SPRING 2021
LUMEN THE
MAGAZINE
OF
NEWARK
AHA!
MOMENTS
ACADEMY
FROM THE EDITOR
This issue of LUMEN is also available online. To view the interactive experience, visit: www.newarka.edu/lumen
S P R I N G 2 0 21
35 CONTENTS
F E AT U R E S
35 AHA! Alumni Share NA Moments That Changed Their Lives
42 Reimagining Rigor: Faculty Share New Approaches to An NA Education
IN THIS ISSUE
2 Perspectives
4 NA News
50 Advancement
52 Alumni News
56 Class Notes
17 VISIT NA on the web at www.newarka.edu LIKE NA on Facebook @newarkacademy FOLLOW NA on Twitter @newarkacademy FOLLOW NA on Instagram @newarkacademy
LUMEN
PERSPECTIVES
S P R I N G 2 0 21 Donald M. Austin Head of School
FROM DONALD M. AUSTIN, HEAD OF SCHOOL
Lisa Grider Assistant Head of School for External Affairs EDITOR
Renée Walker, Ed.D. Director of Communications and Marketing ASSISTANT EDITORS
David Beckman Lisa Grider CONTRIBUTORS
Evan Nisenson ’99 Jeff Vinikoor BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Executive Committee Samuel W. Croll III ’68 Chairman Lawrence G. Cetrulo ’67 Secretary Marika Alzadon ’89 Donald M. Austin John H. Bess ’69 Patricia Budziak
Lauren Hedvat ’01 Wayne D. Kent ’85 Robert Marcus Larry Wiesneck
Turning Points Leading to Successful Trajectories
Trustees Millwood Hobbs, Jr. David Castelblanco Andrew Kogan ’90 Lara Coraci-Basile ’88 Lisa Powers Ajay Dhankhar Valerie Radwaner Virany Cuong Do Michael Rockoff ’87 Robin Eichler Melissa Tassé Robert Fink Glenn A. Waldorf ’90 Anjali Gupta Elizabeth Christou Woodall Karen Guy-Smith Emeriti Louis V. Aronson II ’41 Nancy Baird Harwood ’75 Paul Busse ’38* K. Kelly Marx ’51 Robert Del Tufo ’51* John L. McGraw ’49 William D. Green ’69 Robert S. Puder ’38* William D. Hardin ’44* Gary Rose William T. Wachenfeld ’44
As we usher in summer and prepare for a well-deserved break in the school year, it brings me great pleasure to
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Glenn A. Waldorf ’90 President
see the energy surrounding life at Newark Academy.
From choral rehearsals in outdoor spaces to lively classroom
Sydney Hershman ’11 Amanda Addison ’06 Allison Hyans ’11 Nicole Andrzejewski ’13 Lauren Jacobs-Lazer ’98 Rohit Bawa ’93 Jordan Jett ’11 Michele Chiles-Hickman ’86 Katherine “Katie” Johnson ’11 Asha Talwar Coco ’99 Lauren Kaplan ’09 Daniel D. Cronheim ’72 Jacqueline Lipsius ’93 Christopher Davis ’12 Steve Lozowick ’63 Rebecca Moll Freed ’94 Kathleen Mangunay Pergament ’95 Justin Garrod ’93 Ed Pursell ’02 Kumar Ghafoor ’10 Jed Rosenthal ’93 Susan Goldberg ’79 Brett Finkelstein Rubin ’05 Peter Gruenberg ’81 Lena Hill Ryals ’94 Rasheea Williams Hall ’95 Alex Senchak ’02 Jade-Addon Hall ’98 Alexandra Swanson ’09 Shannon Hedvat ’03 Pamela Helfant Vichengrad ’94
discussions in our now tented courtyards, the NA campus
reflects the promise and possibility of returning to some
semblance of our normal routine.
With the resumption of each activity – such as catching a late afternoon
spring sports contest or preparing for our in-person Commencement
(Sunday, June 13), I gain appreciation for all that Newark Academy has
been able to accomplish this year. While COVID-19 continues to impact all of us, our students, faculty and staff have demonstrated how much
Emeriti Lance Aronson ’74 Leo Gordon ’69 J. Richard Beltram ’41* Jeffrey Silverman ’82 John H. Bess ’69 William Stroh ’48* Richard Watson ’50
can be achieved when all members of the community come together with a common purpose. Despite occasional set-backs and ever-changing circumstances, Newark Academy has remained open for in-person
Newark Academy Office of Institutional Advancement 91 South Orange Avenue, Livingston, NJ 07039 Telephone: (973) 992-7000 Email: communications@newarka.edu www.newarka.edu *Deceased
teaching, learning and working throughout the 2020 – 21 academic year.
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I SPRING 2021
I plan to spend part of this summer
reflecting on our shared accomplishment in order to capture the “aha moments” that brought about creative solutions
to complex problems and set our course for the days to come.
This issue of LUMEN includes a piece about “aha moments” that alumni experienced while they were students at Newark
Academy. These vignettes, featuring four
alums, go to the heart of the transforma-
tional experience that is an NA education. Encounters with an inspiring teacher,
a challenging subject, or a move out of a
comfort zone shaped the trajectories and fueled the achievements of these alums. Although each person had their own
unique turning point, Newark Academy provided the environment where such
magic could, and does, happen.
Similarly, this issue of LUMEN offers
insight into the role that Minuteman
Athletics plays in leadership development for our student-athletes. Recognizing student leadership development as a
key component in Newark Academy’s definition of athletic excellence, the
Department of Athletics is focusing on helping our students develop the skills
they need to succeed both on and off the
fields of play. I hope you will enjoy reading
reflections from some of our young alums who found that the discipline, teamwork and confidence honed as Minuteman
captains led them to leadership roles in their respective careers.
The lasting impact that a Newark
Academy education has on students is well-illustrated in these stories. The
hard work by students is consistently
enhanced by abiding support of our
equity and inclusion, while serving as an
a passion for guiding each student’s jour-
members. I am grateful for Glenn’s many
faculty. Newark Academy teachers bring
ney of intellectual development. This type of personal engagement with students
requires that we continuously “reimagine
rigor.” I hope you will enjoy reading how
some of our teachers meet the challenges of inspiring a passion for learning in today’s NA students.
Finally, this issue of LUMEN honors the leadership of Glenn Waldorf ’90, as he
steps down from his role as President of the Alumni Board of Governors (BOG). During the past six years during which
Glenn has led the BOG, he has helped to
invaluable resource for many community contributions to creating a strong alumni
body in addition to his steadfast commitment to Newark Academy.
As you turn each page, I hope that you
will gain appreciation for this incredible
community and, perhaps, recall a Newark
Academy “aha” moment of your own. Best wishes for a restful, renewing summer. I look forward to seeing
our community come together in September.
enhance the NA alumni experience and strengthened connections among our
graduates. As we have seen this year, the alumni network has been a guiding light
for our community’s work towards greater
NEWARK ACADEMY
3
NA NEWS
Picking Up Pen and Publishing During The Pandemic
While the COVID-19 pandemic has transformed many daily experiences, it sparked an even greater change for three Newark Academy students who were driven to use their creativity and generosity of spirit to support and build community through their publications.
Kaitlyn Chee ’23 Easy Eating Describing herself as a “typical teenager who loves to cook,” Kaitlyn Chee ’23 drew on her love of cooking and baking to publish Easy Eatings: The Book for Kids Whose Parents Don’t Cook. The book invites all families to take an international culinary journey through simple, easy-toprepare recipes. Each chapter highlights a different country with both recipes and Kaitlyn’s stories from her travels around the world. “I have been fortunate enough to travel the world and be exposed to a multitude of culinary dishes. I wanted to share easy
‘‘
recipes inspired by my travels with kids who may not have been able to experience this,” Kaitlyn says. “While I started writing this book in 2017, it felt fitting to release it during a time when no one was able to travel. While it is important to acknowledge that not all of the recipes are authentic to each cuisine, but inspired by common ingredients, I hope that readers will be inspired to learn more about other cultures and try new foods.” Easy Eatings has been reviewed by MasterChef Junior winners and a Chopped Teen grand champion. Kaitlyn is donating all profits from the book to Save the Children, a charity providing food to children impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
While I started writing this book in 2017, it felt fitting to release it during a time when no one was able to travel… I hope that readers will be inspired to learn more about other cultures and try new foods.”
Michaela Wang ’21 Broomed, Blessed, and Braised In her book Broomed, Blessed, and Braised: Celebrating Traditional Chinese Holidays, Michaela Wang ’21 invites readers to take a deep dive into Chinese holiday customs, legends and dishes. Michaela’s book highlights each of the eight traditional Chinese holidays – the Chinese New Year, Lantern Festival, Qingming Festival, Dragonboat Festival, Qixi Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, Double-Ninth Festival, and Winter Solstice – and explores how each has evolved across geographical regions. The holidays also serve as lenses through which to study broader Chinese culture, the arc of China’s historical periods, and the culture’s most ingrained societal values. “I started researching and writing BBB in my ninth grade at NA, so the pandemic did not serve as the catalyst of my work,”
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I SPRING 2021
– Kaitlyn Chee ’23
Easy Eatings: The Book for Kids Whose Parents Don’t Cook
by Kaitlyn Chee ’23. Silvy Zhou ’21
designed the cover art for the book.
Michaela explains. “However, pandemicrelated xenophobia against Asian Americans reinforced the reason why I wrote it: to ignite my audience with a more multidimensional perspective of Chinese culture.” Michaela collaborated with Meilo So, an award-winning children’s book illustrator, to further enhance her storytelling through the book’s designs. Asked why she focused on bringing attention to Chinese holidays, Michaela explains, “Cultural
‘‘
…Pandemic-related xenophobia against Asian Americans reinforced the reason why I wrote it: to ignite my audience with a more multidimensional perspective of Chinese culture.” – Michaela Wang ’21
Michael Pyo ’22 Living Zine When the COVID-19 pandemic caused the nation to quarantine in 2020, Michael Pyo ’22 creatively responded to the situation: he founded Living Zine, a digital magazine to support his fellow creatives. “When my busy personal life came to a halt, I had two choices: to be depressed or to utilize an opportunity to connect with a broader community of young people who have so much creativity in their lives,” Michael says. “I believed I could collect pieces created by talented youth and give them a platform to publish their work.” Living Zine has evolved into a multi-media zine for young creators, with submissions shared by artists and writers worldwide, from California to Australia. The goal of the publication is to give underrepre-
‘‘
celebrations play an intrinsic role in our appreciation and desire to learn about different cultures. Especially for many first-generation American teens, holidays may serve as a reconnection point to our parents’ mainland. Without these flavorful bites of culture throughout the year, sacred cultural traditions could go extinct. Thus, my mission was to utilize Chinese holidays as a window to understand the broader Chinese history, theology, philosophy and cuisine.”
sented voices opportunities to showcase their talents, which has resulted in work from a diverse community of young people. To date, Living Zine has published two issues, with a total 158 pages of art, writing and photography by more than 100 creators. The Living Zine team, led by Michael as its editor-in-chief, is composed of more than 300 members from 43 countries, 34 U.S. states, and 109 colleges and universities worldwide.
where creative young people can come together and share their gifts and talents and their hopes and dreams for a better world.” To subscribe to Living Zine, visit https://issuu.com/livingzine.
“During this challenging time, I hope Living Zine will help lift people’s spirits and encourage them to tap into boundless creativity and thought,” Michael says. “We are glad to provide a space where so many young artists, writers and photographers have the opportunity to share their work with the world. I am even more encouraged to grow and maintain this space
When my busy personal life came to a halt, I had two choices: to be depressed or to utilize an opportunity to connect with a broader community of young people who have so much creativity in their lives.” – Michael Pyo ’22
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
20 YEARS LATER:
NA Celebrates The Off-Campus Study Program From excursions in the Colorado Rockies to studies of maritime life on the Maine
coast, Newark Academy’s off-campus study program has enabled approximately 125
students to expand their intellectual exploration through its six distinct educational
opportunities. On the 20th anniversary of the program, LUMEN looks at the many
ways in which the program has offered memorable experiences for NA students.
THE IDEA of introducing oppor-
for permission to do this 20
2003. Current Head of School
site away from the NA campus
others to do the same.”
directed School Year Abroad
tunities to spend a semester at a began with a simple proposal
from Ben Grant ’02. Ben’s parents, David N. Grant III, former NA Board of Trustee member and his wife Nancy, served as
co-directors of the Mountain School, a semester school in
rural Vermont, so Ben grew up familiar with the concept of
off-campus study. By the time he reached the age of 17 and
was an NA student, he desired a similar experience to those he had witnessed as a child.
“As much as I’d like to take
credit for a creative idea, I was literally born into it. It was a
very familiar concept and place to me,” Ben says. “I admire the
adventurousness of all those for whom it was a bit more of a leap into the unknown. In all hon-
esty, I had no idea when I asked
‘‘
years ago that it would inspire Ben initially approached
Upper School Principal Richard
DiBianca, Ph.D. with the idea to study off-campus. Rich, who
now spearheads the program,
recalls those early conversations. “I remember the faculty and
administration at the time were quick to understand it and see the value in it, and they were game to work with me on
things like how credits and
requirements would reconcile
between NA and the semester program,” Rich says.
With the support of Penny
Riegelman, NA’s head of school at the time, Rich approached
the NA Board of Trustees with a proposal to formalize the off-
campus study program, which
the Board officially approved in
I admire the adventurousness of all those for whom it was a bit more of a leap into the unknown. In all honesty, I had no idea when I asked for permission to do this 20 years ago that it would inspire others to do the same.” – Ben Grant ’02
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I SPRING 2021
Donald M. Austin, who once
in France, came to NA in 2007 understanding the value of education infused with a global mindset.
NA now consistently offers
experiential learning opportunities at six off-campus loca-
tions to approximately nine
students each year. Students can engage in outdoor and
wilderness education at Alzar School in Cascade, Idaho;
conduct aquaculture research
and explore Bahamian art and
culture at The Island School;
learn about the challenges and rewards of farm life at Maine
Coast Semester at Chewonki;
study foreign policy-making
and meet top presidential and congressional advisors at the
School for Ethics and Global Leadership in Washington,
D.C.; make the outdoors their
classroom at High Mountain
Institute in the Colorado
Rockies; or spend a full year overseas through School
Year Abroad.
Among the many hallmarks of
these off-campus programs are
time, when students learn to
teaches adaptability,” he says.
Ben believes that the program’s
company, observe the environ-
reality and you have only a
unique approach to education.
be comfortable with their own
ment around them, and journal
to process their thoughts.
“During those four-month
semesters, our students are
able to mature as young people at a greater rate,” Rich says.
“They are problem-solving in a different way and encouraged
Dr. Richard DiBianca specialized curricula and attention to student development.
Some locations are community
based, with each student taking on a particular job, role or
responsibility. Others encourage periods of individual reflective
to take risks. They aren’t doing
“You drop into this alternate
quick three or four months to
make the most of it. That skill –
the ability to adjust quickly to change – is one of the most valuable I can imagine in a
world where the pace of change seems to be accelerating.”
Off-campus experiences have proven popular among NA
this for their parents or solely
students over the years, and
growing as individuals.”
meet the demands of students
academic reasons. They are
Ben shared a similar sentiment
when looking back on his experience in the off-campus pro-
gram. “On top of whatever the academic curriculum happens to be, this kind of experience
the program has evolved to
seeking summer experiences
as well. In order to ensure that it is equitable and inclusive,
the program also supports the needs of NA students who receive financial aid.
success can be credited to NA’s “I think the fact that it has
become a successful program is testament to the school’s
openness to new ideas and proof of its desire to create
meaningful educational experiences for its students,” Ben
says. “It’s also strong evidence
that off-campus study is simply a good idea, and one that’s far under-used in the context of
high school. I think that spending time immersed in an unfamiliar environment is more
impactful the younger you are, and if you’re fortunate enough
to have the option, there’s no reason to wait until college
(or later) for a self-imposed change of scenery.”
Riaan Dhankhar ’21
I attended the School for Ethics and Global Leadership (SEGL) from January to May 2020 and had an incredible experience. I am passionate
about international relations and knew right away that attending SEGL was the right decision. The school had an ethos that made it easy
for me to jump right in.
I was with a small group of 24
lining was meeting with many
The whole process does come
where we lived with faculty in
ier to make those connections
my senior project, where my
students, a small community
the same house. The school also has an active alumni network, which adds to its strong com-
munity. I was able to meet with leaders in international rela-
tions, visit the Indian Embassy, and pursue many of my areas
of interest. The highlight of my experience took place on my fourth day when I had the
opportunity to go to the Senate
to see part of the first impeachment trial of then President Trump.
After spring break, SEGL moved online because of COVID-19,
and it was rough not being able to see everyone while in quar-
antine. Academically, the silver
high-profile people. It was eassince everyone was home, so I
met with several U.S. Senators
and members of the U.S. House of Representatives. These
opportunities helped to make
up for the lack of an in-person experience. After our unusual
semester, when COVID restrictions changed, I was able to
visit other SEGL students and faculty, and those close relationships were still present.
I also brought unique and interesting experiences back to NA. I am now one of the student
SEGL ambassadors, helping to
encourage other NA students to apply to the program, so they
can enjoy a similar experience.
full circle. I am now working on SEGL experience is also proving beneficial. For the project, my
hope is to become an intern or research assistant at a think tank in Washington, D.C.
The biggest lesson that I learned
from this experience and the
civil discourse at SEGL is that it is
okay to be wrong, especially in
today’s politics. Today, there’s
an expectation that you can’t
show weakness. I learned to
say what I believe in even if it is
considered wrong. In actuality,
this is a sign of strength.
