional drink. They like to choose books that have a special meaning for women today and throughout history. Sarah Lange says, “We have renewed friendships and genuinely enjoy each others’ company and support as we deal with what life throws at us. The group includes a doctor, lawyer, vet, investment managers, teachers, volunteers, etc. and, yes, retirees! This is not your mother’s book club!” Ever since their

25th reunion, the Class of 1975 has taken advantage of keeping in touch via the Internet, and this has made the job of the class representatives, Gay and Lylee, much easier, which they were reminded of during this past spring’s 40th reunion. Not only did they have a remarkable turnout, seeing some people for the first time in 40 years, like Linda Christie, but they also reconnected with folks like Theresa Bailey Baker, who we had not seen in a long time. Gay states, “We have also caught up with folks who left us before graduation like Deborah Diehl Becker and Laurie Heistand. Finally, whether or not they were able to attend Reunion, we are all

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1. Shelley Oakes Swindell ’79 with Lee Rumsey ’59 and her daughters Linda Krause Hill ’79 and Nancy Krause Copeland ’76 at their annual gathering in Tortola. 2. Ilse Wellershoff-Schuur ’76 with newest grandson, Theodor Friedrich Schuur, six days old as pictured

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talking. It has been great to reconnect! We highly recommend the effort.” Lisa Clark ’76 writes, “I

recently moved to Philadelphia and have a wonderful apartment with a beautiful view of the Art Museum. Emma, 23, is at Tyler School of Art,

and Olivia M. Godfrey ’14 is at Trinity College (Olivia absolutely loved Irwin’s). I am still practicing law at Duane Morris downtown, but as a new resident am finding all kinds of nooks and crannies I never knew about. Come visit!”

Alexandra “AK” Van Alen Frazier ’76 is living her

dream. AK has worked part time for 30 years for The Valentine Foundation, which makes grants to women and girls. This gives her the flexibility to work on the nonprofit she created in 2003, Women Golfers Give Back, that funds

girls’ golf programs in the Philadelphia region. Hundreds of girls who would not have had the opportunity to play are funded each year. She and her husband, Tom, recently celebrated their 17th wedding anniversary. Her three children and two stepchildren are spread across

the globe and give them plenty of reason to travel. Elizabeth “Betsy” Moran Legnini ’76 is a grand-

mother! Sylvia Ruth Legnini was named for Ruth Legnini, beloved AIS teacher, parent and grandparent, now age 92! Betsy writes, “Dogs still dominate our lives, with four at home (Boxer, two Boston Terriers and one of unknown origin) and then rescue work, which I continue to love, having found that people who love animals are my favorite kind of people! I am really looking forward to catching up with everyone at Reunion!” C. Kirven Ringe Talone ’76 tells us her

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daughter, Kacy, is a CPA and a certified yoga instructor and enjoys traveling. Her son, Danny, is an accountant and enjoys writing comedy. Kirry and her husband, Michael, live in Berwyn, PA near a few Irwin’s girls: Karen L. Belber, Susan Cauffman Butterworth, Susan Lea, and Martha L. Madeira. Kirry and her husband enjoy spending time in The Villages in Florida and traveling. Her favorite activity is pickleball! Ilse WellershoffSchuur ’76 writes, “Too

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1. Lance Cpl. David Leslie Finlayson, late son of John and Laurie Leslie Finlayson ’74; he passed away on November 7, 2013 at age 25. 2. Ann Klotz ’78, Marijean Moran Bourei ’78, and Meg Garvey, ’78 from last summer at Eagles Mere Country Club in PA. 3. The Lukefahr Family at home in San Antonio, TX.

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bad that my work as a priest in the congregation of the Christian Community once more gets in the way of our Reunion! I was hoping to make it (counting on the first weekend in May) but then it turned


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

Christine Kuhinka ’81

Communicating in Corporate America Although she has the deepest regard for all of her Agnes Irwin teachers, Christine Kuhinka ’81 reserves a special place of affection for her former English teacher Martha Goppelt. “Mrs. Goppelt gave tirelessly of herself to support her students’ academic and personal growth,” said Kuhinka, who has built a successful career as a communications executive at Fortune 100 companies in the pharmaceutical, chemical and consumer packaged-goods industries, including Pfizer (Wyeth), Johnson & Johnson, Dow Chemical and Nestle Nutrition. “I am deeply grateful to AIS for the school’s rigorous academic offerings. There were so many teachers who worked in concert to create a challenging and supportive environment in which students could learn and grow,” said Kuhinka, who currently serves as president of the Philadelphia chapter of the International Association of Business Communicators (IABC) and the managing director of CommScientia, LLC, a strategic communications consultancy. During her 20-year career, she has led various communications initiatives and functions, including marketing communications, public relations, employee communications, cultural transformations and corporate social responsibility programs. She counts among her accomplishments: creating a stronger market and geographic presence for Dow Consumer & Industrial Solutions; shepherding corporations through crises while serving as the corporate spokesperson; and boosting employee engagement by establishing reward and recognition and employee development programs. After graduating from Agnes Irwin, Kuhinka attended the University of Pennsylvania and University of Chicago, where she studied philosophy and mathematics. She also completed a post-baccalaureate premedical program at Bryn Mawr College and an executive business program at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. In 2007, Kuhinka won the Public Relations Society of America Institute award for best strategic public relations plan; and in 2010 she earned the Accredited Business Communicator credential, the global standard of professional achievement for business communicators from IABC. In addition to serving as communications chair for the Agnes Irwin Alumnae Board, Kuhinka sits on the boards of several professional, nonprofit and civic organizations

and is a sustaining member of the Junior League of Philadelphia, having served on the board of directors as the communications chair. Kuhinka is also an elected committee person for Lower Merion Township, has served as a crisis counselor, a group leader of a tutoring program for disadvantaged youth and assisted teaching children with autism. Following natural and manmade disasters both domestically and internationally, she has provided humanitarian assistance through major relief organizations. — Wanda Odom

out to be a week earlier than I had thought, so the date is the date of our annual confirmations. I am very busy in this large congregation, which covers the social context of six living communities of social therapy and/or curative education as well as a lively Waldorf, Germany school with almost 1,000 students from K-13. I am also serving

six weeks as I write this. I am still thinking of a sentence Lisa Umstattd Bonitatibus wrote into my yearbook: “I hope we will meet again, before we change too much...” I wonder if it has happened, but I still feel so connected, so I do not think it has! It would be even more exciting to get to know each other in a new way!”

