Priorities for a New Generation

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PRIORITIES FOR A NEW GENERATION With a nod to the past and an eye on the future, Head of School Peter Nilsson describes how King’s Academy is prioritizing progress to ensure its legacy continues for generations to come. BY PETER NILSSON

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n January of 2007, I flew to Jordan at the invitation of founding Headmaster Dr. Eric Widmer. In between terms as a teacher and leader at Deerfield Academy, I was on a four-year hiatus in New York City to attend graduate school and perform in the city as a musician. That winter of 2007, when I came to the Madaba campus, the grass 8

BEYOND KING’S

hadn’t yet grown, and the buildings were in the final stages of preparations, but the vision for King’s Academy was electric. Energy seemed to crackle in the air, and the prospect of the school was aglow, full of wonder, excitement and awe: what would a boarding school be like in Jordan? Would students come from around the world to study here? How would the AP curriculum work?

Could we build bridges across differences marking every walk of life? Now, 15 years later, King’s Academy is the premiere school in the Middle East. Students from Irbid to Aqaba, from Wadi Musa to Ruwaished, from Jeddah to Beirut, and from California to South Korea — and more — all attend school here. Flags of countries hang proudly in the Hess Family Dining Hall. Buses


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Priorities for a New Generation by King's Academy - Issuu