Riaan Dhankhar ’21,
top row, second from left
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
James McCullough ’21
that most students, including
learning in a different environment with different people. I have
semester. As we had discov-
I wanted to spend a semester away so that I could experience
attended NA since sixth grade, so I jumped on the opportunity to
go away for a semester and switch things up. The Island School caught my
in history class we studied
being in and around the water.
history. The close community
eye right away because I love I spend my summers sailing
competitively, and fishing and swimming off of Cape Cod.
The Island School actually gave me all these opportunities,
along with many adventures outside my comfort zone.
The classes are unlike any I have ever taken before. All classes are based on what is around you. For example, in science class we studied the marine
ecology of the reefs and mangroves around Eleuthera, and
Bahamian rather than U.S. that you build with the
Bahamians around you
immerses you in a completely different way of life.
Disconnecting from technology, which was a requirment
at The Island School, was very
weird at first, but within a week I rarely thought about my
phone. I would say the only time when I was annoyed by not
being connected to the internet was when the NBA and NHL
playoffs were going on. I found
Michael “Mikey” Marcus ’21
me, were sad to be getting our phones back at the end of the
ered, people get too attached to
their phones and lose sight of
what is right in front of them.
After coming back home, I was a different person with different values in life. I left The
Island School feeling more confident in the work I do, whether it is academically or on the
soccer field. I came away with
so many new friends who I still keep in touch with and plan to stay connected to for a long
time. I still keep in touch with
my teachers as well, which has allowed me to have another
semester away, if I saw something that blew my mind, my
first instinct would be to grab
my phone and take a picture or video. I came back and found myself never doing that, but
support system outside of NA.
instead appreciating what is in
experience was to simply “be
hand again.
My biggest takeaway from my
front of me because I might
never be able to witness it first
In Fall 2018, during my sophomore year, I went to the Alzar School,
While some of our classes on
of resilience. After making
Chile. I decided to study off campus because I wanted to experience
traditional in style, those in
and slipping into a river in the
spending about three months in Idaho and about five weeks in
learning in a less typical environment in an unconventional way. I chose the Alzar School specifically because of how the outdoor
experiences and cultural exchange opportunities were integrated with the academics to create an interactive, well-rounded and rigorous educational experience.
the Idaho campus were more Chile and on our backpacking and whitewater expeditions
were more focused on applying what we were learning to how we were living.
Though it sounds cliché, my
semester off campus taught me to live in the moment and to prioritize the things that I
value. As a learner, this means
Park, I learned to bounce back and push forward.
My time away has also made my time back at NA more
meaningful. By prioritizing
what brings me the most joy, I have been able to avoid
spreading myself too thin,
which has allowed me to be a
I am passionate about instead
Additionally, while there have
my time evenly between all of the subjects. On a personal level, those two takeaways
have allowed me to be generally happier and less stressed. While at the Alzar School,
I discovered the importance
I SPRING 2021
middle of Patagonia National
better and more dedicated
of forcing myself to distribute
LUMEN
wrong turns in the hills of Idaho
that I now allow myself to
spend more time on topics that
8
where your feet are.” Before my
member of the NA community. definitely been times when I
have felt emotionally drained
during this year of learning in a pandemic, the resilience that I
learned at the Alzar School has allowed me to continue being an active participant in my classes and school groups.
CONNECTIONS & INNOVATION:
NA Team Helps Seniors Navigate COVID-Impacted College Searches
As with almost everything since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the new normal in Newark Academy’s College
Counseling Office is anything but business as usual. With no in-person group meetings and no college representatives on campus due to health and safety precautions, college counseling at NA has been reimagined – and enhanced – in many ways this year.
extended our office hours and availability to evenings and weekends in an effort to get them the facts and figures and to help them feel connected.” Senior Kaitlin Weiss ’21 is grateful for the invaluable support and comfort she received from the College Counseling Office despite the challenges of the pandemic.
NA’s college counseling team guides students through the 2020–21 school year. “Parents and students craved information as so many things were in flux,” says Director of College Counseling Kerry Winiarski, whose team works each year to guide NA students along the complex path to college enrollment. Kerry explains that building relationships with NA families and tapping into external resources took on renewed importance, as there were many uncertainties about what Fall 2021 would be like for students and what the application process for each college would entail. Although
NA’s counselors continued to encourage students to find their own best fit, it became clear that the College Counseling staff would play a greater role in facilitating that process.
“We are trying to be as accessible as possible,” Kerry says of their ongoing work. “We meet with individuals and families in person, or on Zoom, and have often
“Mrs. Winiarski always made time to meet with me when I had questions or concerns and was a consistently warm and smiling presence throughout an otherwise daunting process,” Kaitlin says. “It was extremely helpful to have someone who knew my character reading my college essays. Her advice was always insightful, and she helped me refine my writing without losing my voice.” (CONTINUED)
We meet with individuals and families in person, or on Zoom, and have often extended our office hours and availability to evenings and weekends in an effort to get them the facts and figures and to help them feel connected.” – Kerry Winiarski
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
COLLEGE COUNSELING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9)
In addition to its strengthened connections with NA families, the College Counseling Office also increased its external partnerships and communications, providing real-time information and resources about virtual college visits and the application process. “I was very fortunate to have gone through the lacrosse recruiting process throughout 2019, so I was able to visit most of my schools before the COVID-19 pandemic,” Kaitlin says. “I know for a lot of my friends not being able to visit schools in person was a concern. As the College Counseling Office navigated this year’s process themselves, they gave us constant updates about testing and set up programs for us.” Kerry explains that her office regularly connects with college admission representatives to understand how application review processes are evolving, including new test-optional policies. The College Counseling Office then shares this information through weekly emails to juniors and seniors and their parents. Some of the office’s external partnerships were newly forged to give students greater access to universities’ and
NA seniors find support and enjoy good times in the college counseling office. colleges’ information, workshops and programming. Other partnerships came from a more familiar source: NA’s in-college alumni. Nearly 100 NA alumni are currently volunteering to help support current students on their journey to higher education. NA alumni near and far are serving as accessible and relatable contacts for NA students seeking to understand the real “ins and outs” of the colleges and universities that they are considering. “We are so grateful to have a wonderful alumni network that truly cares about NA,” says Kerry. “This is one of those times in which having a community goes beyond individual successes.”
When standardized testing presented a new challenge, the College Counseling Office found another solution: bring the test to NA. Although most colleges moved to testoptional applications for 2021, and although several area testing facilities have closed, many NA students still hoped for the opportunity to take the tests to strengthen their applications. “Administering standardized testing at NA has been a huge win for our students,” Kerry says. “They know the campus and they’re familiar with us. They feel more comfortable taking the test here, which is an added benefit for them.”
Mrs. Winiarski always made time to meet with me when I had questions or concerns and was a consistently warm and smiling presence throughout an otherwise daunting process. It was extremely helpful to have someone who knew my character reading my college essays. Her advice was always insightful, and she helped me refine my writing without losing my voice.” – Kaitlin Weiss ’21
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I SPRING 2021
Kerry explains that she and her team are fortunate to be able to pivot and help NA students during this time of even greater need. “We don’t have all of the answers, unfortunately,” she says. “What we can do, though, is provide support and encouragement and continue to educate ourselves as well as our students and parents. At the end of the day, it brings us joy knowing that they can leave NA and head in their desired direction. We’ll always do whatever we can to help them get on that path.”
NA NEWS
I
ATHLETICS
LEADERSHIP FOR LIFE:
Minuteman Team Captains Gain Valuable Experience On and Off the Field Today’s teenagers are, in many ways, experiencing a vastly different
adolescence from that which their parents and grandparents went through. Still, despite the ubiquitous presence of cell phones in their
hands, many students continue to value opportunities to take on
traditional leadership roles. For Newark Academy students, being
elected class or school president, earning the lead role in the winter
musical, and being named captain of one of the 24 varsity athletic
teams are considered great honors and important responsibilities.
›››
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
I
ATHLETICS
These roles, and others like them, have staying
power because of the benefits students receive
‘‘
from taking on the additional duties and
responsibilities that come with service.
For students who take on the role of team
captain, the lessons they learn from leading
their peers can last a lifetime. NA’s Director of
Athletics John Amosa and the NA varsity coaching staff
consider leadership development to be an essential aspect of
the student-athlete experience and are always working with
team captains to help them bring the concepts and skills they
learn in the classroom to the fields of play.
“Two years ago, Newark Academy committed to expanding our
definition of learning beyond content mastery to skill development, through adoption of the Six Cs skills rubric,” John says. “Every teacher and coach who interacts with our students is seeking opportunities to help them develop skills in critical thinking,
creativity, collaboration, communication, cultural competency,
and character.” According to John, that rubric is also the perfect recipe for a successful team captain.
Building on the assumption that leadership takes many forms,
John notes that a team captain needn’t be the best athlete or the
loudest voice on a team. “We remind our student-athletes that a captain can lead from any spot on the roster,” he says. “Captains
are the student-athletes who embrace challenges for themselves and their team, and they are willing to pursue team goals before personal athletic accomplishments.”
John and the Minuteman coaching staff recognize that young people
are not yet fully developed as students or as leaders. To support the
leadership development of NA student-athletes, the Athletic
‘‘
Boys’ Soccer – Max Alter ’22, Zac Strain ’22 Girls’ Soccer – Ava Cole ’22, Kate Fishbone ’22, Zoe Hermans ’23
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Department has updated policies related to team captain selections
and a set of expectations for all incoming captains. “We encourage our
team captains to think about what kind of leader they want to be and
then to share that with the coach and other adults involved in their
program,” John says. “Then we try to mentor them throughout their
time as captain, making sure that they reflect on their role and seek to
improve not only themselves but also their team.”
Among the important leadership habits instilled in team captains are
those of celebrating successes, holding themselves and their team-
mates collectively accountable for outcomes, and bouncing back after
disappointment, whether individual or collective. “I try to remind our
student-athletes and especially our captains that NA believes in a
growth mindset – for everyone,” John says. “Today’s performance or
behavior is not forever. Tomorrow you have the opportunity to listen
to feedback and to be better: a better person, a better leader, and a
better team.”
The experience of being a Minuteman team captain has given many NA alumni valuable skills that they continue to use
long after graduation. Read on for reflections from former Minutemen who appreciate the lessons they learned
from their time on the field or court.
Every teacher and coach who interacts with our students is seeking opportunities to help them develop skills in critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, communication, cultural competency, and character.”
Field Hockey – Tess Kesler ’22, Lauren Hardman ’22
12
We encourage our team captains to think about what kind of leader they want to be and then to share that with the coach and other adults involved in their program. Then we try to mentor them throughout their time as captain, making sure that they reflect on their role and seek to improve not only themselves but also their team.”
I SPRING 2021
NA TEAM CAPTAINS – FALL 2021 Girls’ Tennis – Melanie Kramarchuk ’22, Hilary Adelman ’23, Kaya Rajparia ’22
Football – Chase Clark ’22, Logan Pak ’22, Jelani Dean ’23
Boys’ Cross Country – Max Falkin ’22, Max Gorbarty ’22, Andy Nagpal ’22
Girls’ Cross Country – Emily Swope ’22, Sophia Chen ’22
LEADERSHIP FOR LIFE
DANIELLE GARROD ’98
Although Danielle Garrod ’98 did not recognize it at the time, she became a master juggler while at Newark Academy.
AS A THREE-SPORT team
her experiences at NA prepared
softball) who was relied upon
challenges. “You adjust a lot
captain (soccer, basketball and
as a leader in every season,
Danielle honed her juggling
affairs at Warner
Music Group, Danielle
better to college, when you’re on
skills she learned as a
York office to working remotely
guide her team at Warner. These
“There’s been a lot of time try-
your own for the first time, if you
relies on the leadership
Minuteman team captain to
skills as she learned to balance
have learned to manage your
alongside rigorous classes and
ability to compartmentalize and
navigate the complexities and
cate time to academics helped
merchandising, digital distribu-
her commitment to athletics
involvement in several clubs,
including the Minuteman
Society. “It was all balance,”
Danielle recalls. “With my
classes, my teams and the other
things I was involved in at NA,
doing all of it was a matter of
balance, and it was an impor-
tant lesson that helped me once
I went to college.”
As she pursued a bachelor’s
degree at Cornell University and then her J.D. at Columbia Law School, Danielle realized that
team during the
switch from being
her well for those subsequent
time,” she says. “Having the
recognizing the need to dedime when I went to Cornell.”
Danielle’s success managing
her time was just one of the
valuable lessons she gained as
a team captain. After earning
her law degree at Columbia, she
headed west to obtain a master
of law in entertainment and
music law from the University of
California Los Angeles (UCLA).
In her current role as vice presi-
dent of business and legal
skills have allowed Danielle to
for much of the past year.
ing to be a calming voice,” she
says. “I want them to know that
ever-evolving landscapes of
the company is thinking about
tion and physical distribution
leader to keep the members of
for several record labels.
“I’m big on trust and communi-
cation,” Danielle says of her
leadership style. “I think that’s
very important in being a leader
and motivating a group of peo-
ple to follow you and to be posi-
tive in the face of challenges.
At the Academy, the ultimate
decision-makers were the
coaches, but being a team cap-
tain taught me that building
trust and fostering communi-
cation – by being friendly with
everyone on the team, listening
to teammates, being encourag-
ing – can really help drive a
group toward a common goal.”
Danielle cites the disruption
brought on by the COVID-19
pandemic as an example of
when she had to draw on her
leadership skills to reassure her
‘‘
together at Warner’s New
their safety. It was my job as a
my staff informed, since things
were changing rapidly. In a large
organization, there can be ‘black holes’ where it is hard to know
what is going on at a number of levels. I feel it is important to
bring calmness to the situation
by telling my team what I know,
what I’m hearing, and what decisions are being made.”
Danielle cites her time at NA
as the source of these values:
“My belief in the importance of
communication comes from
being in a leadership position
on Newark Academy teams and
from practicing good commu-
nications with my coaches and
teammates. I thought then, and
believe now, that communica-
tion is one of the focal points for
being an effective leader.”
My belief in the importance of communication comes from being in a leadership position on Newark Academy teams and from practicing good communications with my coaches and teammates.”
NEWARK ACADEMY
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ATHLETICS
LEADERSHIP FOR LIFE
EVA OSTROWSKY ’05
When Eva Ostrowsky ’05 began her job search after graduating from Cornell University in 2009 she couldn’t believe how frequently employers asked her about teamwork.
GIVEN HER YEARS as a four-
Beginning her professional life
Academy, Eva found the
soon decided that her passion
sport athlete at Newark
interview process as easy as a pre-game walk-through.
“One of the job descriptions
described exactly what being on a team required and I remem-
ber thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, I feel like I’m cheating,’” Eva recalls. “Interviewers asked me to tell
about a time I had worked with
in the finance industry, Eva
was not to be found on Wall Street but in hallways and
classrooms similar to those
where she spent her adolescence. Today Eva serves as
the director of counseling and wellness at The Hun School of Princeton, an independent
boarding and day school for
grades 6-12. As an educational professional supporting stu-
‘‘
that key skills can be learned
and honed after the academic portion of the day ends.
“I learned resilience and hard
work and collaboration as a part
been in a difficult situation.
One asked me to tell about a time when something went
well for me but didn’t go well for a friend and how I dealt with that. My time as a student-
athlete at Newark Academy and Cornell gave me a lot of
those life experiences in games and practices.”
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president in 2004 – 2005.
“NA prepared me to figure out
how to manage a lot of different things all at the same time,”
Eva says. “I also learned how to
advocate for myself and to lean on other people for help when
I needed it.”
NA’s close-knit community is
something that Eva cherished
while here. “I remember talking to teachers about our field
NA prepared me to figure out how to manage a lot of different things all at the same time. I also learned how to advocate for myself and to lean on other people for help when I needed it.”
dents, she knows first-hand
a team or a time when I had
time to serve as school council
of being on a team and serving as a captain,” Eva recalls. A
four-year member of the NA field hockey team and team
captain in the 2004 season, she also played lacrosse and divided time during her winter seasons between winter track and
swimming. And when she
wasn’t in class or at a team
practice, Eva managed to find
hockey games, dealing with a
win or a loss. Having others to
help process those things and to help you figure out how to
balance all that with schoolwork are things I appreciate now.” Those relationships
are among the things that
ultimately drew Eva back to
a career working in independent schools.
“NA was a place that taught
me that a community is where people can support you and
believe in you for doing more
than one thing,” Eva recalls.
“When teachers showed up at
my lacrosse games, I felt really
good about how I fit into the
community. Maybe they came
because I was a good student in their class and I participated. But they also came because
they wanted to see me run fast on the lacrosse field and help
my team there. The NA com-
munity pushed me athletically as well as in the classroom.”
Making the transition to The
Hun School after five years as
dean of middle school student culture at the Pingry School,
Eva has had to draw upon her
experiences as a team-builder
and leader during an unprecedented year for schools across
the United States. In many
ways, Eva’s new position at Hun
draws on all of her experiences as an independent school stu-
dent, student-athlete and educational professional. “Taking
on this role at Hun has been an amazing move for me,” she
says. “Hun is a boarding school, so I live on campus with my
husband and children. Between being a dorm parent, the director of counseling and wellness, and a mom to three little ones,
I am not coaching right now, but
I am building relationships with students in new ways. The cur-
rent COVID restrictions mean students can’t ‘drop in’ as I’m
told they usually do, but even
under these circumstances, it is
such a welcoming place. I am so
excited to be part of another
fantastic community.”