on the board of one of the largest Camphill communities and am still very busy with our intercultural projects in the Holy Land, where I travel about three times a year. My book about this was published in January 2015 and is selling well. I am also studying with the Presencing Institute (Otto Scharmer, MIT) whenever there is a chance to

take courses, to improve my skills in institutional counseling. My kids are socially engaged as well. My eldest daughter, Frederike, is doing integration work with refugees; my son Johann is a priest in Frankfurt; and Clemens, the youngest, is a diplomat currently assigned to the German Embassy in Tunisia. My two grandsons are 14 years and

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Kimberly Ford Fulwider ’78 writes, “I

am living in Cave Creek, AZ with Dave, my husband of almost 30 years. We have two grown children: Drew, 27, and Sarah, 25, and three dogs. Sarah is getting married on April 30 and she and her fiancé have just bought a house in Phoenix, AZ. Dave and I have owned a furniture delivery and

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storage facility called Kid Glove, Inc. in Scottsdale, AZ for the last 14 years, and I run the day-to-day operations. We deal with designers and local contractors/ builders from all over the country, and also local customers here in town, receiving their furniture and storing it and then doing a ‘white glove’ delivery to their home when they are ready for it. I keep in touch

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with Tracey Veitch McKinnon every couple of months but other than that I am pretty out of the loop. I always check the AIS bulletin to see if any class notes are in there about us from the Class of 1978, but usually can’t find anything. I would love to hear from anyone.” Christina Masters Jones ’78 writes, “After

sailing the Eastern seaboard from Rhode Island to the Bahamas for the past two years, Roger and I have landed back in the Philadelphia area. It feels great to be ‘back home’ after living in Massachusetts for 12 years and spending two years on a sailboat! We are living in Wyndmoor,

PA. Roger is an Upper School math teacher at AIM Academy in Conshohocken, a school with grades 1-12 for students with language-based learning differences. He is really enjoying being back in the classroom and making an impact on children’s lives. Our son, Eric, 27, is getting married in June at Camp Cody on Lake Ossippee, NH, to his gal of 10 years. We feel so blessed as we adore his bride-to-be and her wonderful family. They live in Somerville, MA. Eric manages bands — check out Darlingside and The Ballroom Thieves — that travel throughout the United States and come to

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1. Children of Kathleen Kirkpatrick Finkenstaedt ’81 2. Dina Stevens ’86 and son, Baily 3. Elizabeth Denlinger ’82 and Joy Ladin on their wedding day 4. Becky Gaffney Campbell ’88, Megan Flinn Boyle ’87, Lindsey Ertel Wolfington ’88 and Shannon McBride Zeller ’91 (AIS field hockey, basketball and lacrosse teammates) at Camp Tecumseh in New Hampshire, where all of their boys attend summer camp 5. Children of Wendy deMarco Masse ’86: Jack, 12, and Peter, 13

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CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

Nancy Bell ’86

Teamwork Drives Success

Teamwork is a valuable skill in most workplaces, but it is especially vital for Nancy Bell ’86, who serves as Senior Manager of External Affairs at Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA), the world’s seventh-largest automaker. After graduating from Agnes Irwin, Bell attended the University of Pennsylvania and received her law degree from Syracuse University. She joined FCA in 2011, and advises on an array of motor vehicle regulatory and legislative matters, such as safety and technology policy, and advocates for FCA’s interests before legislatures, agencies and other stakeholder groups. A member of several industry-related boards — including the American Highway Users Alliance, Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety, FCA Foundation and the Future of Privacy Forum — Bell says the most enjoyable part of her job is the challenge of working with stakeholders toward favorable outcomes for FCA and the auto industry as a whole. “In each professional position I’ve held, building and leveraging teamwork has proven an invaluable skill and been essential to every successful project or initiative,” Bell said. Her experiences at Agnes

Irwin helped her realize just how critical collaboration is, and she especially credits her time on the school tennis team with helping lay that foundation. Now based in Washington, D.C., the former Fulbright Scholar has spent much of her career in the auto industry — first as an attorney for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, then the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, and now FCA. While Bell has always served in a legal or policy role, she frequently interacts with engineers, and one of her greatest assets has been being able to “play well” with them, she said. “While we come from different perspective, backgrounds, and, typically, genders, I have found that leveraging communication and shared interests has allowed me to break down barriers.” In some cases, that has meant strategically developing shared interests. While working at the Auto Alliance in 2004, Bell learned that many of the male engineers she interacted with would socialize on the golf course. Her solution? “I signed up for golf lessons and quickly tried to get up to speed on the sport.” With her willingness to go above and beyond to embrace and conquer challenges, it’s no wonder that as Associate General Counsel at AARP, Bell earned the association’s “Agent of Social Change Award” in 2009. Now at FCA, she frequently presents at national conferences and symposia on topics such as the future of driverless cars. While the themes she speaks on now are worlds away from her senior assembly on The Talking Heads — which she describes as “one of the more nerve-racking experiences of my Irwin’s career” — she says the experience provided great early training for the work she now engages in on a daily basis. Apart from the demands of a busy professional life, Bell still finds time to support the Penn squash team, on which she played in college, and spend time with her family. She says she considers one of her greatest achievements to be attaining a work-life balance. “I have a terrific family and a fun and engaging job. While my perfect day is every day I get to spend with my son, I also bound out of bed every morning looking forward to the challenges that await me at the office.” — Amanda Mahnke

“... building and leveraging teamwork has proven an invaluable skill and been essential to every successful project or initiative.”

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Natalie Rusk ’91 and Melissa Strogatz Burnett ’91