LEADERSHIP FOR LIFE
WHIT HARWOOD ’11
Whit Hartwood ’11 has had a lifelong passion for sports and competed as a two-sport athlete in basketball and lacrosse at Newark Academy.
WHEN HE WAS a lacrosse team
idea that ‘It’s not the size of the
gaining career experience
For Whit, working in the busi-
former NA director of athletics)
the fight in the dog that mat-
launching new products in the
fulfillment of a lifelong dream.
After a college internship at
landed a job that he believes he
captain, his head coach (and
Ted Gilbreath convinced Whit
that he should pursue opportunities to play college lacrosse, which he went on to do for
Colby College. Yet Whit recalls
how his competitive spirit was primarily shaped by his years on the NA basketball team – an underdog team that won
back-to-back conference titles during his time at NA, in 2008 and 2009.
“We played a really tough
schedule, and we were a tough team,” Whit says. “In terms of preparing me for college and
everything else, that experience was the epitome of the
dog in the fight, but the size of ters.’ Our team was made up
of guys who were underdogs
and overachievers, both in the
game and outside of the game.” Whit notes that the experience taught him the strength that comes from being a part of a
group effort. “We played with what and who we had on the
team, and the sum of the parts
was greater than what any one
of us could have done individu-
ally. That stuck with me through
college athletics and beyond.”
Since graduating from Colby in 2015, Whit has remained con-
analyzing, developing and
technology and media spheres. ESPN during the 2014 FIFA
World Cup (soccer), Whit spent time at Fox Sports, NBC News and Peacock TV. Earlier this
ness of sports has been the
In his position at Buzzer, he has has been preparing for since his playing days at NA and Colby.
On a recent LinkedIn post, Whit noted, “In so many ways, this
year, Whit accepted a position
feels like a convergence of
manager at Buzzer, a mobile-
career to date. I feel extremely
as senior product operations
first, live sports platform built on micropayments, interest-
driven mobile notifications and authentication. Buzzer was named to Fast Company’s
everything I’ve touched in my
grateful for the opportunity to work with an intentional and thoughtful team of industry
leaders.”
2021 list of Most Innovative Companies.
nected to the world of sports,
‘‘
We played with what and who we had on the team, and the sum of the parts was greater than what any one of us could have done individually. That stuck with me through college athletics and beyond.”
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
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LEADERSHIP FOR LIFE
SEAN ALLEN ’03
When asked about his experience as a Newark Academy soccer captain, it takes Sean Allen ’03 a moment or two to reconnect with that time in his life.
For Sean, pre-season and prac-
we’d won! But he was teaching
that energy I need.” Sean also
The heat of mid-August, the
nent and to uphold our stan-
every member brings to a team.
tices were as formative as any
game experience he had at NA.
running of sprints after a game
poorly played – times like those that he wasn’t sure he could get through are the moments that stand out for Sean. “When I
was an underclassman, our pre-
season practices were captaindriven, and they were hard,”
he recalls. “I now think of it as a
kind of ‘trauma-bonding.’ You
get through it with your team-
mates and that bond is solidified. Then, when it comes to
crunch time in a game, you draw on the experiences you’ve had with your teammates. That’s
BUT ONCE HE
STARTS talking
about his days playing
as a Minuteman, the
memories come flooding back
and Sean easily pinpoints the
valuable training he received, which he still relies on today. “First of all, I didn’t look like
someone who would be a cap-
tain,” Sean remembers, noting
that he was so skinny as a ninth grader that his mother didn’t even want him to play soccer
out of a fear that he would be
injured. “I wasn’t the star of the team. I wasn’t the best striker.
I was a defender, and it was my
job to complement and support our midfielders and forwards.
I also wasn’t loud. I tried to lead by example.”
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when you take your effort into
a higher gear.”
Sean credits NA’s varsity head
coach at the time, Warren Butler, for teaching him a valuable lesson: “respect the process,” in
any effort. “We played a game against Oratory Prep, and we
were the much better team,”
Sean recalls. “We won, but the score was much closer than it
should have been and much too
close for Coach Butler’s comfort.
At the end of the game, he made us run sprints. I didn’t understand it at the time – I mean,
‘‘
us to respect the game, respect
the process, respect every oppodards. I’ll never forget that.”
Today, in his role as relationship manager for Fidelity Investments, Sean practices daily
much of what he learned as an
NA student-athlete and captain.
Because each year of NA soccer brought new players to the
team, he learned to bond quickly with people that he didn’t know
cites his time as a Minuteman
for teaching him the value that
“We’re not all going to be good at doing everything, on the field or in the office. Once you under-
stand your own strengths and
what you bring to the team, then you come to trust the strengths
of the others around you.”
Looking back, Sean says he felt
that being named a team captain was a tremendous honor
and hadn’t chosen to work with.
and a responsibility he took
with people – the people I work
cism,” he recalls. “I didn’t do that
“In my work today, the quicker I
can make authentic connections with and my clients – the more
successful I will be and my company will be.” He also notes that part of making that connection is asking others for help. “I am
transparent with my teammates and my manager. If I’m not sure
how to handle something, I don’t hesitate to reach out to others.” Perseverance is another trait
that Sean gained from his days as an NA athlete. “Just like the
times when I thought I was too
tired on the field, there are days
seriously. “I learned how to give teammates constructive critiin front of others and I learned how to give what’s called the
‘feedback sandwich,’ where you offer a positive, a constructive point about how the person
can improve, and then another
positive, like ‘You’ve got this.’” Another lasting impact from
his NA soccer days is his love for the game. “I still play soccer!”
he says. “I play on a team in an over-30 league. Today my
teammates are guys with wives, kids and mortgages, but it is
and times in my professional life
the same type of camaraderie
dig deep in those times and find
long as I can.”
when my energy lags. Playing
soccer at NA taught me how to
that I felt when I played at NA. I’m going to keep playing as
We’re not all going to be good at doing everything, on the field or in the office. Once you understand your own strengths and what you bring to the team, then you come to trust the strengths of the others around you.”
FROM NA STUDENT-ATHLETES TO
Playing at the Collegiate Level
Across the athletic fields on the NA campus, you can often find student-athletes showcasing their athletic prowess in a
variety of sports – from football and track to field hockey and soccer. While all Minutemen are prepared to potentially play a
sport in college, several NA seniors have chosen to continue their athletic careers as National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) scholar-athletes. NA seniors who have committed to becoming college athletes beginning in Fall 2021 include:
Will Charvala ’21
Jordan McCray-Robinson ’21
Thomas Clancy ’21
Washington College Lacrosse
Fordham University Track and Field
Cornell University Baseball
FOLLOW THE MINUTEMEN AT: Twitter: @NAMinutemen
Instagram: @NA_Minutemen Facebook: @NAMinutemen
Kaitlin Weiss ’21
Sam Goidel ’21
Bowdoin College Lacrosse
University of Chicago Tennis NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
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EQUITY AND INCLUSION
E&I CONVERSATIONS
Fuel Change at NA
‘‘
They have allowed all of our students, particularly our students of color, to share their thoughts about critical issues.”
It is hard to believe that it has been nearly a year since the NA community
– Gardy J. Guiteau
came together at the Equity and Inclusion Summit of July 2020. The summit
remains a pivotal event in NA history, not only for outlining key action steps
for creating greater equity and inclusion at NA, but it also expedited opportunities for open and transparent conversations during which all community
While some of these conversations have helped students address their
members will know that their perspectives are valued and heard.
experiences with intersectionality,
In the past few months, NA has
notes on their shared experiences.
storming of the U.S. Capitol on
held several events to foster greater
By the end of the fall term, students of
January 6, 2021, the Office of Equity
dialogue among students, faculty
color in the Middle School and Upper
and Inclusion and NA faculty members
and staff, alumni and parents.
School met separately with Head of
held meetings to allow students to
School Donald M. Austin and NA
discuss and process the event. The NA
administrators to discuss E&I at NA.
Students of Color affinity group sub-
others have helped students to make meaning of current events. After the
“There are many existing points of entry into these conversations about equity and inclusion at NA,” says
“These spaces were needed and nec-
Director of Equity and Inclusion
essary, and these events have been
sequently held a meeting focused on mindfulness and self-care.
Gardy J. Guiteau. “But I knew that
well received,” says Gardy. “They have
“We began the meeting with a simple
there were missing spaces and oppor-
allowed all of our students, particularly
meditation giving us the time and space
tunities for more engagement. We still
our students of color, to share their
to become centered and relaxed,”
needed to build capacity among differ-
thoughts about critical issues.”
says humanities teacher Callie Prince,
ent groups in the NA community and create supportive connections between each of these groups.”
Speaking With Students At the beginning of the school year, the Newark Academy Equity and Inclusion Team partnered with several student clubs to offer a series of Open Equity and Inclusion meetings in the Upper School to address a variety of topics. In addition to these conversations, the Upper School affinity groups – NA LGBTQ Students, NA Students of Color, Young Men of NA, and Young Women of NA – offered greater opportunities and space for students identifying within those identity groups to come together and exchange
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Students come together to discuss equity and inclusion at NA.
who joined the NA faculty this year (see article on page 32). “We then facilitated a discussion for the students, focusing on a series of questions: What brings us comfort these days? What is self-love? What gets in the way of self-love? During these challenging times, what do our relationships and our community look like? And how do we build more community, especially at NA?” These conversations have also highlighted just how nuanced and multifaceted racism is and the importance of having allies and accomplices. As anti-Asian violence increased nationally, the Asian Diversity Club, with support from the Office of Equity and Inclusion, gathered to discuss those troubling developments. “It helps to have these discussions, and it’s great to see the community and ally participation,” says Elaine Choy ’21. “It shows that the community cares. I’ve seen an increase in these conversations since my freshman year. It’s good to know that students have a voice and can bring up the social justice issues that they are passionate about. These small changes in the school can create a greater impact in the community and outside NA.” Alexis Romay, NA language teacher and E&I team member and advisor, also believes that these conversations strengthen the NA community. “Supporting students of color and
NA alumnae share how they broke into their industries and advanced their careers during “She Knew She Could,” an event in celebration of Women’s History Month in March.
Forging Faculty Dialogue NA faculty and staff have continued throughout the year to participate in professional development on E&I issues in order to be effective facilitators of such discussions and act as models of NA’s Community Commitments for Belonging. Many are also taking part in a thorough review of
even more difficult for people of color who live, work and study in predominantly white institutions – without alienating white students and colleagues requires a lot of tact and skill,” says Alexis. “It also requires courage
should consider the opportunities to have these important conversations based on the topic of the lesson that day or provide students time to reflect on current events that may influence the learning environment.” After the insurrection at the Capitol,
existing administrative policies at NA
Rochelle amended a lecture she was
through a lens of equity and inclusion.
giving on Reconstruction to include
“Faculty, first and foremost, need to create classroom communities in which students feel safe and comfortable enough to engage in these types of conversations,” says Humanities Department Chair and Upper School Equity and Inclusion Coordinator
some images from the recent event and to draw historical connections between our current political divides and those during the era of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Doing so allowed the class to move forward with content while also giving space (CONTINUED)
addressing issues that are essential to their lives – at a time that has been
Rochelle Outlaw Edwards. “Rather than forcing the conversation, they
‘‘
Faculty, first and foremost, need to create classroom communities in which students feel safe and comfortable enough to engage in these types of conversations.” – Rochelle Outlaw Edwards
and clarity of thought.”
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E&I CONVERSATIONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19)
Spring 2021,a new affinity group for
about opportunity. She believes that
parents aimed at supporting families
hosting NA events at times that all
with members of varied physical,
parents can attend is another E&I
mental and emotional abilities. for students to discuss their feelings and concerns around the insurrection. “Cultural competence should be a
“As an NA parent of color, I am pleased with the direction that NA is going in as it relates to equity and inclusion,”
requirement for educators. If you
says NAPA Communications Chair
don’t have an awareness of how social
and incoming NAPA Vice President
identities intersect and how they are
Leigh Slaton Mumford. “NA has
connected to power and access, that
been supporting the Black and Latino
effort. “The ability to have events virtually and the idea of scheduling them in the evening, I believe, afforded the opportunity for working parents to participate,” Leigh says. “With these options, participation and attendance noticeably increased.” Still, Leigh notes that while NA has made progress in its efforts to become more equitable and inclusive, there
‘‘
As an NA parent of color, I am pleased with the direction that NA is going in as it relates to equity and inclusion.” – Leigh Slaton Mumford
will be reflected in what you teach and
is more work that must be done. “Expanding dedicated resources to the Office of Equity and Inclusion would be a tremendous assist towards this effort,” she says. “I am very optimistic that NA will continue to
Families Network for a number of
how you teach it. That’s why we must
years. The increase of full-time NA
have faculty and staff who are trained
faculty and staff of color as well as
to be capable of working with a diverse
accepted families is noticed among
student community,” says Alexis.
the parent community.”
Alumni and Parent Discussions
Leigh adds that E&I is not only about
strengthen its commitment to equity and inclusion.” For a complete list of NA’s recent E&I accomplishments, view the E&I quarterly reports.
race, gender or ability, but it is also
While current students are having important discussions in and outside the classroom, NA’s Black alumni continue to consider how they can support current students. Alumni helped to promote and attended the MLK Day lecture and engaged with students during a wellness event. Newark Academy Parents Association (NAPA) is also working to foster a greater sense of belonging among parents. NAPA’s new parent affinity groups – the LGBTQ+ Parents and Allies Group and the Immigrant Parents Network – were developed last year using the Black and Latino Families Network as an exemplar. Both groups blossomed over the course of this year. The success of these groups made way for the creation of the Diverse Abilities Group in
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NA alumni reconnect and discuss racial inequities during a spoken word event in honor of Black History Month in February.
NA NEWS
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COMMUNITY SERVICE
These partnerships include a multi-year engagement with Covenant House and a long-standing and evolving partnership with The Apostles’ House.
MOVING BEYOND A HELPING HAND
NA Community Service Efforts Create Partnerships for Learning Like most other aspects of its educational program, Newark Academy’s approach to
community service is grounded in long-held core values, yet continually evolves to meet the needs and opportunities of a changing world.
Many older alumni fondly recall their efforts at “serving others less fortunate” while attending NA. These one-off efforts, frequently initiated by students, were the foundation of what later became NA’s formal community service program. Under the leadership of a much-beloved faculty member, the late Betty Newman, the program launched a number of long-standing activities, including the SCEEP Olympics and an annual holiday party for children in need. While generosity of spirit remains at the core of NA’s approach to serving others in the community, the program has shifted from a “helping hand” model to more of a “service learning” paradigm,
designed to help students partner with the broader community in ways that benefit everyone involved. According to Director of Community Service Sarah Fischer, this approach still offers help but also gives NA students opportunities to “interact effectively with, and appreciate, people of different backgrounds and cultures.” “The service learning our students engage in has to be based on mutual respect – respect for what we, as volunteers, bring to a situation or issue and what those we are working with bring,” Sarah says. “We want our students to consider themselves partners with others, not saviors. And we want our students to look beyond an immediate need to consider
the root causes of social issues such as food insecurity, homelessness and environmental vulnerabilities.” In light of NA’s approaching 250th anniversary in 2024 and renewed calls for social justice initiatives, NA’s community service program is seeking to strengthen its partnerships with existing programs and organizations in the city of Newark.
The Covenant House partnership includes an annual Solidarity Sleepout each November, with NA students raising awareness and funds in support of housing and services for young people who have experienced abuse, neglect, abandonment, homelessness and human trafficking. Although last November’s Solidarity Sleepout took place as a virtual event, approximately 180 NA students participated, garnering more than $15,685 to date for this important effort. A two-decade partnership with The Apostles’ House in Newark is another example of NA’s commitment to community-based service learning. A source of comprehensive social services for homeless women with children and for families at risk of homelessness in Newark and Essex County, The Apostles’ House has continued to partner with NA despite having to shift to virtual activities due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (CONTINUED)
The service learning our students engage in has to be based on mutual respect – respect for what we, as volunteers, bring to a situation or issue and what those we are working with bring.” – Sarah Fischer
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NA’S MONTH OF ACTION
Awakening The Inner Activist MOVING BEYOND A HEL PIN G H AN D (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 21)
In 2020, instead of offering the traditional holiday party, student volunteers distributed food and goodie bags and offered virtual arts and crafts events for Apostles’ House families. According to Sarah, the opportunity to launch a new program with The Apostles’ House has been a silver lining of the pandemic. “A new program called The Apostles’ House Kids is giving our students a wide range of programming to get involved with,” Sarah says. “Apostles’ House and Newark Academy share many goals for the kids we serve, like building resiliency and developing life skills. By working as volunteers with the younger children served by The Apostles’ House, our students can build their own skills in these areas as well as sharing what they have already learned.” NA Reads is another new initiative that serves both The Apostles’ House and Newark’s 13th Avenue Elementary School. NA Reads began in November 2020, with NA students reading books over Zoom to Apostles’ House children, who read along with their own books. In early 2021, the program expanded to include NA students and parents recording story readings for families of young children who attend the 13th Avenue School.
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“Shortly after we started the reading program with The Apostles’ House, leaders from the Newark Academy Parents Association (NAPA) reached out to me with a similar idea,“ Sarah says. “NAPA had launched its own service partnership with the 13th Avenue School through the I Have a Dream Foundation. In both cases, our students and parents are learning, first-hand, how the pandemic has affected low-income families and how important it is to keep children reading and learning even in trying circumstances.” Sarah also notes that these types of experiences prompt a deeper level of cultural competency among NA students. “As our students do this work, we discuss the fact that we are disproportionately serving students and families of color,” she says. “Rather than having that simply reinforce existing implicit biases, the Community Service Council is actively discussing how to serve a broader population and avoid a ‘white saviorism’ paradigm. As we look to next year, we hope to expand our partnerships to other areas in Northern New Jersey. Whether in Sussex or Morris County or right in Livingston, systemic issues like food insecurity, homelessness and other challenges exist. These aren’t Newark problems – they’re everywhere problems. That’s also a lesson our students are learning.”