Destined for Friendship Natalie Rusk ’91 and Melissa “Missy” Strogatz Burnett ’91 are as close as two sisters can be, except they’re not — sisters, that is. Both pediatricians, they have spent the past 39 years living uncannily parallel lives. When asked about their similar trajectory, Burnett explained, “I think we always understood it to be happenstance. We were always friends and acted independently. Now we are 42; it is quite remarkable. Life is funny, and things happen in unexpected and wonderful ways.” Part of their incredible story is the fact that Rusk and Burnett were together at every stage of their education. They began their journey in nursery school at The West Hill School; then the duo attended Agnes Irwin for all 13 years. Reflecting on AIS, both point to their teachers as having had the greatest influence on their decisions to pursue careers in the sciences. “I feel so grateful to the teachers who nurtured me along the way,” Burnett said. “Mrs. (Diana) Gormley, Mrs. (Sally) Randolph, Miss (Penney) Moss, Dr. and Mme. (George and Barbara) Barnett, Mme. (Rita) Davis, Mr. (Wigs) Frank, Mr. (Murray) Savar, Mrs. (Priscilla) MacNeil, Miss (Kathleen) Bartuska — so many AIS teachers who made me feel so valued and supported at such a formative time.” “Miss Bartuska was the teacher who got me excited about science and biology,” Rusk recalled. “She was such an inspiration to many of my classmates who went into science-related fields.” Following Agnes Irwin, both attended Harvard University. Burnett majored in history and literature, Rusk in anthropology, and then both took two years off after graduating. “We made our decisions on our own, and it worked out that we made them the same way,” Burnett explained. After their hiatuses, they each enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and followed medical school with pediatrics residencies at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “We became especially close during our medical training,” Rusk said. Burnett agreed, adding, “When we were in college, we were friends but had our own lives. We were always anchors for each other through medical school and residency.” Ten years ago, Rusk moved to Austin, TX, with her husband, a fellow pediatrician, and two children, Liliana, 10, and Mateo, 7, to be closer to her husband’s family; she joined a private practice there. The following year, Burnett, her husband and their two children, George, 6 and Will, 4, also began preparing to move cross-country — to Austin, where he would establish a neurosurgery practice with two colleagues. “I will never forget that phone call I made to Natalie to tell her that we were moving to — of all places — Austin!” Burnett said. “We were laughing so hard we could hardly get the words out. I joined Natalie’s practice that year, and we have been working together ever since. I am lucky to get to work with someone as wonderful as Natalie, someone

“We were laughing so hard we could hardly get the words out.”

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“There is no one else who knows friends and stories from every age I have gone through.” whose knowledge and judgment I trust completely.” The pair has been blessed with — and maybe destined to — a lifelong friendship. “We have been great friends through all stages of life. Now our families are very close, and we enjoy many family dinner nights together,” Rusk said. “There is no one else who knows friends and stories from every age I have gone through.” It was not until much later that they discovered they were born in the same hospital, just a week apart! Even though they are not technically sisters, Burnett said, “we are family.” — Corin Breña


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

Philly often. You all might just enjoy them! Our daughter, Courtney, 24, is an oncology nurse at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and I am having the best time seeing her every week after having not lived in the same state as her for nine years! It is wonderful to have family nearby and so many friends. I would love to catch up with those classmates who are living in the area!” Ann V. Klotz ’78 writes, “I

am finishing my 12th year as headmistress at Laurel School in OH, which, in itself is thrilling in some ways. I am so happy to be connected with many of you on Facebook. A highlight of last summer was a visit by Meg Garvey and Marijean Moran Boueri to Eagles Mere, PA for a lunch full of laughter and reminiscences. I have been writing a good bit

recently, blogging semi-regularly for the Huffington Post and publishing short pieces in a variety of literary journals. It feels fun to be doing something I love for myself. Shoulder surgery a little over a year ago has sidelined me from yoga, but the writing helps re-center me. Our son, Atticus, is in 5th grade; our younger daughter, Cordelia, turned 21 and is a junior at Bowdoin College. Our oldest, Miranda, graduated from Wesleyan University last spring and is living on the Upper West Side and working for a public defender. Eagles Mere is still a constant for us. Come visit!” Antoinette M. Burton ’79

stepped into a new role at the University of Illinois (Urbana) this year, where she has taught for 16 years. She became the director of their humanities center.

In that capacity she secured a $4.2 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, in part to develop research projects on “The Work of the Humanities in a Changing Climate.” Exciting! Antoinette says, “If you are ever in east central Illinois…”

1980-89

Kathleen Kirkpatrick Finkenstaedt ’81 writes,

“I cannot believe it will be 35 years this June. My husband Ned and I still live happily in Wynnewood, PA. Our two older children, Sam and Jane, are both at Penn State. Jane graduated from AIS in 2014 and loved her time there. My youngest, Barbara, will start high school in the fall. I still enjoy fun adventures with Lucy Flammer Rhodes and have had the pleasure of reconnecting with Missy Brown. I hope we have a good turnout

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1. Ania Plocha ’96 with her husband, Ken, and their sons, James, 3, and Niko, 18 months 2. Solmaz Amirnazmi ’96 and baby girl, Mia 3. Daughter of Jessica Krick Stanton ’98, Natalie 4. Lara Kroop ’94 married Olivier Delamarre in Paris on November 14, 2015

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1. Dolores Spina Carter ’91 with her husband, Sean, and their children 2. Finn Joseph Caruso, son of David and Sarah Eremus Caruso ’96 3. Hads Ogden Holmgren ’98 in Bogota, Columbia 4. Lisa Anderson Wolff ’91 with her husband, Scott, and sons, Henry, 3, and Graham, 5, in Edgartown, MA 5. Audrey Cleary ’96 married Chad Anderson, in Key West, FL, in December 2012. The wedding party included AIS classmates Aileen Ruff and Solmaz Amirnazmi, and her sister, Emily Cleary Tracy ’99 5.

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CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

and I look forward to seeing everyone in April.” Elizabeth R. Denlinger ’82 continues

to curate the Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle at the New York Public Library. Her job title is long, but it is rivaled by that of her wife, Joy Ladin, the David and Ruth Gottesman Professor of English at Stern College for Women of Yeshiva University. In August 2015, they were married in Riverside Park in New York, NY. Brooke Howard McIlvaine ’83 is teaching

full-time in the first grade at King, an independent school in Stamford, CT, and loving her class and the school community! She plays competitive basketball after school with second and third graders! She also plays squash with her own two teenagers, who play on teams at St. Andrew’s School in Delaware and Greens Farms Academy in Connecticut. On the sports theme, her oldest works for Duke Student Broadcasting, creating the sports videos and articles. Leigh Morrissett Foltz ’85 writes, “By the

time this news posts I will have one year left serving on the Oak Grove School Board in Libertyville, IL. It has been a huge learning experience, and truly makes me appreciate the education I received at Agnes Irwin. Although we are in a superior dis-

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trict in the state and my kids receive a high quality public education, I now understand the value of a private school. Family is great. Syd is finishing her sophomore year at Columbia College in Chicago and lives in the city full time. She is a comedy major with a voiceover minor — look out SNL! My son, Cameron, will graduate in June and heads to Duke in the fall with a focus (as of now) in astrophysics (what?!?!) — yes, he is mine, I swear, recessive gene perhaps? My baby, Charlie, will be finishing his freshman year in high school and is quite the athlete — football, wrestling and lacrosse. Bob and I will celebrate 25 years this July, where did the time go? It shows in my face and the color of my hair, which I deal with every four weeks now. Ugh! Miss you all, life is fast, never a dull moment, and as always our door is always open but I recommend summer!”