NA’s annual Month of Action took place virtually in February, with the theme of Moving Forward: Awaken Your Inner Activist. Approximately 27 student clubs and NA families participated by making web pages, highlighting activists and hosting events. A few NA students shared the ways in which they showcased their leadership skills through several community service events.
“I’m really passionate about political participation and voting in particular. I was motivated to write to my local New Jersey lawmakers to advocate a work holiday on Election Day for New Jersey voters.” – Kavya Nivarthy ‛21
“I signed three petitions about shutting down and not replacing Line 3 in Minnesota. These petitions mattered to me because they concerned two areas of service and advocacy that I am passionate about: climate change and indigenous people’s rights. Additionally, I sent emails to New Jersey assemblymen and women, senators, and the governor to support causes that work to create equity and equality in societies that have been poisoned by systemic discrimination and inequality. Finally, I also participated in the ‘Color a Smile’ program because I believe in the importance of acts of kindness in an attempt to bring joy to others!” – Emily Swope ‛22
“Today, I made toys for animals at St. Hubert’s Animal Shelter. This was important to me because I have worked with St. Hubert’s in the past, and although I could not work with them like I planned this year due to COVID-19, I wanted to stay connected and keep helping.” – Kate Fishbone ‛22 Jack DeVirgilio ʼ24
donated food to Meeting
Essential Needs With
Dignity (MEND), an
interfaith network of
20 member food pantries
located throughout Essex County.
NA NEWS
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STEM
Molly Cantillon ’21
and members of her
Techshare team.
Techshare Adapts,Thrives THROUGH THE PANDEMIC
When Molly Cantillon ’21 visited her grandfather’s hometown in Guangxi, China, she was
struck by the shortage of technology available for local students. Molly returned home determined to help provide low-income children with access to enhanced opportunities
for learning in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) both locally and globally.
With a purpose and ingenuity, Molly formed the nonprofit organization Techshare Project
in 2017.
Techshare’s executive board is made up of Newark Academy students, and most of its volunteers are students, with only a handful of adult mentors involved. Since its inception, the organization, which has more than 140 volunteers, has given approximately 700 students access to STEM resources while raising more than $3,000 to implement a new phase of our Global Computer Community Project in the Philippines. One of Techshare’s main initiatives involves monthly events at the Boys & Girls Club of Newark, where elementary school students have created games with scratch coding and built their own robots to compete
in races. “That’s what’s been amazing about Techshare,” says Jack Cleeve ’21, one of the first fellow students Molly recruited. “We actually see it have an impact and make someone’s life better. It’s an amazing feeling, seeing it help people.” Techshare strives to help kids not only locally but also abroad. Last year, the group partnered with the Peace Corps and The Batey Foundation to travel to the Dominican Republic, bringing computers they had built to elementary students there. During the visit, a group of Techshare volunteers spent two days helping students from San Luis and Santo Domingo build and race robots.
Of course, like everyone else, the organization had to alter its plans due to COVID-19. No longer able to make those in-person trips, the group now has pivoted to offering a webinar series of educational programs with featured speakers on STEM topics, which can be found on the Techshare Instagram page. The Techshare team is also leaning on technology and social media to enhance its presence. “During Summer 2020, we often would repost insightful posts on Instagram and communicate with other STEM student-led organizations,” Tiffany Agkpo ’21, who has been at the center of the organization’s operations
explains. “We organized a webinar series where we invited young leaders in STEM to inspire middle school and high school students to pursue different facets of STEM from astrophysics to UX design. We’ve also been working on our Global Community Computer Project, and we’ve been communicating often about that via Zoom.” At the same time, the Techshare volunteers have teamed up with the NA Robotics Club to collaborate in building more computers for students abroad. “Engaging different members of the community, who maybe a few years ago didn’t even know about Techshare, is an amazing feeling,” Molly says. “It’s awesome to know that we’re changing the culture – not just generating knowledge, but also using that knowledge to make life-changing impacts.”
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA STEM OPPORTUNITIES
Take Students on a Virtual Exploration Last summer, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many universities and organizations postponed or cancelled
their internships for students who were seeking in-person science, technology, engineering and math (STEM)
experiences. While initially seen as a challenge, this change ushered in new and innovative virtual opportunities for NA students. No longer limited by geography, NA students are now able to participate in virtual labs and cutting-edge research from across the globe while physically remaining at home.
EIGHT NA STUDENTS –Molly Cantillon ’21
Charles Crosby, who stepped into
and approaches to independent work
Stella Gilbert ’22, Ryan Kim ’22, Kaya
November 2020, frequently looks for
Virtual labs were introduced last year and
(see story on page 23), Lauren Freed ’22, Patel ’22, Julia Seebach ’23, Skywalker
Li ’22 and Ian Zhang ’23 – shared high-
lights of their 2020 research internships with faculty, parents and peers at the
annual STEM presentation night, which
for NA students. “I am consistently
says Charles. “It is important for myself
explore human anatomy and dissections
Under COVID-19 restrictions, NA faculty
STEM experiences here at NA.”
how simulations can be used for natural
have reimagined and adapted STEM
accommodating different learning styles,
critical thinking while replacing their
physical effects of virtual reality.
I SPRING 2021
have been effective. In addition to the
natural selection simulations and chemical
experiments found in the virtual labs,
students have done in their internships,”
of fields: Kaya, for instance, studied
while Julia charted the emotional and
and collaboration, including on Zoom.
impressed by the caliber of work our
and my colleagues to offer equally strong
disaster preparedness training while
LUMEN
these and similar STEM opportunities
was held virtually in January.
The students’ work covered a range
24
the role of NA STEM coordinator in
experiences to continue fueling students’ usual hands-on experiences. There is now a greater variety of assignments
NA students now can use technology to
without the need for gloves or scalpels.
“It’s been an adjustment,” says Charles,
“but we were fortunate to be technologi-
cally and pedagogically prepared.”
On the next page, two NA students discuss
their work in STEM during this pandemic.
Skywalker Li ’22
Skywalker Li ’22 spent Summer 2020
interning at New Jersey Institute of
Technology (NJIT), where he learned to
read scientific papers and studied the
photocatalytic reduction of CO2 in artifi-
cial photosynthesis, a potential source of
clean energy. Skywalker is continuing his
internship with NJIT during the current
school year and in Summer 2021. He is
currently working with a Ph.D. student
on cubic gauche polymeric nitrogen,
which is a high-energy-density material
used for explosives. He also recently won
an impressive six awards at the North Jersey Regional Science Fair.
“W
“I
Skywalker ’22 reflects on his STEM experiences over the past year:
definitely think my internship greatly helped my studies in every class at NA.
One of the biggest benefits of the STEM experience has been the improvement
in my intellectual curiosity. Participating in back-and-forth discussions with
STEM professors and Ph.D. students made me realize that nothing should be taken for
granted. They constantly pushed me to question every result and to come up with my own
conclusions. This systematic way of questioning things has helped in all academic areas.
It, of course, helped me gain a deeper understanding in my STEM classes, but it also
helped me form more cohesive and logical arguments in English and humanities. In a
society dominated by misinformation, I believe it is more important than ever to practice skepticism. The STEM opportunities at NA really helped with that.
It has definitely been a challenge adjusting to the new environment, and opportunities
are limited. I was lucky that my STEM teachers at NA were able to create some virtual labs,
which allowed us to do some hands-on work. Additionally, Mr. Crosby has been very
helpful by updating us on new information and opportunities in STEM.”
Juliet describes the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on STEM experiences and how the school has adapted to these circumstances: hile I miss the familiarity of pre-COVID-19 lab periods, NA has successfully adapted its
STEM programs to give students interactive, educational and COVID-safe experiences. My Chemistry Honors class has done a combination of hands-on labs and virtual
simulations. During our hands-on experiments, everyone has their own station and materials.
I feel extremely lucky that NA is able to offer us these resources so our learning is not compromised during
Juliet Bu ’23
Juliet Bu ’23 will spend
Summer 2021 interning with Dr. Xianqin Wang at her materials engi-
neering lab at NJIT.
the pandemic. Our virtual simulations are great substitutes for when we are remote and unable to be in
the lab. Although these new lab formats are different, NA STEM classes have continued to prioritize
high-quality education for us.
While I was planning out my activities for Summer 2021, I frequently visited the “STEM Opportunities
Page” for students on MyNA (the school’s internal digital platform), where I found amazing research
programs and internships, like my upcoming internship with Dr. Wang. These opportunities are con-
stantly updated by our STEM coordinator Mr. Crosby. I am excited to work in a professional research environment, and I am very grateful for NA’s vast connections, which have helped me find unique extracurricular STEM experiences.”
NA students discuss their STEM internship experiences during the STEM Presentation Night in January 2021.
NEWARK ACADEMY
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NA NEWS
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FACULTY
AFTER MANY YEARS OF SERVICE, THIS GROUP OF BELOVED FACULTY AND STAFF ARE RETIRING
Fond Farewells
SJ: In ways large and small, the NA community has become much more accepting
LUMEN: What has been the most enjoyable part of working at NA? the most fun part of my days. Although
SJ: My wife Christine Johnson is also retir-
the interactions with the students. I have also enjoyed the camaraderie of the faculty.
his career at Newark Academy in
1983. He had previously taught at
School level. Most recently, I’ve been teaching Algebra I and Algebra I Honors. I have been an advisor every year, and I advised or supported the publication of the Polymnian for more than 30 years. I also coached a number of sports, including JV boys’ soccer, Middle School boys’ soccer, varsity girls’ soccer, varsity girls’ softball, JV girls’ basketball, and Middle School baseball.
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Norway and Sweden are high on our list.
Over the years, many alumni have sung their songs to me when back on campus for Homecoming.
LUMEN: What roles have you had at the school? What courses have you taught?
I have taught exclusively at the Middle
well as Europe; England, France, Germany,
median, mode and range to the tune
SJ: I have many fond memories of working
teaching a 10th-grade Algebra 2 course,
hope to travel around the United States as
concepts. This year, for example,
LUMEN: Over the years, who has influenced your work at NA?
Scott Johnson (SJ): Except for one year
some of our winters in Florida. We also
and perform songs to explain math
also the site where he would meet
his wife, Christine Johnson.
Maine. In a few years, we may also spend
the math song. Every year, students write
in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. Scott
proximity to New York City. NA is
of our summers on Little Sebago Lake in
that has become a tradition in my classes:
of “Happy” by Pharrell Williams!
strong academic program and
ing from NA, and we will be spending most
SJ: Many years ago, I introduced a project
a duo explained the concepts of mean,
was drawn to NA by the school’s
26
LUMEN: In this issue, we are featuring alumni “aha” moments. Can you think of an “aha” moment during your teaching career?
Indian Mountain School in Lakeville,
Connecticut, and The Shipley School
This has been great to see.
I have taught the same course for many years, each year feels different because of
Math teacher Scott Johnson began
of the needs of our students over the years.
LUMEN: What’s in store for you in the next phase of life?
SJ: Working with students has always been
Scott Johnson
LUMEN: How has NA changed over the course of your career?
with Jeff Kacur when he was the varsity boys’ soccer coach and I was the JV coach. He was always very supportive and would do anything for me and the teams. He was also a great friend. Hampton Abney was another mentor and friend. His guidance in shaping the yearbook always impressed me. Similarly, Tom Ashburn has always championed my work, and I’ve appreciated his great sense of humor. More recently, Rob Rezvani has shared his knowledge of technology with me and his ideas for integrating technology into the math classroom.
Christine Johnson Middle School Office Manager
Christine Johnson began working at
Newark Academy in 1997. She came to the school when her friend Bev
Pickering announced her retirement from NA. Bev, who had always raved about working with NA students,
told Christine about an opening, and Christine knew she couldn’t pass up the opportunity.
LUMEN: What roles have you had at the school?
LUMEN: What’s in store for you in the next phase of life?
Christine Johnson (CJ): When I first
CJ: I look forward to enjoying life on
arrived, I worked as the Middle School
Little Sebago Lake in Gray, Maine, with my
administrative assistant. I then became
husband Scott, who’s also retiring from
the administrative assistant to the former Head of School Elizabeth Penney Riegelman. Eventually, I returned to the Middle School, as I was eager to return to a role where I could spend more time with
Newark Academy. We will probably spend late spring, summer and fall in Maine. I hope winters are somewhere far away from the cold! I also look forward to traveling to visit family and friends.
Eileen Gilbert (EG): As the Director
students. In the Middle School, I have worked as the office manager, as an advisor, and as a Student Council advisor. I’ve also coached Middle School girls’ basketball and Middle School girls’ volleyball.
LUMEN: What has been the most enjoyable part of working at NA? CJ: Far and away, the camaraderie I’ve felt with colleagues and students has made working at Newark Academy fun, enjoyable and educational.
LUMEN: How has NA changed over the course of your career? CJ: The teachers are younger as well as the students! More seriously, new technologies have changed many aspects of
LUMEN: What has your work at the school involved?
Eileen Gilbert
Director of Administrative Services
Eileen Gilbert began working at Newark Academy in 1984. She had previously been coordinating transportation for NA with a local bus company, and
when NA’s business manager offered
her an in-house position, she initially declined; when asked again, though,
she decided to pursue the opportunity.
of Administrative Services, I have overseen a number of aspects of school operations. These have included coordinating daily transportation, transportation for field trips and athletic teams, book ordering and distribution, and bookstore and school store operations. In recent years, I have also coordinated the rental of school facilities by outside groups.
LUMEN: What has been the most enjoyable part of working at NA? EG: I’ve always enjoyed solving problems. Engaging with colleagues to come up with and implement solutions to challenges has been rewarding.
(CONTINUED)
the roles I’ve had.
LUMEN: In this issue, we are featuring alumni “aha” moments. Can you think of an “aha” moment during your teaching career? CJ: There are always challenges that arise in a school and many moving pieces involving students, faculty, staff, administration and parents. I learned an important lesson from former Middle School Principal Joan Parlin: she taught me both to learn from mistakes and to learn to live with them. Her wisdom helped me feel more comfortable in my role and as a member of the Newark Academy community.
NEWARK ACADEMY
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A FOND FAREWELL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 27)
LUMEN: Do you have a favorite memory from your years in the bookstore? EG: Every summer, several current students or recent graduates help out in the bookstore. I will always be grateful to all of them for helping to coordinate book orders and distribution. They have been fun to work with and have really contributed to the success of the bookstore.
LUMEN: What’s in store for you in the next phase of life? EG: As my new chapter begins, I look forward to being with family and friends. I am very thankful to NA for so many years
Bob remembers the call he received
from former Dean of Faculty Blackie Parlin asking him to interview for
the position. As soon as Bob learned about NA, he was hooked.
LUMEN: What roles have you had at the school?
BM: During the summer of 1988, NA temporarily hired Jean Moroz to automate the entire library and audio-visual collection. Six years later we had an opening for a librarian. Facing the prospect of reading
Robert Mallalieu (BM): I’ve had many
countless résumés, it suddenly dawned
roles at Newark Academy, including direc-
on me: “AHA! Let me see if Jean Moroz is
tor of library media services, summer
available!” She was; she was hired, and
session director, department chair, admin-
that working relationship flourished and
istrator, coach, advisor and more. I was
lasted for 26 years!
also part of The Watchung Mountain Boys,
LUMEN: How has NA changed over the course of your career?
a Morning Meeting performing group that included Steve Miller, Fred McGaughan and Lee Abbey.
LUMEN: What has been the most enjoyable part of working at NA?
BM: One answer is the change brought about by technology and information access. When I started, there was one telephone in the library, and one very
of meaningful work.
BM: I particularly enjoyed working with
large Wang computer used for scheduling.
students and colleagues in small groups
Access to information was limited to
Robert Mallalieu
and teams to accomplish common goals.
a physical card catalog, encyclopedia
Director of Library Media Services and former Summer Session
Director Bob Mallalieu began
working at Newark Academy in 1982. He was seeking a strong
independent school where he could
work as a library director and coach.
Whether it was the summer session
sets and magazines. Today’s access to
administration, the library staff, an ath-
information has given students unimag-
letic team, an advisor group, memorable
ined empowerment in their pursuit of
student AV crews, or an ad hoc committee, I appreciated the opportunity to get to know people better and work together through issues with determination, perseverance, enjoyment and, of course, some fun and laughter.
LUMEN: Do you have a favorite memory from your years at NA – a student who left an impact? a beloved colleague? an event or trip? BM: Beloved colleagues and memorable students abound; they will stay with me for the rest of my life. If I had to put some people at the top of this list, it would be the summer session crew of Bill Blaskopf, Tom Ashburn, Jean Moroz, Nancy Celente and Dan Erlandson. Working alongside them was the highlight of my career at NA. Additionally, having my youngest son, Josh ’21, attend and graduate from NA was a special blessing for which I am grateful.
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LUMEN: In this issue, we are featuring alumni “aha” moments. Can you think of an “aha” moment during your teaching career?
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I SPRING 2021
knowledge and learning.