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1. Sons of Lexie Stein ’91, Tommy, Bo and Sam, with horse “Winter” 2. Robert “Bobby” Cannon Goldworm, son of Sam and Amanda Cannon Goldworm ’94 3. Children of Maura Cannon Dick ’98: Bill, 2, and Henry, 4 months 4. Meggin Capers ’93, Betsey Capers Exley ’95, Lauren Capers Ryan ’98 and family celebrating their mother’s 70th birthday 5. Laura Bright Babka ’94 and family enjoying Europe

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Erin Murphy Barzilay ’96

Dina B. Stevens ’86

In the Service of Women’s Health

As defining experiences go, one could say that Dr. Erin Murphy Barzilay ’96 found the inspiration to become who she is today during her years at Agnes Irwin. Barzilay is co-director of the Women’s Life Center at UCLA, where she provides psychiatric care to pregnant and postpartum women. She is also a staff member of the UCLA Dual Diagnosis Intensive Outpatient Program and in that role delivers both psychiatric care and addiction treatment to patients. What she enjoys most about her position is working with the resident physicians who are training to become psychiatrists and observing their evolution as young physicians. “The thing I’m most proud of is my appreciation for the critical role of women’s health in our society,” said Barzilay, who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a B.A. in Sociology of Medicine in 2000 and earned her medical degree from Jefferson Medical College in 2005. “Agnes Irwin’s emphasis on the well-being and education of women was instrumental in my commitment to serving women’s mental health needs across the life cycle,” she said. Barzilay had the honor of delivering the student

address at the Commencement exercises for the Class of 1996. “I have always treasured that opportunity, which allowed me to share in the collective goals and aspirations of my fellow classmates,” she said. One of her fondest memories of AIS is the hot chocolate and cookies served up on snowy days in the former Middle and Upper School lobby, now the Alumnae Lobby. “It was such a nice way to make something very ordinary feel special.” Barzilay also praised Bud Dengler of the Music Department, adding that through him she “learned that the most important voice in any song is everyone’s voice.” Barzilay said she loves to travel, cook and hike with her husband, and savors any experience that combines those three. “Living in southern California has been a great introduction to all of the natural beauty in the western United States,” she said. “I’m trying to visit as many national parks as possible, with Zion National Park in Utah being a favorite. We also just returned from an incredible trip to Japan that included many culinary adventures!” — Wanda Odom

“It was such a nice way to make something very ordinary feel special.”

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writes, “I honestly can’t believe how quickly 30 years has gone by! I’m looking forward to connecting with everyone again at Reunion. All is well with Baily and life is good. In November 2014, we moved from my townhouse in Chesterbrook, PA, after 17 years to a single-family home in Bryn Mawr, in the Old Oaks neighborhood. We have settled in nicely and love the neighborhood, as Baily was the 13th boy in his neighborhood who is around three years old, and more young families continue to move in. He is making lifelong friends. He is attending preschool at The Haverford Center and is really loving it. He continues to be the light of my life. I’m still with SAP, and hard to believe, it’s been 15 years. Baily and I continue to spend our summers in Beach Haven so he is able to spend time with my mom, Sydney Davis Stevens ’53, and dad. My sister, Dawn Stevens Brennan ’82, and her husband, Dan, are happy in Rocky Mount, NC and spend their weekends in Nags Head. Sanna Marshall Henderer and I still try to get dinner once a month!”

1990-99 Courtney W. Allison-Horowitz ’91

writes, “I’ve been keeping busy this year by continuing to promote my cookbook, The Soup Club Cookbook. It’s been a wild ride and I’ve


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

learned a ton! Recently we were on public radio in Roxbury, NY and we’re still cooking and posting on Instagram and Twitter. Find me @thesoupclub in either spot and share what you’re cooking (and eating) these days. In my nine-to-five life, I’ve started a new job as the deputy executive director of Math for America. It’s a nonprofit that gives fellowships and funding to expert NYC public and charter school teachers of math and science. It’s great work and has let me have a better balance with work and family life, too. Now I work just blocks away from my kids’ elementary school (Eleanor, 9 and Edwin, 7). I stay up-to-date with classmates on Facebook mostly and recently ran into Alicia D. Lombardini ’92 at a restaurant in the Lower East Side of Manhattan where we both live. I’ll miss everyone at Reunion but I’ll be sending warm thoughts from the sunny beaches of Puerto Rico.” Lynne Stine Hanna ’91

writes, “I’m a full-time mom/wife, and parttime veterinarian/ teacher; I recently started my own veterinary acupuncture business called Peaceful

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Pet, LLC. I make local house calls for dogs and cats. I love treating pets in their home and getting to know their devoted and loving owners. It allows me the flexibility to be home with our three active boys, Tommy, 10, Bo, 9, and Sam, 6, after school, while still practicing what I’m passionate about — veterinary acupuncture. I also teach Animal Science at Centreville Layton School, where our middle son, Bo, attends. We recently acquired a seven-year-old Thoroughbred horse, so I’m enjoying spending time at the family farm of my husband, Thomas, and reliving my youth!”

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Katharine Berry Swartz ’91 writes, “For

1. Alison Dillihay-James ’00 and her daughter 2. Daughters of Susan Hirtle McEvoy ’00: Eva and new baby sister, Georgia Elizabeth 3. Children of Mike and Corina Sylvia English ’00: Cori and her big brother, Nolan John 4. Allison Ianovale Kent ‘07 celebrates on her wedding day with AIS classmates and a friend 5. Kaitlyn Klagholz Zitzer ’01 wedding party