LUMEN: What’s in store for you in the next phase of life? BM: Initially, doing some things that you don’t have as much time to do when you work full time: traveling and hiking with my wife; playing and performing Appalachian and gospel music with friends; volunteering in national parks; seeking opportunities to serve others; short-term mission trips; spending time with our 10 grandchildren; and, every once in a while, turning the alarm clock off.
their own cultural and religious
history. My connection to my colleagues
identities. Dr. Alan Strand, Penny
has gone beyond friendship, and I have
Riegelman, Don Austin, Rich Dibianca,
not only enjoyed working and laughing
and Von Rollenhagen, to name a few,
with Joseph Borlo, Lydia Masterson,
gave me the gift of intellectual freedom.
Kirsti Morin, Julie Jacoby, Scott Jacoby and
I have also been a faculty advisor to
Jeff Vinikoor, but we have truly learned
many clubs, most notably the Jewish
from each other, and been willing to share
Club, Minuteman Society, and the newly
ideas – both successful and, sometimes,
created Food Club.
less successful.
the most enjoyable part of teaching at NA
LUMEN: In this issue, we are featuring alumni “aha” moments. Can you think of an “aha” moment during your teaching career?
has been becoming a part of the lives of my
ARS: I know this is really corny, but I must
LUMEN: What has been the most enjoyable part of working at NA?
Amy Rubin Schottland Humanities teacher Amy Rubin
Schottland began teaching at Newark
Academy in 1982, having first learned
about the school from her husband,
Dr. Paul Schottland, who is a member
of the Class of 1970. When her children were born, Amy stepped away from the classroom, but she returned in
2001. She is also the proud mother
of two NA graduates, Dr. Elliot
Schottland ’02 and Laura Schottland
Giske ’06.
LUMEN: What roles have you had at the school? What courses have you taught?
ARS: This is not a difficult question: by far
students and their families. This commu-
say that every day – and I mean every day
nity has returned my sense of dedication
– has had its “aha” moments! The nature
many times over. The students have fully
of adolescents is that they are in their own
embraced me as their teacher, advisor,
world, and we as teachers are in our own
mentor and, ultimately, their friend.
world – and, somehow, we connect with
I have been fortunate to have taught sev-
each other. That is the miracle of teaching:
eral generations of NA families, including
to find a way to communicate with each
Wayne Kent ’85 and his three beautiful
other, and to find joy in sharing what we
daughters. How is it possible that I have
know. I have been so fortunate to be in
not aged one year, and yet my students
those trenches where the connections
have now become parents themselves?
have been made.
LUMEN: Do you have a favorite memory from your years at NA – a student who left an impact? a beloved colleague? an event or trip?
LUMEN: How has NA changed over the course of your career?
ARS: For sure, there have been many
and meeting the needs of students. This
ARS: I think, over the years, there has been a growing respect for understanding
highlights, and many deep and abiding
is undoubtedly a very positive movement.
Amy Rubin Schottland (ARS): It has been
memories, from the deeply moving to
I think the students feel connected and
my deepest personal and professional
the more mundane everyday experiences.
valued more and more.
pleasure to have taught a variety of courses
One year, in commemoration of a visit by
at NA. I taught World Cultures in the
a peace delegation from Hiroshima, Japan,
Middle School, and under the support
I asked the whole school to read “One
and encouragement of Tom Ashburn
Thousand Cranes,” and then we proceeded
LUMEN: What’s in store for you in the next phase of life?
I designed a month-long archaeological
to make one thousand origami cranes,
expedition on the grounds of NA entitled
which were hung at the entrance to the
“Can You Dig It?” In addition, with the
school. In 2011, Sam Goldfischer and I
guidance of the late Betty Newman,
organized a momentous and deeply mem-
I taught the Upper School American
orable journey to seven concentration
Experience class. I also designed and
camps in Poland and the Czech Republic.
taught the senior elective course called
Even though this undertaking was deeply
Politics of Change. Most significantly,
disturbing, our diverse band of students,
I began to carve out the ninth-grade
parents, colleagues and spouses were
Ancient World course, which has encour-
forever changed by our common goal of
aged so many students to see beyond
revisiting and learning about our common
ARS: Here is where I get to talk about my adorable grandsons, Jackson and Zachary, and how I hope to spend more time being their Nana. In addition, I have started a new business: Nana Bakes, NJ. I hope to continue my love of baking and teaching with this new enterprise. The world of Zoom has opened up many new ways that I can connect with kids and their families.
NEWARK ACADEMY
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FOUR NA FACULTY MEMBERS
Finishing Strong: Four Faculty Members Reflect on Their First Year at NA
1
Dr. Oliver Hagen | Arts Department/Orchestral Music
My life has taken me through various conducting, piano and teaching jobs,
from New York City to Paris. In 2016, I started teaching conducting and coaching
chamber music at the Juilliard Preparatory Division, which I continue to do on weekends.
In a previous decade, I assisted French conductor and composer Pierre Boulez in Lucerne
and Paris. More recently, I played piano on a Grammy-winning album of the music of
Steve Reich.
Newark Academy’s full orchestra was a major selling point for me. So many schools have a string orchestra and a band or wind ensemble, but here they are combined. The energy and rehearsal flow I felt on my audition day – combining high-level performance with pedagogy – was exactly what I was looking for. It’s been quite a first year. Orchestra and wind ensemble changed status from all-remote courses to in-person. Earlier this month, the orchestra played all together for the first time, set up in two different rooms across the hall from each other, with me conducting in the middle. Section leaders Kristin Tsay ’21 and Ruthie Gu ’21 were key players (and conductors) in helping this happen! It felt like being in an opera pit, where musicians often find themselves with obstructed sight-lines but still make it work for the sake of the whole. It was so personally satisfying to pull this off in a year full of troubleshooting. For our sixth grade students, the need to address classroom capacity issues inspired us to revamp the curriculum. In chamber music, we have had in-person learners
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synchronize with remote learners in a very small ensemble setting. Zoom collaborations can work! Seventh- and eighth-grade strings students have enjoyed some percussion improvisation from time to time, as a healthy change of pace. Since March 2020, my previous teaching had been remote, so at NA
‘‘
I was eager to continue trying out new methods such as multi-track recordings. What’s most interesting to me is that my teachers have been recommending recording as a form of practicing all my life. I have also been asking students for years to practice their orchestra music by playing along with professional albums. I have found making multitrack recordings myself to be very helpful in learning music. Well-known artists like Stevie Wonder have been asynchronously recording multiple parts for decades. Suddenly, in the pandemic, these methods became absolutely necessary in school environments. Having recordings as the backbone of student work samples allows for much more individualized support and specific feedback than the large ensemble experience has historically offered. I am always open to hearing from my students about how all of this is working for them – especially considering the level of motivation I have felt from students at NA. I have enjoyed the atmosphere and sense of community created by our musicians, whose qualities as motivated learners and humans have made me feel welcome and valued in a new position. I was particularly impressed to hear, in a recent faculty meeting, about the many accomplishments of students nominated by their peers for the Ad Lumen Awards. From a personal standpoint, I have often asked myself how classical music and the orchestra, can help
I have enjoyed the atmosphere and sense of community created by our musicians, whose qualities as motivated learners and humans have made me feel welcome and valued in a new position.”
promote social justice. Inspired by some of the initiatives taken in the greater classical music industry, students had a session on Black classical composers that led to incorporating names such as Joseph Bologne and Florence Price into our repertoire – composers I had never heard of in high school or even during my doctoral work. Students have been exploring various genres of Black musical culture and have also been working on music from PubliQuartet’s video biography about Madam C. J.
2
Walker, the wealthiest Black woman of her time. We are lucky at NA to have one of the premiere jazz education programs to look up to as we widen the cultural sensibilities of the orchestral program. Conducting a large orchestra is one of my great joys in life; it is one of my favorite ways of sharing my passion for music with others. I would very much like many students to experience the thrill of conducting, should they choose to give it a try. It’s been
Kristin A. Nwokedi | Upper School English
Prior to coming to Newark Academy, I worked in international schools. I lived
for six years in Shanghai, where I taught English at the French School of
Shanghai. There, I prepared students to pass their National Diploma with the option
for international honors in English language and literature study.
remote learners, and I wanted their experiences to be as integrated as possible with those of on-campus classmates. Therefore, I really leaned into using technology in all of my classes so everyone could interact
teaching, I also served as the school’s coordinator of diversity and inclusion.
on digital platforms. I have been impressed by the students’ alacrity and skill in using technology.
Several important aspects of Newark Academy drew me here. I love the fact
What surprised me most about working at NA is how quickly faculty
that NA offered the IB Diploma as an option for students who were interested in taking on the challenge. I also love the emphasis and intentionality
After receiving Diploma Program certification from the International Baccalaureate Organization, I then moved back to the United States to work in an international school where I could use my IB knowledge. I worked for five years as an IB English language and literature teacher at the International School of Indiana in Indianapolis, during which time I also became an IB examiner. Outside of
great to have a few already join an informal, cyclical group conducting lesson. More generally, I hope to foster an environment where students are musically self-sufficient: where they know how to creatively practice their craft, how to communicate, and how to organize themselves. In a sense, my job is to put myself out of a job! Lucky for me, though, my job begins again with each new sixth-grade arrival.
that NA put on diversity, equity and inclusion. It was fabulous that NA was in such a good location! I like its proximity to New York City and to awesome nature hikes like the Appalachian Trail. I teach ninth-grade Literature and Composition and 11th-grade IB English. Beginning a new job in the age of COVID has definitely been an experience! It was a unique challenge to begin at a new school during a year when you could only see half of colleagues’ and students’ faces. I had to learn students and colleagues by their eyes and the tops of their heads! I also knew that NA would have some
and staff knew my name. It was nice to walk around and get smiling eyes from people, followed by “Hi, Kristin!” – even when I wasn’t sure that I had ever formally met them. I feel like NA is a bit like the television show “Cheers” in that way! My hopes for my future at NA are manifold. I hope to grow professionally as a teacher, a learner and a champion of education that values collaboration, reading, diversity, mindfulness, internationalism, geekiness and art. I also hope to pass on to my students a love for the privilege and the pleasure of learning. Hopefully, they will learn, travel the world and teach someone something new.
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Samantha Wilkerson | Middle School Science
Before coming to Newark Academy, I was a Teach for America corps member,
teaching middle school science and English in St. Louis. I became interested in
NA when a friend of mine who is an alumnus told me about the school, and I thought
teaching here would be an interesting new experience.
While this year has been extremely unusual, I have been in awe of the resilience the students show in the face of great adversity and constant change. It is a testament to their characters and their desire to learn and grow. I think the thing that most surprised me was how much fun I am having, even in a pandemic!
4
Everyone has been extremely welcoming and kind. I hope to continue to work for the community and develop lasting relationships with NA staff and students. In my classes, I hope to continue introducing my students to diverse texts and learning about their experiences and lives. I am also working to
Callie Prince | Upper School/Middle School Humanities
I am originally from Oakland, California, and graduated from Trinity College in
2017 with a bachelor’s degree in history. After graduation, I lived in New York
and worked as a litigation legal assistant at Sullivan & Cromwell LLC. Last year, I also
spent time as a paralegal secondee in the litigation and regulatory proceedings group at
Goldman Sachs. While I learned invaluable skills from my previous positions, I decided
to pursue a career in teaching, as that was more in line with my skills, interests and
goals. I come from a family of teachers and was also inspired by their careers.
gone above and beyond to welcome and support me. This year has confirmed just how special it is to be a part of the NA community.
I was initially drawn to Newark Academy because of its academic rigor, emphasis on continued personal growth, and strong sense of community. I am continually thankful for the kindness and authenticity of everyone I have met here. In an especially challenging year, everyone has
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I love teaching seventh-grade American Studies and ninth-grade Ancient World. It has been ideal to teach in both the Middle School and Upper School, as I’ve been able to learn more about NA in its entirety. The students impress me every day with their dedication, maturity and intellectual curiosity. Even with all the challenges of this year, the students’ adaptability has been truly remarkable. They are all rock stars! What has surprised me most about working at NA is the positivity and commitment of the entire school. Joy and gratitude resonate within the community, making teaching at NA
help bring educational equity to the City of Newark as a board member of Newark for Educational Equity and Diversity (NEED), and I hope to continue working with NEED for the community at large.
a positive and rewarding experience. Every adult on campus is focused on supporting all of our students, and it shows. I feel as if my most critical goal is to encourage and support my students as lifelong learners and responsible members of society. I am grateful to be at a school where helping to develop this kind of student is the focus. While at NA, I am excited to continue working with and learning from my colleagues and students. I enjoy serving as a faculty advisor to the NA Students of Color Affinity Group and the Ethics Club. I look forward to becoming more involved outside of the classroom. I also want to continue my education and look forward to future professional development opportunities. Later on in my career, I would love the opportunity to pursue more leadership roles as well.
‘‘
What has surprised me most about working at NA is the positivity and commitment of the entire school.”
A Passion and A Purpose: Two NA Faculty Members Will Lead as New Department Chairs Viraj Lal, Choral Director, Chair, Arts Department
Why Did You Decide to Step into This Role?
As a member of the Newark Academy community since 2007, I have witnessed and contributed to the growth and development of the arts program under former Chairs Scott Jacoby and Elaine Brodie. Inspired by their leadership, for many years I have thought about the opportunity to build on their accomplishments. As I consider the next 10 years of my career at NA, leading the arts department is an honor as I begin the 15th year of my tenure.
Dan Reed, Chair, English Department Why Did You Decide to Step into This Role?
Having had the opportunity to do similar work for another mission-driven institution – Camp Pemigewassett, a boys’ summer camp in New Hampshire – I was excited for the chance to get more involved in work that shapes the experiences of our students and teachers. I continue to be impressed by the dedication, generosity and intellectual fervor of both NA’s English faculty and our students; it’s an especially inspiring group to work with. Finally, after recent conversations with Neil Stourton (current Department Chair) and with several colleagues, I found that our Department has several compelling common goals (more on those below); I’m personally very passionate about these areas for development, so it felt like the right time to take on a role like this. Looking Ahead
“First things first.” I’m looking forward to working with all my colleagues in the English Department to establish a collective vision. What do we each already love about our curriculum? In five years, what do we want to look different? In addition to that collaborative exercise, I am excited to continue our department’s focus on DEI efforts – ensuring diverse representation in our texts (of authors, characters
Looking Ahead
In the United States, there are not many South Asians in the field of education, even fewer in the arts and rarely in administrative positions. Considering the significant population of South Asian families at Newark Academy, I hope my representation as arts chair is validating. My ideas are diverse and stem from a global perspective. My vision is to elevate our arts community and programs through collaborations and potential international projects and much more. Elaine Brodie has been a boon for our arts department and has led our program and colleagues phenomenally over the past 10 years. I am grateful to have Elaine mentor me as I transition into the role. I hope to carry on her sincere admiration and affection for our arts colleagues as well as her warmth and kind nature towards our NA families. I am ready and confident that I will be able to enhance our excellent arts program and I look forward to shepherding our programs out of the pandemic and into a fresh world, full of vibrant, robust artistic possibilities.
and experiences) and extending efforts towards equity and inclusion further into our day-today curriculum and pedagogy. I envision a design process that garners input not only from all members of the English department, but also from others in the NA community, especially our students.
Additionally, our recent Growth & Renewal curriculum review process included conversations about the breadth of our writing curriculum, and the possible benefits of implementing more modes of writing in our instruction. I look forward to collectively mapping out what this might look like and how it would fit into our skills planning through the seven grade levels at NA. I get really excited talking about skills curricula, because I believe that the strongest English curriculum leverages both intentional skills planning extending both across a given grade level and vertically through all our grade levels, and significant individual teacher flexibility in most aspects of teaching. This sort of balance, I think, gives students two critical things: equitable opportunities for growth and the development of critical skills, and the opportunity to learn from and with teachers who are manifestly passionate about what they teach. Learn more about the ways in which Dan and NA English department faculty are “reimagining rigor” on page 45.
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NA NEWS
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FACULTY
Mr. Guiteau Leaves a Lasting Impact on NA Newark Academy’s Director of Equity and Inclusion
Gardy J. Guiteau will step down from his role at the end
of the 2020 – 2021 school year. He will join his wife and partner Dr. Mirangela Buggs, who has been appointed as the Director of Institutional Equity at the American School of London.
“Working tirelessly with students, faculty, administrators, trustees, parents and alumni, Mr. Guiteau has spearheaded significant institutional change,” says Head of School Donald M. Austin. “His list of accomplishments are myriad. Mr. Guiteau has impacted every corner of our community. I am personally indebted to Mr. Guiteau for his work and his partnership.”
Academy with a great sense of pride and accomplishment. I depart NA proud to have served in this role and knowing that the work of advancing equity, inclusion and belonging is
Since joining Newark Academy in July 2018, Mr. Guiteau
in the capable hands of so many colleagues who are passion-
has been instrumental in creating a broad, deep and inclusive
ate and excited about where the institution is headed.”
framework that is steering Newark Academy toward its goal of having every person in our school community feel an abiding sense of belonging.
NA will continue to move its DEI efforts forward in order to become a more equitable and inclusive community. Learn more about Gardy J. Guiteau’s recent DEI work at NA on page 18.
“I can honestly say that working with students, families, colleagues, Board members and alumni at NA has more than lived up to my expectations,” says Gardy. “I leave Newark
Gardy Guiteau, Director of Equity and Inclusion, guides the NA community’s critical conversations centered on trust building and social justice.
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AHA!
NA ALUMNI SHARE KEY TURNING POINTS THAT THEY EXPERIENCED AT NA by Dr. Elizabeth Barbato La Padula
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AHA! MOMENTS
S
ocratic seminars are at the core of many English classes at Newark Academy because they demand
that students take responsibility for their own learning and support
one another along the path of understanding. The teacher must be merely the “guide on the
side.” However, we are allowed to throw the occasional stone into the pool, simply to disrupt the surface, to see what ripples may form and how students’ minds can swerve. One of my favorite disruptive statements is, “You don’t know what you don’t know.” I love seeing the looks of consternation, then dawning awareness, on my eighth graders’ faces, as this is both a playful and somewhat disorienting idea.