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Shona Bhattacharyya ’01

Witness to the World’s Affairs

You never know where life may take you — and for Shona Bhattacharyya ’01, the old adage rings especially true. A journalist at France 24, an international news station in Paris, her work ranges from editing, writing and voicing stories using footage from around the world to live reporting in the studio and the field. “Mostly, though, I anchor the news,” the 32-year-old said. A 2006 graduate of Brown University, where she majored in Development Studies, Bhattacharyya studied abroad in Niger and Egypt, and went on to earn her M.S. in Social Policy and Development from the London School of Economics the following year. While working at an international development agency, she heard about an internship at France 24 — no journalism experience necessary — and thought, “well, why not?” She interviewed for and got the job. Little by little, she worked her way up to becoming a full-time news anchor. “With hindsight, I’m glad I studied

what I studied,” she said, “but I’m grateful things turned out the way they did.” In France, news anchors write everything they say on air, which Bhattacharyya says is a fun part of her job. However, what she enjoys most is learning about various communities, and the adrenaline rush of reporting on breaking news. In her eight years at the station, her favorite reporting experience was a short series of reports on international communities in Paris. “I got to dive deep into the African district in northern Paris, meet children of North African immigrants learning their parents’ language, attend celebrations on Chile’s Independence Day, and more. It was an amazing experience, and lots of work! The best part is always meeting people and having the excuse to go out and discover more about the world we live in.” Bhattacharyya recalls many fond memories of AIS, and says she is indebted “to many teachers, including Mr. (Murray) Savar, Mr. (Andrew) Connally, Mrs. (Cathy) Lynch, Mr. (Wigs) Frank, Dr. Bruce (McGrath), Ms. (Linda) Solomon and Mrs. (Lynn) Lewis. They all taught me very well, and were incredibly open-minded, tolerant and understanding.” Now more than ever, Bhattacharyya says, she appreciates attending an all-girls school. “Growing up at Irwin’s taught me so much. It gave me the confidence to follow my dreams and trust myself, which isn’t always easy in our maledominated societies. Everything I’m proud of — becoming a full-time anchor at 30, becoming a homeowner at 27 — were all made possible because I believed in myself. And I have AIS to thank.” She credits Agnes Irwin singing groups for her ability to be at ease in front of a crowd. “It was singing in the Bel Cantos and in the Glee Club that helped me most, long-term,” Bhattacharyya said. “When that red light goes on in the studio and I’m live on air, it feels no different from being in front of an audience and singing my heart out.” — Amanda Mahnke

“The best part is always meeting people and having the excuse to go out and discover more about the world we live in.”

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the last five years, I’ve been living in England with my husband and five children. The oldest is heading to university in a year! My husband and I are currently working as houseparents at a boarding school near Oxford, and I am also writing commercial fiction (katharineswartz.com). I would love to connect with AIS ex-pats!” Margaret R. Capers ’93

and her sisters, Betsy Capers Exley ’95 and Lauren Capers Ryan ’98 (who left AIS after Lower School), celebrated the 70th birthday of mom Ann B. Capers, with a surprise family reunion in February. Fun was had by all, especially Lauren’s children Brooklyn, 2, and Jake, 3, and Betsy’s children Leah, 9, and Emma, 11. Meggin writes, “A highlight of the weekend was watching DanDan (John Capers, Haverford ’61) go down the water slides with the grandkids! As Mom always says, ‘Age is a state of mind. Play on!’” Meggin’s job as a professional event coordinator helped in planning a wonderfully successful, surprise weekend. Laura Bright Babka ’94

writes, “I have taken a career break to move to Norway with my family for three years because my spouse had a great job opportunity and we wanted to travel through Europe. We are having a fantastic experience and taking full


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

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advantage of the proximity to so many lovely cities and countries.” Lara Kroop Delamarre ’94 writes, “I

am delighted to share the news that I got married on Nov. 14, 2015 to Olivier Delamarre in Paris, France, where we live. Among other loved ones, our two daughters, Mila and Gisela, celebrated with us as did classmates Lloyd “LeeLee” Brown and Hilary Halper. We were extremely fortunate to be able to celebrate love amidst so much tragedy in our neighborhood, Paris’ 11th arrondissement.” Amanda Cannon Goldworm ’94 and her

husband, Sam, had a baby boy on June 7, 2015. His name is Robert Cannon Goldworm. “We are calling him Bobby. We are over the moon with this little guy!” Sandra L. Moser ’94 con-

tinues to work hard and

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expand her family in Washington, D.C. where she is Senior Deputy Chief of the Department of Justice Fraud Section. She is expecting a daughter in March 2016, who will join big brother, Holden, 16 months. Solmaz Amirnazmi ’96

specializes in internal medicine, with a focus on preventive medicine, nutrition and healthy lifestyle behaviors. She created alliswellthateatswell.com, which offers visitors healthy recipes based on the Mediterranean diet and information about healthy eating. She and her husband, Toru, live just outside New York City, and they are thrilled to announce the birth of their daughter, Mia Soraya, on Dec. 8, 2015.

1. Agnes Irwin Bel Cantos made a surprise appearance at the wedding of Mary McCarty ’05 2. Wedding party and guests of Sarah Calvert Lartey ’03. Front row (l-r): Emily Calvert Goodling ’92, Laurie Hugill ’03, Amanda Calvert Feeks ’89, Ann Bevon Hollos ’92; back row: Alessandra Gonzalez Martinez ’03, Winnie Schulz ’03, Amanda Earl ’03, Caroline Cuckler Shane ’03 and Kate Hollos ’89 3. Howard and Ann Schimminger Marcus ’75 celebrate the marriage of their daughter, Sarah Casserly Marcus ’06, to Matthew Hall Hansen 4. Annie Duckett ’05 and Sara MacIntyre ’05 at The American Institute for Stuttering in New York City

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Sarah Eremus Caruso ’96 works as an

immigration attorney, representing clients in matters being decided by immigration judges and government agen-

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cies. She and her husband, David, live in Swarthmore, PA. They welcomed their son, Finn Joseph, on August 19, 2015. Audrey A. Cleary ’96

earned a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Arizona. She relocated to Miami in 2010, where she is currently a staff psychologist in the counseling center at the University of Miami, in addition to maintaining a private practice. She and her husband, Chad Anderson, married in Key West, FL, in December 2012. Ania Plocha ’96 writes, “I

graduated from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School of Communications in 2000 with a degree in Illustration Photography. The following year, I worked for the Red Cross as an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer in Northern California where I helped communities with natural disaster preparedness. When 9/11 happened, I helped train Red Cross volunteers so they could travel to New York City and assist with disaster cleanup. Once my AmeriCorps stint was over, I hiked, along with my then boyfriend, Ken, 1,000 miles of the Camino de Santiago, an ancient pilgrimage route through southwest France and northern Spain. In 2005, I graduated from the University of Pittsburgh with a Master of Occupational Therapy degree. Ken and I were married the same year