AHA! An “aha” moment is the same sort of disruption – the same sort of movement towards a new awareness that my statement stimulates in students. These moments were highlighted by author Ben Cohen ’06 in his recent interview with Olympic swimmer Christopher Jacobs ’83, WNBA player Jocelyn Willoughby ’16 and President of the Daytona Tortugas Minor League Baseball Team Ryan Keur ’08. The alums shared the key turning points in their athletic careers when they suddenly “got hot” and exceeded in their athletic performance, even changing their lives. Inspired by these experiences, LUMEN put out a call to other alumni, asking for times in their NA careers when they uncovered something new about themselves, something that caused them to swerve from their expected paths. I had the pleasure of speaking with four alumni – Rebecca Freed ’94, Rasheea Williams Hall ’95, Dr. Lee P. Neuwirth ’51 and Elliott Zornitsky ’18 – each of whom had an experience that catalyzed a ripple effect in their lives.
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DR. LEE P. NEUWIRTH ’51
W
hen Dr. Lee P. Neuwirth was in the first form (eighth grade), the Academy had demerits, penmanship classes, boxing, a drum and bugle corps, World War I veteran teachers like Mr. Hobbs – and a librarian, Mr. Davis,
who had graduated from college in the 19th century! Perhaps most intriguing, though, were the post-graduate students who had fought in World War II. “They were nice to us,” Lee recalls, “but they were not children. They were men.” In the midst of pugilists and veterans, Lee encountered his own battle in the form of Mr. Butler, a demanding math teacher. Unfazed, the future pure math scholar and deputy director of the Institute for
Defense Analysis assumed he was going to ace a quiz on factoring polynomials. Instead, he earned a paper drenched in red marks and a failing grade. And in that moment, he realized something that would become a thread throughout his long career. “There is such a thing as thinking you know something without actually knowing it,” Lee says. “You can hear something and not truly understand it. After that quiz, I always asked myself whether or not I truly understood anything and everything in my life.” Lee believes that, most of the time, mathematicians like him live in
“
There is such a thing as thinking you know something without actually knowing it. You can hear something and not truly understand it.”
a cocoon of intellectual frustration: sometimes they earn a break for a day or so, then they become fascinated and confused by the next theorem or idea. Interrogating himself about the extent of his knowledge because of that first failing grade all those years ago allows him to, as he says, “keep my acuity intact.”
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AHA! MOMENTS
nd after college? What if you were so impacted by a
The late Betty Newman, who was then the Mock Trial
club in high school that it determined your career
team’s faculty advisor, led by example: she held meetings
A
and inspired you to serve that high school commu-
at her home, which helped the team to bond. Through
nity? Rebecca Moll Freed, who is currently nomi-
these experiences, Rebecca learned lessons she still relies
nated as President of NA’s Alumni Board of Governors, is
on today. “My experience helped me learn the importance
a partner in Genova Burns LLC’s Newark office, where she
of collaboration and the value of being part of a team,” she
chairs the practice groups on corporate political activity
says. “I think that too often we feel the need to come up
and on nonprofits, trade associations and tax-exempt
with answers or solve problems on our own. We are some-
organizations. Discussing her current work, Rebecca is
times afraid to admit that we may not know an answer.”
quick to note that her legal career truly began at NA. Before her junior year, Rebecca assumed she would become a pediatrician, but she had also been involved in the Speech and Debate Club, which sparked her interest in trying out for the Mock Trial team. After being chosen as an attorney in her first year on the team, Rebecca thrived. She is not a confrontational person by nature, but she loved the preparatory work for trials: the dissection of information, the movement from making an argument to questioning, and especially the “storytelling” aspect of law. “I do not like working from notes,” Rebecca says. “Presenting ideas that you have committed to memory
“
My experience helped me learn
the importance of collaboration and the value of being part of a team. I think that too often we feel the
need to come up with answers or solve problems on our own.”
allows you to draw people in.”
REBECCA MOLL FREED ’94
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ELLIOTT ZORNITSKY ’18
T
hree playwrights who must each create a one-act drama between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Three directors who must each execute a playwright’s vision in time for a performance at 8 p.m. It takes a creatively
acute thinker to successfully finish the marathon that is NA’s 24-Hour Playwriting Festival, but that’s the kind of mind Elliott Zornitsky possesses. A member of the Student Council and the cross country team, and a future recipient of NA’s Ad Lumen Award, Elliott looked forward with excitement to the event. But then Scott Jacoby,
“
Sitting in the audience, I was able to see that I wrote something people responded to – that they reacted when and how I wanted them to. It made writing real for me.”
NA’s longtime drama teacher, announced his retirement. Elliott and his fellow IB Advanced Acting students were devastated. What would the new teacher do? To the
heard people laughing at the jokes he had written that
actors’ delight, she rose to the challenge. As Elliott says,
changed everything. “Sitting in the audience, I was able
“NA is its teachers. They are given great resources, and
to see that I wrote something people responded to – that
use them to get to know their students so well. A few
they reacted when and how I wanted them to. It made
occupy the role of something close to a counselor.” People
writing real for me,” Elliott says.
like Benson Hawk, Sarah Fisher and that brave new (in 2017) drama teacher, Rachel Shapiro-Cooper, allowed Elliott to grow.
Now, even though he keeps busy at Dartmouth studying political science, Elliott also finds time to be a writing tutor. “At NA, I found out I have a voice, and the passion
But it was the moment when Elliott – exhausted and
of other students helped build a bridge for me from
exhilarated from a night spent feverishly writing his
high school into college.”
play and exploring the darkened hallways of the school –
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AHA! MOMENTS
ometimes the moment that changes us is the result
When Rasheea saw
of many events lining up like cosmic dominoes, day
those front fields
after day. That was the case for Rasheea Williams
stretching out, she
Hall, currently the Vice President for Broadcast
knew she was in a place
S
Standards and Practices at Fox Broadcasting Company. After attending a summer institute for gifted students who resided in Newark, run at the time by former NA
Today, smiling warmly, Rasheea
faculty member Joe Ball, Rasheea was granted a scholar-
relates that her passion for learning
ship to NA. Rasheea easily recalls her “aha” moment:
“allowed me to be chosen to exist in a new world.”
when the #70 bus from Newark pulled up to drop her off
She credits the growth she experienced at NA, starting on
at 91 South Orange Avenue for the first time. Rasheea
that very first day, to her many mentors and supporters
awakened at 5 a.m. in order to make it to school on time,
on the faculty and staff. Sue Sawatsky’s quiet nurse’s
and that bus had traveled through many iterations of
office gave Rasheea a refuge for saltine crackers and the
“
New Jersey’s class structure and levels of privilege.
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chance to sit and collect herself, and Kerry Winiarski’s sage advice helped her make the next big leap to the world of college. Among these supporters, Rasheea’s time at NA was an opportunity for her to cement her “willful
[My passion for learning] allowed
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that would quite literally change her reality.
me to be chosen to exist
optimism.” As retired faculty member and Middle School Principal Joan Parlin used to say to her, “You always believe that you can work things out.” And Rasheea does!
in a new world.”
RASHEEA WILLIAMS HALL ’95
SO MANY “GUIDES ON THE SIDE” were mentioned by these alumni. It is clear that the bonds formed between students and their faculty and staff mentors act like ripples, both disruptive and generative. And the energy causing those ripples has not yet been used up. Somehow, these “aha” moments lodged in the consciousness of these individuals; the rocks that disrupted the surface tension of their lives as young people were of such substance and mass that they remain. And what a revelation that is! So I ask of you: What do you know? How do you know it? How did you get to where you are now?
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE YOUR OWN “AHA MOMENT,” PLEASE SEND AN EMAIL TO ETAYKI@NEWARKA.EDU
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ARTS
NA Artists’ Creativity Garners Prestigious Awards Seven Newark Academy students received a total of 13 awards at the 2021 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for the Northern New Jersey Art Region, the nation’s longest-running, most prestigious recognition program for creative teens. These students’ works exemplified the awards’ core values: originality, technical skill, and the emergence of personal voice or vision. NA’s award recipients are as follows: GOLD KEY
Jessie Luo ’22 SILVER KEY
Lucas Alland ’22, Lauren Freed ’22, Tess Kesler ’22, Jessie Luo ’22, Jeffrey Keys ’21 HONORABLE MENTION
Jessie Luo ’22, Kaya Patel ’22, Anika Verma ’22 All students’ winning works are accessible for viewing at the Montclair Art Museum’s online exhibition. DREW FRANCE ’22 won the 2021 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards’ Civic Expression Award for creating an original work of art or writing that promotes responsible civic life. Drew won the award in recognition
of her critical essay titled, “The Pantry Paradox: Food Insecurity as a Threat to the Meaning of American
Citizenship.” The essay addresses how the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated food insecurity in
the United States. Drew initially wrote the essay as an assignment for her AP U.S. History class, taught by Rochelle Outlaw Edwards.
As a Civic Expression Award recipient, Drew will receive a $1,000 scholarship. Her essay was among
the nearly 230,000 works that were entered into the awards competition by students from every state in the nation for adjudication.
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science
W
hether you are sitting among students
at a Harkness table or walking through
the halls at Newark Academy, you will
english
find NA faculty consistently reimagining the educational rigor that the school is
known for. Each day NA educators bring innovative, engaging and challenging
experiences to students in order to help instill within them with a genuine love of
learning. This focus on academic excellence
is affirmed by NA’s supportive community – one in which students learn together
while developing as confident individuals
with integrity. Several NA faculty members shared with LUMEN their vision of what
“reimagining rigor” means to them and
their colleagues in their respective roles as educators.
humanities IB health
›››
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science b y R ac h a e l R e e v e s I
What are humans made of? What should we do about
climate change? How can we prevent a global pandemic? Interactive Systems, the eighth-
grade science course, teaches students the content and skills they need in order
to engage with these questions and more. In teaching the course, I have found that
traditional assessments can’t always achieve my goals, so I often rely on inquiry-based labs and
student-driven research projects to structure and assess student learning. Looking back at her time in Interactive Systems, senior
“I was really surprised by how much
Ruthie Gu ’21 says, “I really appreciated the agency we were
we change the rivers around us,”
given, particularly with the infectious disease project and
says Saul Brauns ’25. “Studying the
the end-of-year science fair. By being able to choose our
Passaic River made me think about
own topic and research question, a genuine curiosity was
how we should be protecting the water
fostered for the subject matter. I am of the opinion that
we rely on.”
curiosity is more valuable than knowledge capacity. The latter gets you good test scores; the former encourages out-of-the-box thinking – the kind that leads to discoveries and breakthroughs.”
As a Middle School teacher, I also have a responsibility to prepare students for the academic rigors of Upper School science and IB courses. As they study the human body, students learn to design their own experiments and
As I designed the course, I hoped to instill in students a sense
manipulate laboratory equipment like microscopes and
of curiosity about the world around them and the skills to
sphygmomanometers. Exercises like mind-mapping help
think critically about problems facing their communities. For instance, in the Fall, we spend time exploring the NA campus, thinking about our impact on the local watershed. Students measure water quality in the stream on campus and in the local Passaic River, submitting their data to the Great Swamp Watershed Association, in support of the nonprofit’s mission to “protect and improve the water resources of the Passaic River region, from the Great Swamp headwaters to Newark Bay.”
students draw connections between topics and think deeply about the content they are learning. “Eighth-grade science sets a foundation in skills-based learning that reaches far beyond the Middle School,” explains Science Department Chair Caitlin Ciampaglio. “As students enter the Upper School they are equipped with key problemsolving skills using discipline-specific knowledge and methods of inquiry while thinking divergently. The dayto-day of our eighth-grade science class focuses on constructive sharing of roles, responsibilities, spaces and resources in the laboratory.” Throughout the year, students practice lab design skills, culminating in a science fair at the end of the year. The fair is modeled after an IB assessment in the Upper School, for which students research a topic of their choice then design, execute and report on the results of their own experiments. “The fair celebrates intellectual, personal, and creative risk-taking – all of which the Upper School program is centered around,” says Caitlin. Senior Kaleb Youngren ’21 recalls his eighth-grade project fondly, remembering “how fun it was working with my classmates to figure out whether artificial flavorings really matter to taste.” There is nothing more rewarding to an educator than seeing
Rachel Reeves, Middle School teacher, encourages her students’ scientific explorations.
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your students joyfully learning new skills and thinking deeply about issues, and I am so lucky that I get to witness this happening on a daily basis.
english by Dan ReeD I
To me, reimagining rigor means realizing balance. It means
creating balance between writing and other forms of communication, as my students
and I combine a detailed approach to strong writing – a central hallmark of a Newark
Academy education – with opportunities for other modes of creative expression.
It means finding balance between self-driven and collaborative work, both of which will surely be
essential in our students’ lives after they leave NA.
Perhaps most importantly, it means achieving balance between teacher and student. Not a proponent of the classical “sage on the stage” model, I find that my students and I thrive together when we prioritize teacher-student collaboration in as many areas as possible – planning and facilitating discussion, choosing texts, designing assessments – instead of abiding by a traditional top-down approach. In these ways, I work with my students not only to promote challenge and find joy in learning, but also to realize that this joy can and should come as a direct result of that challenge.
This looks different in every grade. For instance, the seniors in my IB English Higher Level (HL) class work together to define what a great reading discussion looks like, and then they plan and facilitate the discussions – each student working with a partner – for some of our texts. This year, inspired by one of my colleagues in the English department (shoutout to Mr. Scerra!), I asked my IB students to choose our final course text; they debated the merits of several works and eventually settled on Kazuo Ishiguro’s Booker Prize-winning The Remains of the Day (one of my favorites, in fact!).
Dan Reed, newly appointed English Department Chair, engages students to explore the themes presented in Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day. To be sure, I work to apply many of the same academic rigors that have long characterized a challenging English education, namely those that come with a meticulous approach to analytical and persuasive writing. Indeed, my students might tell you about how I expect knowledge gained from our “Daily Nuggets” – short lessons at the start of each class about all sorts of “hard skills” related to our subject – to show up in their writing. They might also mention the challenges of our cumulative writing curriculum, and the necessity of keeping a detailed record of writing feedback in order to progressively master skills and mature as writers. My goal every year, though, is to get to a place with my students where they are the ones applying the rigor to our work.
Meanwhile, my students in ninth-grade Literature and Composition, having already written plenty of analytical essays (as I’m sure they’d tell you), recently went through the process of proposing, designing and completing creative projects in response to Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. With the aid of a rubric to keep them on the right track, they needed to determine what rigor looked like in their own processes. Unsurprisingly, they ended up producing a panoply of imaginative projects, complete with analytical artist statements: a painstakingly designed Twelfth Night Monopoly game, an original Twelfth Night-inspired rewrite of a popular Hamilton song, and an adaptation of the play set at a modern high school, to name just a few. I’ve found that, when students are given a stake in planning their experiences, they tend to choose rigor. Their creative risk-taking has inspired me to challenge myself in the classroom in similar ways, like planning special units around skills that each year’s students want to learn but that I first need to learn more about myself. Perhaps more importantly, I think their choosing to challenge themselves is rather auspicious for them, as this sort of intrinsic motivation will be integral to their well-being when a teacher’s grades are no longer the ostensible markers of their success. In the meantime, I continue to revel in how much I learn from my students – and how much they learn from one another – when they share in the mission of designing our experience together in the NA English classroom.
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b y M a R y ly s I n g e R I
If you imagine learning complex grammar exceptions and
memorizing long vocabulary lists as the definition of rigor in the language classroom,
think again. Today’s modern language classes at NA foster students’ abilities to use
French, Mandarin and Spanish to communicate their thoughts and open doors to
other ways of thinking and experiencing the world. Using techniques that promote the use of only
the target language in the classroom, NA students are challenged from their very first day in class to take risks and to figure out what they are hearing. Content is selected for its ability to spur exploration and discussion of topics from a variety of domains, and assessments are often project-based and multi-faceted.
While a traditional language classroom may wait until students have learned “enough” and “earned” the right to engage in critical thought, NA teachers are suporting students in active learning. For example, Middle School French students will use simple tools like decision trees and inductive reasoning processes when discussing grammar, becoming actively involved in ensuring accuracy of communication. Mandarin teacher Shun-Yao Chang and Spanish teachers Reyther Ortega and Patty Pascal recently devoted a year of professional development to implementing a scaffolding approach in their intermediate curricula. “Rigor for us means setting high expectations but supporting our students during their learning progress,” says Reyther. “We immerse them in the culture and language they are learning and place them out of their comfort zones.” This approach has been very successful, according to Reyther: “Students are more motivated when they know exactly what is the real-life purpose of the material they are learning.” Meanwhile, in IB language classes, students meet with authors, UN delegates and other guests, engaging with them in discussions of timely topics. The students develop criticalthinking skills in the process of analyzing causes and effects,
Katherine Guo ’24 and Dagny Slomack ’24 with the awards they received at the 2020 National French Contest.
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and then propose solutions to realworld problems. Collaboration and creativity are key features of language instruction at NA. Thematic units with project-based assessments allow students to engage with technology and each other while working towards meaningful final projects that pull together material in ways the students themselves design. The results are varied and exciting: comic books, newscasts, memes and brochures are just a few of the examples one finds across languages and levels. In Mandarin classes, for example, all levels of instruction participate in an NYU-sponsored annual competition that requires students to write a script and produce a film on a proposed theme. Last year’s Mandarin B, 2 and 3 levels all won awards for their interpretation of “Ten Minutes to Change the World.” Collaboration is crucial not only among students but also between teacher and class. French teacher Moussa Fall says, “My goal is to have my students in the ‘leaning zone’ – which is between their ‘comfort zone’ and the ‘red zone’ – because that is where learning occurs.