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and settled permanently in Colorado. I worked as an occupational therapist providing home-based therapy for children three and under as part of Colorado’s Early Intervention program (EI). EI is a federally-funded program that aims to identify children who are developmentally delayed or at risk for being delayed and provides them with (usually free) services to mitigate their developmental deficits. I became a stay-at-home mom in 2012 when Ken and I had our first son, James. Ken and I now live just outside of Boulder with our two boys, James, 3, and Niko, 18 months. I love Colorado and the laid-back pace of life, its 300 days of sunshine, limitless recreation options and constant mountain views. Please look me up if you are ever in the area and I can show you around!” Erica Foehl Weihermuller ’96 and

her husband, David, welcomed their son, Michael David Weihermuller, on Feb. 5 2016. Their first child, Gemma Lee, is 7 and is a great big sister!

now work for the Origins brand in Global Product Marketing, which is still part of Estée Lauder. I hope to see AIS friends when I’m home visiting with the kids!” Hads Ogden Holmgren ’98 writes, “In

February, I traveled with an FBI delegation to Bogota, Colombia to assist the Colombian National Police with counter-narcotics operations. As part of the visit, I met with senior police officials in an effort to help curb ongoing country violence

1. Kendra Fretz Morris ’01 and her new son, Jackson 2. Maryellen Guinan ’02 and her mother pose for a photo on her brother John’s (Haverford ’01) wedding day in Vail, CO 3. Sarah DeCamp ’08 with classmates Kate Mezzanotte, Catherine Yoh, Katie Reiger and Lauren Lombardo 4. Wally and Shannon Casey Zimolong ’00 welcomed a baby girl, Merritt Anne Zimolong

1.

2.

Maura Cannon Dick ’98

writes, “We welcomed Henry Truesdale Dick into the world on Oct. 16, 2015. He was 7 pounds, 7 ounces. We’re all doing well and settling into life as a family of four in New York City. After 11 years working at Clinique in Global Skincare marketing, I

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3.

4.


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

Rebecca Harper ‘06

The Power of the Big Picture

After Agnes Irwin, Rebecca Harper ’06 attended Princeton University, where she majored in astrophysics and earned a Certificate in Medieval Studies, graduating in 2010. “After going from an all-girls school straight into the male-dominated Physics Department, I’ve had lots of practice dealing with gender imbalances. To this day, they rarely bother me,” said Harper, who lives in Kigali, Rwanda, which has given her a fantastic vantage point from which to explore the region. “This is a stunning and culturally rich part of the world. I try to get in as much travel as I can.” Harper currently works as projects coordinator for Symbion Power, an American electricity company that specializes in helping African countries replace expensive, imported fuel sources with locally available resources. She has been with the company for a year and a half. Harper began working for Symbion shortly after it won a tender to build, own and operate a 50-megawatt power plant that uses the unique methane gas resource in Lake Kivu, one of the African Great Lakes, to provide base-load power to Rwanda’s national grid and help power its rapid development. As one of Symbion’s first employees in the country, Harper has been a core part of the project from the beginning. She is a member of the “owner’s team,” involved in every component of the fascinating and complex project. From how to arrange financing to overseeing the details of the engineering design to

“Seeing a new business or initiative through from conception to execution and launch is both grueling and extremely rewarding.”

liaising with different government entities, she loves being able to see the whole picture. Once up and running, the plant will increase the generating capacity of the East African country by almost 30 percent compared to current grid production, Harper said. Before joining Symbion, Harper worked on the core launch teams for two start-up companies, each with a vision to make the world a better place. “Seeing a new business or initiative through from conception to execution and launch is both grueling and extremely rewarding,” Harper said. “Irwin’s allowed its students to try new things. Coordinating educational and fundraising events at AIS to address the refugee crisis in northern Uganda at the time gave me a taste of what it was like to create something new.” What Harper remembers most about AIS is how accessible and engaged teachers were. “Some of my fondest memories were wandering into classrooms during free periods and talking with faculty about just about anything. From Dr. (David) Kuyat’s infectious love of Cicero, to hearing Ms. Carm (Sara Carmichael) geek out about physics to Mrs. (Marge) Stallard reminiscing about n-dimensional geometry, it was always clear that my teachers genuinely loved their subjects. That fueled an intellectual curiosity that has opened doors and ultimately made life a whole lot more interesting.” — Corin Breña

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Alumnae | CLASS NOTES

that is associated with the drug cartels.” Jessica Krick Stanton ’98 writes “Bet-

ter late than never to announce you had a baby!” Jessica had a little girl, Natalie, who turned two this March.

2000-09 Alison Dillihay-James ’00

writes, “On New Year’s Eve 2015, we welcomed a beautiful baby girl into our family: five pounds, 10 ounces, 19.5 inches. Rasheed and I are thrilled to have a future Irwin’s girl in our home.”

1.

Corina Sylvia English ’00

3. 2.

1. 2015-2016 Annual AIS Alumnae MotherDaughter photograph 2. Martine White ’13 and Corinne Odom ’13 travel while studying abroad. Together they visited Rome, Venice and London. 3. Jenna Roland ’14, Kelly Manning ’14, Anna Yass ’14 and K. Elizabeth “Lizzi” Kania ’14 4. AIS Allied panelists (l-r) Tracy Solomon Dowling ’01, Molly Scudder ’02, Erinn Corbett-Wright ’10, Shaina Flynn Hamilton ’01 , Megan Pauley ’08 and Victoria “Tori” Johnston ’06; AIS Allied is an Upper School mentoring program

4.

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and her husband, Mike, welcomed their second child, Keira Corina, on Jan. 14 2016. Cori, Mike and big brother, Nolan John, are thrilled with the newest addition to their family. Cori is a Vice President at Hamilton Lane, a private markets asset manager and advisor, where she has worked for eight years. She lives in Bryn Mawr. Susan Hirtle McEvoy ’00

writes, “Jon, Eva and I welcomed another little girl into our family on Jan. 21 2016. Georgia Elizabeth was born at 9:21 p.m. and was 7 pounds, 11 ounces and 21 inches long. Georgia came home in the middle of the first blizzard of the winter!” Kaitlyn Klagholz Zitzer ’01 is happy to

announce her marriage to James Zitzer on June 6, 2015. Morning thunderstorms led to a beautiful candlelit cere-

mony at St. Paul’s Church in Stone Harbor, NJ. The rest of the day was full of sunshine at the Stone Harbor Golf Club for the reception. AIS alumnae in attendance were bridesmaid Parker Lynch ’03, Jessica Dubin and Kate MacMullan ’07. Maryellen Guinan ’02

moved to Washington, D.C. in May 2015, and is now using her law degree in a policy position at a national hospital trade association. While it was hard to leave the beautiful Main Line, Maryellen is now just minutes from her brother and his wonderful new wife, and is excited to become a first-time aunt this July! Sarah Calvert Lartey ’03

writes “I got married in September 2015 to Leslie Lartey at my family’s farm in New Hampshire. My husband and I live in Washington, D.C., where I work as a pediatric nurse practitioner. My sisters Emily Calvert Goodling ’92 and Amanda Calvert Feeks ’89, along with Laurie Hugill and Alesandra Gonzalez Martinez, were bridesmaids in my wedding and my Owls for Life crew of Winnie Schulz, Amanda Earl and Abbe Wright (from afar) were there to celebrate, too!” Emily C. Peters ’03

writes, “I just finished up my first season as Associate Director of Admission at the Brearley School in NYC. It is an absolute joy to be back in an all-girls envi-