Claire Waskow ’23 participates as a guide during the Middle School French C’s annual field trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
humanities by Rochelle outlaw eDwaRDs I
The experience of the pandemic and the
constant shifts between remote and in-person learning have inspired faculty members in
the Humanities Department to reimagine rigor as we seek to maintain the intellectual quality
of our courses, to keep students engaged, and to make classes more fun and enjoyable. In humanities
classes, reimagining rigor began with reimagining homework assignments. While some classes, like AP
U.S. History, reduced the length of nightly reading assignments, others, like Modern World History and IB Philosophy Higher Level (HL), replaced homework assignments with in-class readings. Reading aloud together in class allows students to digest difficult concepts and vocabulary
together and allows the class to do immediate work with the text.
a campaign for a political party during the 1860 presidential election. The project required their investigation into the life of a candidate, the candidate’s political positions, and the issues central to that year’s election. In addition to a written report, groups were tasked with implementing a campaign for the candidate via social media or posters throughout the school, using primary sources. Both of these projects demonstrate the department’s focus on skill building. In past years, humanities assessments tended to be more traditional, like in-class essays; now, however, faculty members are constantly seeking creative ways to assess student learning. One example of this can be seen in IB Philosophy HL, where some essays have been replaced with daily reading Rochelle Outlaw Edwards, Humanities Department Chair, helps her students to take ownership of their learning. Another strategy, used in Holocaust and Genocide Studies, is incorporating more discussion-based classes and rotating the responsibility of students to submit discussion questions on each night’s reading. According to Jim Coe, who teaches the course, this strategy helps frame the class’s thinking about the material and gives students an increased sense of ownership over their own learning. Another way of reimagining rigor is through creative group projects. In American Studies, groups of students were tasked with researching, planning and teaching lessons on the postCivil War era. Each group wrote an outline, conducted a seminar, designed a Kahoot (an online, game-based learning platform), and gave a quiz on the material they presented. This project stressed collaboration, communication and creative thinking skills. Likewise, in American Experience, a recent group project incorporated five of the Six Cs: Citizenship, Collaboration, Communication, Creativity and Critical Thinking. Students worked in groups to plan
notes and reflections. According to course teacher Dr. Richard DiBianca, these types of assessments give students more control over their learning. Rather than spending time on studying and trying to anticipate the questions on an in-class essay, students put more effort into making deeper connections to the texts. In IB Modern World History Standard Level (SL), students were required to debate whether Adolf Hitler was Germany’s fate or misfortune. As they would for an in-class essay, students had to develop nuanced and focused arguments while illustrating the depth of their understanding of the historiography surrounding Hitler’s rise to power. A debate tests their oral communication skills and challenges them to immediately respond to arguments posed by their classmates. The debate in IB Modern World History reminds us of the challenges of the past year, with students continually shifting from in-person to remote learning and the impact of those changes on these types of assignments. We applaud our students for remaining dogged in their endeavors, despite our ever-evolving circumstances. Beyond COVID, the Humanities Department plans to take these new challenging and innovative ways of reimagining rigor into the future.
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IB by neIl stouRton I
If you graduated from Newark Academy
in the 1990s, you remember the International Baccalaureate program
as catering to a handful of students. Fast forward to today, half the
students in each class graduate from NA with an IB diploma, while many others
take individual IB courses as honors offerings.
NA students have embraced the IB diploma program because it is widely recognized as the most rigorous college-prep curriculum available, but that rigor is not limited to challenging exams. Diploma candidates take IB courses over the final two years of Upper School in six subjects, so they must demonstrate both breadth and depth of knowledge. In addition to studying for end-of-year IB exams, students in each subject must complete IB-moderated internal assessments and other coursework to demonstrate that they can absorb and analyze the course material. IB courses value mastery of skills over content, and students may demonstrate those skills by creating a podcast in a language class, coming up with an independent topic for a paper in math, or doing lab work to prove a theory in the science textbook. Lessons are inquiry-based, and students are always encouraged to challenge ideas and to question sources. The Extended Essay, now completed during June Term, allows each student to follow their passion and to become the school’s expert in a particular area of knowledge, resulting in a 4,000-word research paper.
on Africa rather than Europe, and IB arts classes look at plays, dance forms, music, paintings and film from around the world. I also invited NA seniors Lori Hashasian and Nicole Pesquin for their take on IB…
What are IB classes really like?
“I really love the freedom that IB gives to choose the classes I am most passionate about. My favorite part of my IB classes is the discussions. I appreciate the ability to learn from my peers and use their differing perspectives to form my own perspective on a subject. The material is presented in a way that encourages students to question and build their knowledge on real-world issues, rather than simply memorizing theorems and facts.”
How do IB classes differ from AP or regular classes?
“My biggest concern about taking IB classes was that they’d all be teaching to a test in the same way AP classes do. I was pleasantly surprised that this wasn’t the case at all. IB exams are structured to test critical thinking, so a lot of them involve writing argumentative essays and shorter responses. Preparing for IB exams falls naturally into the structure of the class since most class discussions involve lots of critical thinking and creating arguments. Internal assessments provide a unique opportunity to research a topic that you’re really interested in. They put the responsibility of choosing a topic into your hands and require you to manage your time effectively.”
Which IB class developed your thinking the most, and why?
Neil Stourton, Director of the International Baccalaureate Diploma Program (IB), and Lori Hashasian ’21 discuss real-world issues to further frame a class discussion. The IB was founded to foster international mindedness, but looking at other cultures and experiences also forces us to question our own assumptions and values. To this end, IB literature classes read works in translation, IB history now has a focus
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Theory of Knowledge (TOK) has definitely transformed the way I think about learning. Before taking TOK, I’d never really considered the different ways we learn and produce knowledge. TOK doesn’t have as many homework assignments or assessments as other classes, which makes it a stress-free environment and gives you space to just think. One of my biggest takeaways from TOK is that certain types of knowledge are not inherently more valuable than others. For instance, while knowledge in science might be more objective than knowledge in the arts, that does not make it more valuable to society.”
health In the Health Department, “Reimagining Rigor” Is Answering the Question Why? by DIana FeRnanDes I
Through our curriculum and hands-on lessons, it is our goal in the
Health Department to provide information that can help students become more knowledgeable,
to provide tools for positive decision-making, and to give students opportunities to recognize why their mental and physical health is important.
We ask students to connect on a personal level and reflect
on ways to handle these situations and oppor-
on course content, in order to strengthen understanding
tunities to practice those skills.
and confidence in making healthy decisions for themselves. Across all grades, students are asked to come together and discuss why actions are important and what impacts they may have on people around them or on themselves as individuals. “In Upper School, students learn about healthy decisionmaking that will take them through life,” says Health Department faculty member Tara DelRusso. “They consider decisions regarding their mental, social and physical health, as well as the consequences of these decisions. Consent, perspective-taking and stress management are all a part of the conversation.” In Kirsti Morin’s seventh-grade Understanding Risky
In my own Physical Health classes, I ask students to explore movement, game strategies and personal fitness with an emphasis on why movement is important. In a class where physical performance is often thought of as primary, it’s easy to forget that knowing why we move can be just as important as the movements themselves. In the midst of a pandemic, these opportunities for students to challenge themselves through movement have become even more meaningful. In my tenth-grade Physical Health class, students create individualized physical goals and design their own workouts to find success. Last fall, I had several students thank me for helping them reach goals they didn’t think were possible, especially because prioritizing
Behaviors class, she uses real-life examples of peer pressure
movement while home has been challenging. One student
and peer conflict to make scenarios relatable for students.
impressively completed over one hundred push-ups in a
She then leads discussions that result in practical advice
single class period! This was something she thought she’d
Diana Fernandes, Health Department Chair, helps Wesley Freeman ’23 (on the left) and Zoe Hermans ’23 (on right) to reach their physical health goals.
never be able to accomplish. It’s a true joy to work with and support these students, and it’s especially gratifying to watch as they push themselves and take responsibility for their physical health. As Carol Spooner, another faculty member in the department, says, “Whether designing their own fitness programs, creating healthy coping strategies for the physical and mental-health challenges of the pandemic, or developing empathy and perspective-taking skills to better connect with others, the Health Department curriculum celebrates challenge and inspires integrity within oneself and in collaboration with others.” It is our hope that all of our classes instill in our students lifelong skills and the confidence to take charge of their wellness for many years to come.
NEWARK ACADEMY
49
A DVA N C E M E N T
TOTAL (DOLLARS RAISED + TRUSTEE MATCH)
$
411,912.70
$242,562.70
DOLLARS
+
381 147 TOTAL # OF DONORS
50
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DONORS MADE A SECOND GIFT TO THE ANNUAL FUND
$169,350 TRUSTEE MATCH
46 1,735 ALUMNI CLASSES MADE AT LEAST 1 GIFT
DAY OF GIVING VIDEO VIEWS
sĈƤÝŸŀ ûÝāĈŋƪ ōōƍÝń Gƍōā ɀȾɀȾɫɀȾɀȿ
IĭƣĈ ùƪ dƍōĈ ɁȾ Ýōā ŋÝŀĈ Ý āĭğğĈŸĈōûĈɚ ƤƤƤɚōĈƤÝŸŀÝɚĈāƍɠāŕōÝƇĈ NEWARK ACADEMY
51
ALUMNI NEWS
Letter From Glenn Waldorf ’90 President, Alumni Board of Governors
It took 30 years and becoming president of Newark Academy Alumni Board of Governors (BOG) for me to appreciate what I learned in my first year at Newark Academy. Drama class taught me how to improvise
and add creativity to words spoken on stage in order to make the
audience enjoy a show. Playing basketball taught me how critical
passing is for running up the score and getting wins. And Latin class taught me carpe diem – seize the day.
››› The quotes within this article were shared by members of Newark Academy’s Board of Governors.
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and understanding all voices in order to
‘‘
Glenn is a compassionate, dedicated, and funny leader. He has set the Alumni BOG up for great success. Thank you Glenn for your service.”
reach consensus positions on complex issues. Each year, we evaluate our results and operations and modify our structure to meet our alumni constituents’ needs. This year COVID-19, Zoom, and a greater emphasis on equity and inclusion reshaped our approaches to meetings
When I was elected president of the BOG
progress is possible during each
in 2015, I was fortunate not to start with a
academic year
tabula rasa (blank slate). I benefited from the strengths and approaches of my predecessors. Thank you, Judge Leo Gordon ’69 (BOG president from 2005–2011), for the extraordinary commitment you
n
Ubi concordia, ibi victoria (where there is unity, there is victory): forging our
The most prominent area where we have
them for success
expanded programming and resources is enhanced alumni networking opportunities.
I am grateful to have worked with two
connecting the school to our alumni, and
outstanding women as vice presidents –
our alumni to each other. Thank you, John
Rebecca Freed ’94 and Jacqueline Lipsius
Bess ’69 (BOG president from 2012–2015),
’93. We recruited an outstanding group
focused the board’s actions in building the NA community. Expanding on these former presidents’ dedication and planning, I sought to raise the bar for how the BOG operates and what we could accomplish for and with our alumni. The board has a clear set of aims: to be the dynamic leadership group of the NA alumni community, dedicated to supporting the mission of the school and serving as a relevant catalyst for engagement between the school and its alumni. My approach as a leader blends my character, experiences, and additional lessons
of alumni leaders and doubled the size of the board. I’m very proud of how the BOG became a proactive working board that anticipates and reflects the interests and goals of our entire alumni constituency. The BOG now includes NA graduates from
as well as in the middle of the country. In addition, a majority of the board is now female, with women chairing the preponderance of BOG committees. The BOG represents a diversity of alumni viewpoints and experiences, as 30 percent of the governors on the
n
Divide et impera (divide and conquer):
We have made our governors’ involve-
being very practical about what can be
ment an engaging and fun commitment.
accomplished and how
The BOG has changed the substance of our
don’t count them): acting with a sense of immediacy to implement whatever
‘‘
nors located on the East and West Coasts
board are alumni of color.
Utere, non numera (use the hours,
Thanks to the recommendations of a
the 1960s through 2010s. We have gover-
from those first NA classes:
n
and online events that have engaged our alumni.
volunteers into a team and empowering
made to NA in advancing the BOG and
for developing robust strategies that
and our programming. I’m thrilled at how we’ve created innovative in-person
meetings to include presentations from trustees, administrators and students on key topics. Discussions focus on hearing
Glenn is an incredible one-man band. Beyond his personal dedication to NA, he is also always intent on learning about each BOG member to understand how he can support them. We welcome our new President and at the same time, understand there will never be another Glenn.”
dedicated alumni task force reporting to the BOG, we adopted a smartphone app to foster alumni networking, ran workshops for young alumni to get a jumpstart on their careers, and expanded our online programming for different industries. This year we transformed our popular NYC Networking Night into a virtual con-
I’ve known Glenn and his family since I was in Kindergarten! Glenn was the first person to welcome me back with open arms to the BOG when I returned for my second stint. His leadership, humor, and care for the NA community and the BOG will be missed!”
ference that attracted alumni nationwide, including NA graduates from the 1950s through 2010s. I am also pleased with the growth in our equity and inclusion efforts during the past few years. We have opened dialogues among our alumni of color, students and
NEWARK ACADEMY
53
ALUMNI NEWS
‘‘
Glenn was a focused leader that helped elevate the BOG’s role at the school. He will be missed…”
NA administrators about their distinct and common sets of experiences. Attending some of these events taught me key lessons that NA students are learning – especially how to defuse conflict and create understanding and empathy. I am proud that the BOG is working hard to support and implement the school’s important equity and inclusion work. NA alumni now participate in NA’s community service initiatives, help NA juniors prepare for their college interviews, and socialize with faculty. Reunion has become a much fuller and more popular experience. The BOG expanded our alumni awards ceremony to recognize contributions to the arts, along with professional, athletic, alumni service and faculty achievements. The BOG is always measuring our progress
‘‘
Glenn is a tireless champion for the NA alumni community.”
and how we can best serve alumni. I believe that our growth and evolution as a board has had a positive effect on NA and its
In June 2021, after 10 great years on the BOG, including six as president, I am concluding my service on the alumni board. Thank you all for your encouragement during this time and your support of the incoming leadership team. I think that the BOG will be in great hands and do even more to serve our NA community
mater such a prominent place in your
in the coming years.
hearts and minds. Thank you to our excel-
As I learned in my first year at NA, there is
lent group of governors for what you’ve
a time to exit the stage and pass the ball to
accomplished and for your ambitious
other fantastic alumni. As I say goodbye,
ideas. Thank you to the strong and
I close with one last Latin phrase we all
creative team in the NA Advancement
learned at NA – one that needs no transla-
Thank you, alumni, for participating in
Office that backs our initiatives and has
tion: Ad Lumen.
school activities, for engaging NA on
been especially impressive during this
social media, and for giving our alma
challenging year.
alumni community. The greatest sign that alumni recognize our increased efforts is that they frequently approach us about volunteering for NA and joining the board.
Glenn has been an exceptional leader on the BOG. He has taken the time to get to know each member of the BOG and has done a remarkable job making sure that we are all connected to one another and to Newark Academy. Glenn truly cares about NA, each member of the BOG, and the entire alumni community. He also has a great sense of humor which makes service on the BOG a lot of fun! Although I will miss calling Glenn, ‘Mr. President,’ I am thankful to call him my friend!”
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Cosimo Fabrizio’18 Introduces rapStudy
A passionate and talented musician, Cosimo Fabrizio ’18 has channeled his love
of music and education into the development of a new company called rapStudy.
Co-founded by Cosimo while attending Cornell University, rapStudy is an online
platform that uses popular song melodies paired with new lyrics to educate children on topics ranging from COVID-19 to the Electoral College.
In a recent interview Cosimo said, “rapStudy really originated from the impact that
music can have by helping prompt ideas and serve as a memory and retention aide. Over a
year of thinking and development, we realized that that has no better place than in the class-
room with young students.”
Cosimo is currently double-majoring in economics and government at Cornell. When not absorbed in his
coursework, he focuses considerable energy on ensuring the continuing success of rapStudy. Asked about the future of the company, Fabrizio said, “If we can have access to younger kids and get their learning process to a place where their relationship with learning fundamentally changes, we will have met our goal. If kids are
more excited about the learning process and realize that learning is not just about filling out worksheets, we
think we’ll be able to have a profound impact on kids’ lives.”
Watch our recent interview with Cosimo Fabrizio ’18 on YouTube to learn more about his work with rapStudy.
2021 VIRTUAL REUNION – JUNE 5
Celebrate and Reconnect with NA! LEARN MORE: www.newarka.edu/alumni
NEWARK ACADEMY
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C L A S S N OT E S
1958
1964
1968
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
Stephen Knee shknee@hotmail.com
Michael r. Yogg michaelyogg@gmail.com
Stephan G. Kravitz sgkravitz@gmail.com
Mark Belnick’s theatrical production partnership is coproducer of the new, musical version of the iconic “Back To The Future,” which played to packed houses and SROs during its tryout last year in Manchester, UK, until COVID intervened. The show is now scheduled to open this summer (COVID willing) in London’s West End, for an unlimited run before hopefully heading to Broadway.