CLASS NOTES | Alumnae

ronment and I am reminded everyday of my wonderful memories from Agnes Irwin. When I’m not advocating for the importance of single-sex education, I’m writing and taking in all of the theatre that NYC has to offer (Yes, Hamilton really is that good and, thanks to Wigs, I remembered most of my AP US History facts!). I also just enjoyed a long weekend in Los Angeles with fellow classmate Maddie Katz. I hope everyone is happy and healthy, wherever they may be!” Winifred L. Schulz ’03

lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn, where she feels lucky to get together frequently with fellow Owls and Brooklynites Abbe Wright and Amanda Earl. She currently works in digital sales for Real Simple and is also busy planning her August 2016 wedding to college sweetheart, Colin Most. Abbe L. Wright ’03 is the

editor of Read It Forward.com and is responsible for overseeing all editorial content on the reader community site, which is owned by Penguin Random House. She conducts author interviews, writes and edits for the site and manages a team of writers to produce great content about the ways books and reading enhance our everyday lives. She is based in Brooklyn, NY. Ann B. Duckett ’05 com-

pleted a two-week

intensive internship this January under speech-language pathologist and AIS classmate Sara MacIntyre at The American Institute for Stuttering in NYC. Annie will be graduating from La Salle University this May with a master’s in Speech-Language Pathology. Mary H. McCarty ’05

married Christopher Frassetto on Nov. 7, 2015 at Overbrook Golf Club in Villanova, PA. Guests were serenaded by The Agnes Irwin Bel Cantos in a surprise appearance. The wedding party included Grace McCarty ’09, Annie Duckett, Melissa Jefferis, Caroline Dooner ’06, and Ariel Hudes ’07. Kathryn K. Graves ’06

writes, “After graduating from Syracuse University in 2010 with a B.F.A. in Stage Management, I decided to move on from the world of theater and engage in a career focused on event production. I freelanced in New York City for two years before I moved to the Lakes Region in New Hampshire to work as a wedding coordinator at Castle in the Clouds, a premiere wedding venue overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee. Six months and 35 weddings later, I returned to NYC to take a job as an Associate Producer at MKG, an advertising agency specializing in experiential marketing. Since then I have traveled the country producing events for major

brands like J.P. Morgan Chase, Heineken, New Balance, Sports Illustrated and countless others. I look forward to continuing my work in event production — however it seems less and less likely I will ever fulfill my dream of being Ashlee Simpson’s tour manager. Can’t wait to celebrate the Class of 2006 this spring! Hurrah!” Lexie Barker ’07 has

been working on The Splattered Palate, a food blog that follows her as she makes her way through the iconic cookbook of a similar name (The Silver Palate), getting sidetracked and picking up a few new cooking skills along the way. Check it out at thesplatteredpalate.com and subscribe if you like!

Roland, Andrea Lucas, Mackenzie Tuite, Caitlin Finnegan, Samantha Lucas ’11, Melanie Lucas ’08, Ludmila Crowther, Alexandra Greco, and Alexis Williams. Andrea P. Lucas ’07

writes, “I got engaged in September and will be getting married this October, and am looking forward to graduating from Drexel’s Physician Assistant School in December. BIG YEAR!” Pamela K. Bunten ’09

got engaged to Bret Norris Maffett on Nov. 25, 2015 in Malvern, PA. The couple will be married in Wayne, PA in September 2016. Fellow AIS alumnae Amanda Bunten ’11, Julie Bunten ’13, and Lexi Tocci will all be in the wedding party. The couple currently resides in North Carolina.

Alexandra K. Greco ’07 is

soon to be Dr. Greco! She is finishing her last semester at Columbia University College of Dental Medicine and will be earning her D.D.S. degree in May. She is excited to be moving back home to attend the two-year orthodontic residency program at the University of Pennsylvania starting in July.

Katherine J. Hauler ’09 is

Allison Ianovale Kent ’07

2010-

was married Nov. 21, 2015 to Shaun Kent at the Union League of Philadelphia. She celebrated with many Agnes Irwin classmates including Mackenzie Lucas ’12, Alice Goldenberg, Jenea Williford, Elizabeth Gretz, Alyssa

enjoying life in New York City. For the past few years since college, she has been working at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in Phase I clinical trials and loving it; she is now a Research Study Specialist there. She still likes to run in her free time, and spends time with AIS friends in the city whenever she can.

Caitlin M. McGilvery ’10

has been residing in New York’s East Village since graduating from Bucknell University in 2014. Caitlin currently works in New York at Tory Burch LLC, owned

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by fellow alumna Tory Robinson Burch ’84, in the buying department for Handbags & Accessories, focusing on Tory Burch’s outlet division. Caroline C. Sutherland ’11 gradu-

ated from Villanova University School of Business in December. She is currently studying for the CPA exam and will be working at PricewaterhouseCoopers in Philadelphia as an Assurance Associate in their asset management practice. She also volunteers through the IRS sponsored Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, preparing income tax returns for low income families. Martine E. White ’13 and

Corinne Odom spent time traveling together while they were both studying abroad this past fall semester. Together they visited Rome, Venice and London. Lynn H. Luong ’15 is

majoring in mechanical engineering at Hofstra University. She is incredibly happy to bring everything she has learned from Agnes Irwin to New York! With the same drive that was nurtured in Upper School, she is now a competitive ballroom dancer, in the process of bringing a startup to fruition, working for a nonprofit based in Philly called TechGirlz and teaching students how to code in the Upper East Side at the Coding Space.

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Alumnae | MILESTONES

MARRIAGES 1955

Devy Rose Bruch to Capt. Armand Tise Eyler, USN Ret. October 17, 2015

1973

Ellen H. Funk to Ann M. O’Keefe August 30, 2014

1999

Meghan Comey to Eric Thomas October 3, 2015

2000

Elizabeth Sall to Joshua Ott September 12, 2015 Jodi Housman to Graham Rives October 31, 2015

1982

Elizabeth Denlinger to Joy Ladin August 16, 2015

Lara Kroop to Olivier Delamarre November 14, 2015

Mary McCarty to Christopher Frassetto November 7, 2015

2006

Sarah Casserly Marcus to Matthew Hall Hansen May 30, 2015

2007

2001

Kaitlyn Klagholz to James Zitzer June 6, 2015

1994

2005

Allison Ianovale to Shaun Kent November 21, 2015

2003

Sarah Calvert to Leslie Lartey September 12, 2015

1995

Amanda Nichols to Benjamin Arritt August 1, 2015

BIRTHS 1992

To Rob and Amy Gregg Maher, a girl, Audra Robinson November 25, 2015

1994

To Sam and Amanda Cannon Goldworm, a boy, Robert “Bobby” Cannon June 7, 2015

1996

To David and Sarah Eremus Caruso, a son, Finn Joseph August 19, 2015 To Toru Endo and Solmaz Amirnazmi, a girl, Mia Soraya December 8, 2015 To David and Erica Foehl Weihermuller, a boy, Michael David February 5, 2016

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1998

To Tom and Jessica Krick Stanton, a girl, Natalie March 28, 2014 To Will and Mauyra Cannon Dick, a boy, Henry Truesdale October 16, 2015

2000

To Kristopher and Alexandra Fergusson Powell, a girl, Isla Elisabeth August 20, 2015 To Rasheed James and Alison Dillihay-James, a girl, Alyssa James December 31, 2015 To Mike and Corina Sylvia English, a girl, Keira Corina January 14, 2016

To Jon and Susan Hirtle McEvoy, a girl, Georgia Elizabeth January 21, 2016 To Wally and Shannon Casey Zimolong, a girl, Merritt Anne February 5, 2016

2001

To Samuel S. and Emilie Slack Rendall, a girl, Lydia Valentine August 11, 2015 To Matt and Kendra Fretz Morris, a boy, Jackson October 18, 2015

2003

To Benjamin and Avery Eyre Lovejoy, two girls, Lila, December 31, 2013 and June Cooper, October 9, 2015


MILESTONES | Alumnae

IN MEMORIAM 1935

Louise Maury Cleary December 30, 2015 Barbara Weymouth McCallister April 6, 2015 Mary Augusta Biddle Scheetz January 15, 2016

1940

Isabella Cummings Zimmerman December 21, 2014

1941

Joan Carson Havens February 10, 2016

1942

Lucy Black Johnson December 4, 2015

1943

Carolyn Fotterall Robinson January 10, 2015

1945

Joan Twaddell Carrow March 25, 2015 Jeanne Farrington Leslie February 9, 2016

1946

Mary Heyl Walton May 3, 2015 Elizabeth Cryan Wheaton-Smith February 13, 2015

1947

Margaret Vollmer Addis May 22, 2015 Augustine Janeway Rhodes August 22, 2015

1949

Cornelia Aldridge Service December 13, 2015

1951

Mary Zisette Olmsted October 23, 2015

1956

Alexandra F. Ehret September 21, 2014

2004

Amanda L. White January 3, 2016

SEND US YOUR CLASS NOTES! Have you recently achieved a major career milestone? Did you receive an award? Did you enjoy an impromptu reunion with a fellow AIS alumna? Please share your news with us and we will share it in the Fall 2016 Agnes Irwin Magazine! To submit your news, comments or photos, please contact Brooke N. Norrett ’95 at 610.526.1675, bnorrett@agnesirwin.org or online at agnesirwin.org/classnotes.

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From the Archives PUBLICATION

A CenturyOld Keepsake Yearbooks, by design, are intended to portray the life of a school and the personality of a graduating class. Contents often involve tributes, witticisms and poignant farewells. So it was with the Class of 1915 yearbook. The plain navy suede cover, with “AIS” embossed in gold, belies a playful sketch of the academic, athletic and artistic exploits of 44 students, as well their friendships, hobbies, humor, desires, ambitions and planned occupations — which many listed as “coming-out,” meaning a debut into society as a debutante. For nicknames, some went by Centipede, Pearl Button, Parkie and Wriggles. Some listed pastimes as books, automobiling, horses, and “being late.” Others listed destinies: school teacher, co-ed at Penn, old maid’s home and picture in a “Rogues’ Gallery.” Amid such lightheartedness, scholarship clearly shines through — in their scholastic reports, academic prizes, poems, homages and valedictory. — Wanda Odom

Jane Hamlin Everett

1632 Latimer St., Philadelphia Born February 7, 1897 Entered class in 1909, College Preparatory 1914–15 Member Athletic Association 1912–13, 1913–14, 1914–15 “ I have no secret to success but hard work. We are wiser than we know.”

Class Record Your Occupation Next Year.

Hobby.

(excerpts from 1915 yearbook, Class of 1915)

Wants.

Greatest Ambition.

Coming out.

Wearing a pompadour.

To have an auto.

To be a “movie actress.”

Selling shoelaces!

Being late.

Common sense.

To acquire tact.

College.

Dancing.

Hairpins.

To drive a car.

Débutanting.

Cruising.

A Ford.

Dean of “Bryn Mawr.”

Finding a place to live.

Doing all I can for everybody.

Bulldog.

To vote.

To trip (over) a light fantastic toe.

Billy Sunday arguing.

To be a chauffeur.

Playing the piccolo.

Horses.

To get a composition in the Red Book.

Gadding.

Automobiling.

A pair of red silk stockings.

I’ll never tell.

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To be a jockey.



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Ithan Avenue & Conestoga Road Rosemont, PA 19010 agnesirwin.org

FSC Logo FPO

ROMPER ROOM First graders delight in frolicking under the billows of a brightly colored 45-foot-wide parachute. Through a cooperative game, the students exercise their girl power in gym class by flapping the parachute, then lifting it overhead for the air to create a huge canopy to romp under. “The parachute is a great way of involving a large group in an activity. It is fun, and cooperative rather than competitive. It also can create an atmosphere with a positive spirit and reinforce togetherness,� said P.E. teacher Suzanne McInnes. Photo by Jim Roese Photography


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