Franklin C. phifer, Jr. fphifer@hecht.com
1959
1940
CONTACT:
Jerome Bess says, “80 years ago I graduated from NA and started what was to be four years of college. Not so! WWII got in the way! Lots of action those days. I returned from Italy in January of 1946 and finished college with a degree in marketing. But returning to school wasn’t the same experience for me as the world had changed.”
douglas B. Slade Dslade542@aol.com
1960 CONTACT:
Frederick Katz, Jr. katzjr@optonline.net 60th Reunion
60th Reunion CONTACT:
CONTACT:
Curtis Cetrulo Curt.cetrulo@gmail.com
robert lee (561) 747-4331
peter papademetriou papadem@cs.com
1946 75th Reunion
1962
CONTACT:
robert Cronheim rdc@cronheim.com
1965
Bernard J. d’Avella, Jr. bud@davellafamily business.com
CONTACT:
Van S. Stevens drvanstevens@gmail.com Alan Grassano and his wife Valerie are the proud grandparents of Jack Miles Grassano born September 3, 2020. Jack joins his first cousin Margot Leigh Grassano born May 7, 2019.
1963
William (Bill) Van Winkle billvw7334@aol.com
CONTACT:
1955
1966
1971
Edward l. levitt eezyed@comcast.net
1972 CONTACT:
daniel d. Cronheim ddc@cronheim.com
1974
Warren G. Soare wsoare@optonline.net
CONTACT:
lance t. Aronson lancetrezevant@aol.com
1967 1975
Matthew leone mleone@colgate.edu
2020–2021 NA ANNuAl FuNd Make your gift by June 30.
Mark Menza menza613ha1@aol.com
55th Reunion
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
I SPRING 2021
leo M. Gordon gordon43b@gmail.com
Harry Hazelwood III drhazelwood@massmed.org
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
Charles A. Fischbein cafpac@Earthlink.net
luMEN
John H. Bess bessjh@gmail.com
Contact: William d. Hardin, Jr. whardin@ptd.net
CONTACT:
1952
56
CONTACT:
50th Reunion
1961 1944
1969
CONTACT:
William J. York wyork@smallfeat.org
Imagine the possibilities your gift can have. Support NA: www.newarka.edu/donate
1976 45th Reunion CONTACT:
donald C. deFabio drdefabio@aol.com robin lechter Frank ontheqt1231@aol.com
1978 ricky Kirshner, owner of RK productions Inc. was an executive producer of President Joe Biden’s and Vice President Kamala Harris’ Inaugural festivities. He also directed the 2020 Democratic convention last year.
1979 CONTACT:
Michael Schneck Mschneck@schnecklaw.com
1980
when automotive engineers and mechanics race their homemade jalopies as fast as 450 mph. She saw her first live NASA launch – a bucket list item since age 10 – with other press members at Vandenberg Air Force Base. Afterward, she accompanied photographers who retrieved their remote cameras near the launch pad, enabling a close-up look at the charred returned SpaceX fuselage. Susan also wrote about a 2019 dive trip she took with retired astronauts to the Aquarius Reef Base, an undersea lab where they trained to live aboard the space station, and the Coral Restoration Foundation, a reef conservation effort. Her weekly Zoom sessions with her Burning Man campmates, including Brian Stroehlein ’80, and visiting with Michael Blum ’79 kept her “relatively sane.”
1
2
3
4
1983
CONTACT:
Kim S. Hirsh KHirsh@jfedgmw.org
1981 40th Reunion
Grammy-nominated singer, Stacey Kent, was a recent guest on Newark Academy’s NA Voices podcast and has recently released her newest single, Landslide: https://orcd.co/sklandslide
5
CONTACT:
Arthur (Artie) Williams IV artiekid@aol.com Artie Williams works for E Street Capital Management, a hedge fund. He is in regular contact with John Roegner, Hans Petter Evensen, Andy Mulvihill and Mac Harris. In spite of the COVID-19 pandemic, Susan Karlin managed some silver linings in the last year. She won a Los Angeles Press Club Award for a Fast Company profile of Poppy Northcutt, the first female NASA mission control specialist turned women’s rights attorney. Susan took a road trip to the Bonneville Salt Flats, on the Nevada/Utah border, for Speed Week,
1984 CONTACT:
William E. Markstein WEMarkstein@gmail.com
1985 CONTACT:
Kimberley Griffinger Wachtel kgwachtel@gmail.com trevor Weston, Professor of Music at Drew University received an Arts and Letters Award in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
1. Alan Grassano’s ’65 grandson, Jack Miles Grassano. 2. Susan Karlin ’81 diving in the Florida Keys. 3. Craig B. Helfer’s ’07 daughter, Ella Rose Helfer. 4. Natalie Lampert’s ’08 daughter, Melody Doris, and her big brother, Josh. 4. Carly McMahon ’13 and Charles Bushnell ’13 at their wedding.
NEWArK ACAdEMY
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C L A S S N OT E S
IN SEARCH OF THE COLOR PURPLE Dr. Salamishah Tillet ’92, Author Salamishah Tillet’s book, In Search of the Color Purple was published in January 2021. Former Newark Academy faculty member Joseph Ball, who read Salamishah’s work, shared his thoughts on her book. “Salamishah draws up her academic studies, her interviews with Alice Walker, Oprah, and others, as well as her personal experiences with tragedy and pain, to illuminate the personalities, relationships and themes of Walker’s modern classic, The Color Purple,” Joe said. “I finished Salamishah’s book with a deeper understanding of the characters Celie, Shug, Albert, Sofia and Harpo; but even more so, I came away with a deeper admiration and love for Salamishah. Her book is a gift. Give it to your friends, and make sure you save a copy for yourself.”
1986 35th Reunion
1991 30th Reunion
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
Betsy dollinger Bernstein bdb1@mac.com
richard l. Worth richardworth2001@ yahoo.com
James C. Schachtel Jschachtel@verizon.net
1993 1988
CONTACT:
CONTACT:
timothy E. Herburger burgermac@mac.com
lara Coraci Basile ljc@norpak.net
Jed S. rosenthal jedrosenthal@gmail.com
Matthew Mctamaney mattheynow@yahoo.com Melissa dollinger Shein msheinus@yahoo.com
1994 CONTACT:
pamela Helfant Vichengrad pamelavich@hotmail.com
1989 CONTACT:
Stacey Bradford stacey.bradford@gmail.com
1990 CONTACT:
Glenn A. Waldorf gwaldorf@bellenvironmental.com
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I SPRING 2021
rebecca Freed moderated a conversation for, “She Knew She Could: A Women’s History Month Event,” featuring five of NA’s amazing alumnae who have broken into their respective industries. Chloe Miller published her new poetry book, “Viable,” which is a collection of poems and stories about “childbearing in the twentyfirst century, when mothers are held to an impossible standard of producing
perfect pregnancies, and an early miscarriage can haunt future motherhood.”
1995 CONTACT:
Evyan turner evyanturner413@gmail.com
1996 25th Reunion CONTACT:
Jason S. Granet grizo1222@yahoo.com Andrew Slutzky andrewzky@gmail.com
1997 CONTACT:
Amanda rubinstein Black amandahblack@gmail.com
1998 CONTACT:
Jack A. Hyman jahyman@gmail.com lauren Jacobs-lazer laurenjacobslazer@gmail.com Smita ramanadham smitar2280md@gmail.com
Jenna Smith Schwerdt jenna@smithdesign.com Congratulations are in order for Jamin Mendelsohn who welcomed her baby Sacha Portoff home on February 21, 2021. Archana rao Calapa and her husband PJ Calapa shared a special conversation in an interview with Evan Nisenson ’99, the Director of Alumni Relations about how they have been managing their restaurant business during a pandemic. Michael Carniol and his family welcomed home a baby girl, Chloe Hannah Carniol, on March 31, 2021. Jade-Addon Hall was nominated for the 2021 Man & Woman of the Year Campaign to raise much-needed funds for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. To help raise awareness and funds for this initiative, Jade recruited a team of close friends and colleagues which includes several NA alumni: ryan Howard ’97, Jenna Smith ’98, pinakin Jethwa ’98, Kavita Jethwa ’01 and roopali Jethwa ’02. You can learn more by contacting Jenna at jenna@smithdesign.com.
1999 CONTACT:
John Gregory Jcg681@gmail.com Asha K. Coco asha.talwar@gmail.com dr. david Green, associate professor of anatomy, coauthored a paper published in Scientific Reports with Daniel Garcia-Martinez and Jose Maria Bermudez de Castro, paleoanthropologists from the National Center for Research on Human Evolution (CENIEH) in Burgos, Spain. Their published findings suggest that Homo antecessor shoulder development was nearly identical to that of Homo sapiens. The authors concluded that H. antecessor shoulders were already very similar to modern humans, even during the Lower Pleistocene (~850,000) years ago.”
2000 CONTACT:
Alison poole lasher alisonklasher@gmail.com Genevieve Custodio welcomed her baby girl, Madeline.
2001 20th Reunion CONTACT:
Colin r. Griggs cgriggs13@yahoo.com Brian McGaughan bmcgaughan@gmail.com
2002 CONTACT:
Joshua Jacobs joshua.s.jacobs@gmail.com Marcelo C. porto mark.c.porto@gmail.com Alexander C. Senchak alex.senchak@gmail.com
Andrew Martino’s novel start-up restaurant concept, Ghost Truck Kitchen, celebrated its 2nd anniversary on April 20th. Andrew is currently fundraising to grow the concept to multiple locations in 2021 and beyond. For inquiries, please email info@hellogtk.com
some way during this tough time. The entire Fritze family is looking forward to the end of the pandemic so we can come back to New Jersey to visit family and spend time down the shore!
2004 CONTACT:
2003
danielle Grunebaum Barrett dlsimon85@gmail.com
2006 15th Reunion CONTACT:
Julia Appel appel.julie@gmail.com Sarah Marcus Hansen sarahmarcushansen@ gmail.com Brandon Hedvat bhedvat@gmail.com
lauren H. Anderson lauren.h.anderson@gmail.com
Kathryn pagos katie.pagos@gmail.com
Ilana Mandelbaum Sterling ilana.mandelbaum@ gmail.com
david N. rattner drattner07@gmail.com
Stephanie reingold simma.reingold@gmail.com
Asia Stewart asiamstewart@gmail.com
Evan p. Sills evan.sills@gmail.com
louise Ball Schutte louisehira@gmail.com
Jahlisa Braithwaite’s daughter Jayla was born on December 20, 2020.
2005
Julie Cubicciotti welcomed home her baby boy Daniel Anthony IV.
CONTACT:
david Mazzuca and a colleague at Harvard wrote an op-ed titled, “Combine federal funds to clear the air and reopen schools.” This opinion contribution is featured on The Hill. Heather podvey Asip welcomed home baby Callum Asip who was born on March 1st. dorian Muench-Fritze, and Kevin Fritze have been staying safe and keeping very busy in Charlotte, NC during the pandemic. Dorian has been getting their son through remote learning while becoming their daughter’s preschool instructor. She has an even greater appreciation for everything that teachers do, especially the little, day-to-day things that most parents never see. Meanwhile, Kevin has been managing his company’s response to the coronavirus pandemic since June, when he was put in charge of helping the company’s manufacturing sites respond to cases among their 9,000+ employees. While the role is challenging, it is rewarding to be able to help others in
CONTACT:
Jonathan Allocca jonathan.allocca@gmail.com Gabriel Gaviola gabe.c.gaviola@gmail.com Molly McGaughan molly.mcgaughan@gmail.com Bridget duffy raines Bridgetpraines@gmail.com Jacquelyn S. dorsky pinchuk (Jackie) and her husband Randy welcomed their baby Skylar Nora home.
2007 CONTACT:
david doobin doobind@gmail.com Catherine pfeffer catherine.pfeffer@gmail.com Emily Crystal emily.c.simon@me.com Andrew Somberg asomberg@gmail.com Craig B. Helfer welcomed home baby girl Ella Rose Helfer, born on 2/21/21.
BECoME A ClASS AMBASSAdor! Class ambassadors perform a valuable service to the NA alumni community: they communicate school and class news, support key initiatives such as Reunion, and encourage participation in the Annual Fund. Sign up online at www.newarka.edu/classambassador.
NEWArK ACAdEMY
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C L A S S N OT E S
We Fondly Remember Edwin M. Gangemi ’78 March 1, 2021 Frank M. MacKeith ’50 February 9, 2021 Charles R. Moffatt ’37 February 6, 2021 Gerald L. Evans ’80 January 28, 2021 H. Peter Schaub, Jr. ’40 December 18, 2020 Robert J. O’Brien ’60 October 28, 2020 Kenneth Goldman ’50 December 9, 2019 Martin T. Gilman ’47 Ernest N. Scarpa ’50 April 15, 2020
welcomed their daughter, Melody Doris, on February 13, 2021. She joins big brother Josh, age 2. The family also recently bought their first house and have moved out of Manhattan and back to New Jersey!
2009 CONTACT:
Andrew S. Binger abinger1990@gmail.com Christina A. Colizza christina.colizza@gmail.com rebecca Curwin rebecca.curwin@gmail.com Shannon lam Webster shannonrlam@gmail.com Brian l. Silver briansilver0711@gmail.com Congratulations to Carly Hyatt Balagia who welcomed her baby girl Anabel home.
2010
CONTACT:
david Frank david.frank44@gmail.com Alexa Gruber Kitchin alexa.gruber@richmond.edu Maximilian C. Staiger mstaiger41@me.com Congratulations to Michael Forman and Becky Jay Forman who welcomed their baby girl Molly Ezra, November 2020. rachel Klein Melhorn and Bryan Melhorn welcomed home a baby boy. Natalie (Friedman) lampert and her husband Gary
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10th Reunion
lisa Fischer lisasuefischer@gmail.com patrick Kelly patrick.o.d.kelly@gmail.com
After spending years connecting at NA events, Susan Kobler, mother of Kendra Kobler, and several moms from the Class of 2010 realized it might be the end of seeing each other once their daughters graduated. To stay in touch, they formed a book group. 10 years and more than 100 books later, their group still meets nearly every month. When the pandemic hit, they switched from inperson to Zoom, and were able to invite their daughters to join (who were scattered in various cities). The mother/ daughter duos include the Koblers, Mukherjees, Shubes, Steins, rajans, and Bienstocks.
2015 CONTACT:
Sydney Hershman Smhershman@gmail.com
Madeline delamielleure maddydelamielleure15@ gmail.com
Jordan I. Jett jordanjett13@gmail.com
Jasmine Gamboa jgamboa19@amherst.edu
Jennifer Mandelbaum jmande15@bu.edu
Nicholas Murray nsm407@gmail.com
Jourdan McGhee jourdan.mcghee@gmail.com
Zachary persing zcpersing@gmail.com
Congratulations to William Harwood (Whit) who recently got engaged and started a new job at an organization called BUZZER as a Senior Product Manager.
Matthew thekkethala matt@learnforlife foundation.org
CONTACT:
2012 CONTACT:
Christopher p. davis davis.cp@gmail.com Shane S. Neibart ssneibart@gmail.com Carissa E. Szlosek szlosek@wisc.edu
CONTACT:
Brian McHugh mchugh.brian10@gmail.com
2008
2011
2013 CONTACT:
SaVonne Anderson savonneanderson@gmail.com Nicole Andrzejewski nicole@go.wustl.edu Matt Cowen mcowen95@gmail.com Carly McMahon married Charles Bushnell on June 6, 2020 with immediate family present at the ceremony.
2014 CONTACT:
Jai Ghose jghose@andrew.cmu.edu thomas pan tpan14@gmail.com lauren Whelan lmw025@bucknell.edu Jacob Wieseneck jwieseneck@gmail.com
Gebereal Baitey became an assistant men’s basketball coach at Emory University on February 22, 2021.
2016 5th Reunion CONTACT:
Courtney Cooperman courtneycooperman@ comcast.net Jacob Furst Jacobfurst20@gmail.com Joshua Martin Martinjoshua029@gmail.com Elizabeth Merrigan Elizabeth.merrigan16@ gmail.com Samuel Vazir samvazir@gmail.com Bryan Wilensky bryanwsemail@gmail.com Mackenna Woods Mackennavalle@gmail.com Joshua Collin is Co-Founder of Bioloop Sleep, which offers expert 1-on-1 sleep coaching digitally to provide a more personalized way to unlock better sleep health.
2017 CONTACT:
Chloe Yu chloeyu@college.harvard.edu
Step Ahead & Sharpen Your Skills:
REIMAGINE SUMMER 2021 at Newark Academy June 28 - August 6
THAN MORE ES AND SS 50 CLA SEBALL A BA P ! CAM
• Grades K - 12
Students will: Increase their skill-level, so they are better prepared for a return to school
in the fall
•
Engage in experiential learning opportunities for leadership development
•
Gain new perspectives from peers and instructors, to encourage participation and growth Choose among several offerings, including: Academic & Enrichment Programs
Meaningful discovery & skill development in advanced credit classes, STEM, arts, writing, sports, SAT/ACT Prep
NA-X Courses
EXclusively taught by NA faculty and administrators, with EXploratory courses in languages, financial literacy, philosophy, anatomy, coding
Apply online today! www.newarka.edu/summer
… and MORE!
Newark Academy
NON-PROFIT ORG. US POSTAGE
91 South Orange Avenue Livingston, NJ 07039
PAID
P (973) 992-7000 E communications@newarka.edu www.newarka.edu
PITTSBURGH, PA PERMIT #5450
Parents of alumni: If this publication is addressed to your child and he or she no longer maintains a permanent residence at your home, please notify Newark Academy, alumni@newarka.edu.
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SAVE THE DATE SEPTEMBER 20, 2021 Minuteman Golf Invitational Cedar Hill Golf & Country Club Livingston, NJ