Country ZEST & Style Holiday 2023 Edition

Page 79

Head of Highland School Heading Out

W

By Jodi Nash

illiam Butler Yeats, the epic Irish poet and politician, once observed that, “Education is not the filling of a pot, but the lighting of a fire.” Henry D. “Hank” Berg knows a thing or two about lighting fires. Great administrators have the capacity to create excellent schools because they attract gifted teachers to inspire young minds in and out of the classroom. As Head of School since 2005, he’s guided Highland School in Warrenton through a period of dynamic growth during his 19-year tenure. A graduate of Wake Forest University with a bachelor’s degree in economics, his was an unusual path into education. A devoted outdoor wilderness enthusiast and experienced hiker, kayaker, and rock climber, he and two friends started Blue Ridge Outfitters, guiding white-water rafting trips in West Virginia. Seeking alternatives to traditional sports activities for boys, St. Albans School in Washington, recruited him to co-direct their wilderness program. He essentially served as their outfitter while teaching history and supervising dorm life. After six years, he was on a canoe and camping trip to Big Bend National Park in West Texas when a chance meeting led to an opportunity to obtain a Master’s degree in interdisciplinary science at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. Offered a scholarship, he completed the program in a year. At the time, St. Stephen’s School in Alexandria was creating a middle school program, looking for someone to modernize the curriculum and revise their methodology for sixth to eighth graders. It was a perfect fit. Hank and his three brothers had attended St. Stephen’s, an independent school with a long tradition of providing an excellent college preparatory education. His father, a Yale graduate, was chair of the foreign language department, teaching Spanish, coaching baseball, and immersing his family in the culture and tradition of private education and academia. He started in the fall, teaching eighth grade science and working to ground and discipline 80 boys. He eventually became director of the middle school, obtaining his first administrative position at age 28. “I was the boss of some of my father’s colleagues,’ he said. After the merger of St. Stephen’s with its sister school, St. Agnes, to create a coed class, he and several colleagues left to start Flint Hill School in Oakton. “The Hazel family was instrumental in funding and supporting this…and did more for education

Hank Berg

Hank Berg, the man in the middle, surrounded by Highland School students on a recent paddling excursion. in Northern Virginia than anyone,” he said. “We had 425 kids, from feeder schools all over the area.” At Flint Hill, Hank built the program, first as upper school director, then as assistant head, and later as acting head of the school. Chosen as director of Highland School, being an educator developed over time as a function of experience, not necessarily choice. “I love working with kids in a school setting,” he said. “Highland eschews a one-size-fits-all ‘sit and get’ approach to learning. We strive to understand the science behind it and support our teachers’ growth and training in how to reach all kinds of minds.” Clearly proud of the All-State and Division III athletes the school has produced over the years, Hank notes this reputation for being a good athletic school never comes at the expense of academics. The robust performing and fine arts programs at Highland, with a state-of-the art facility featuring the Rice Theatre and Lise Hicklin Black Box Theatre, offers a vital alternative to creative students seeking career paths in the arts. Hank also has made Highland a true family affair; his three daughters are all graduates.

Asked about his biggest challenges, he answered immediately. “The economic recession in 2008,” he said. “There we were, embarking on expansion and growth with the building of our new lower school, just as enrollment shrank. Our faculty bore the burden, with the sunsetting of benefits and wage reduction.” With a goal to always avoid disruption to students, the next arduous task the school faced was Covid, post-Covid, and the resulting teacher shortage. “It was an unknown for everybody, but we were able to keep most of our lower-level kids in the building,” he said. “We had the capacity to spread out. The upper school did hybrid learning or alternate day attendance.” Hank will retire from Highland at the end of this academic year. Still an avid cyclist, he completed a cross country ride from north of Seattle to Bar Harbor, Maine in two parts, pedaling 3,000 miles in 2017, and 1,000 miles in 2019. First thing on his agenda? An already mapped bike ride from Minneapolis to Yellowstone National Park. After that Hank Berg expects to be active in the non-profit volunteer community. After all, there’s always more to learn.

Country ZEST & Style | Holiday 2023

77


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

A First Love Lost

5min
page 82

A Day at the Montpelier Races

4min
page 81

Something For Everyone at Littleton Farm

3min
page 80

Head of Highland School Heading Out

4min
page 79

Cousins Meet in Pacific; Littletons Honor Visitors

3min
page 78

Looking For More Faces at the Gold Cup Races

3min
page 77

PROPERTY Writes

3min
page 76

China Folk House Retreat in Harpers Ferry

4min
pages 74-75

Conservation Partnerships Lead to Historic Battlefield Protection

3min
page 73

Edith Blackwell: An Amazing Life

3min
page 72

History Unfolds at Loudoun County’s Ebenezer Churches

4min
pages 70-71

A Familiar Face in the Kitchen at Marshall’s Blue Mountain Grill

3min
page 69

Hill School Auction Just Keeps on Giving Back

3min
page 67

On The ROAD

2min
page 66

Theodore Roosevelt’s Sporting Universe

3min
page 65

Wolver Beagles Are Now So Much History

3min
page 64

HELP WANTED: THE TRADES

3min
page 63

Umpire Mitigation Doesn’t Mess Around

3min
page 62

MODERN FINANCE

3min
page 61

Copper Fox: A Luscious Liquor Made With Love

3min
page 60

CELEBRATIONS

2min
page 58

Perspectives on Childhood, Education, and Parenting A CONVERSATION ON THE PRESSURE OF GREAT EXPECTATIONS

5min
pages 56-57

Another Fabulous West Virginia Breeders Classic

3min
page 55

Say hello to Middleburg library’s new branch manager

3min
page 54

Small Ways AI Enhances Everyday Life

4min
pages 52-53

Survival of the Fittest: Envisioning Wildlife and Wilderness with the Big Four, Masterworks from the Rijksmuseum Twenthe and the National Museum of Wildlife Art

2min
page 51

Meet Jamie Potter: Writer, Illustrator, Musician and Bartender

3min
page 49

Long Branch Traces Its History a Long Way Back

4min
page 48

How Does Wildlife Survive Winter?

3min
page 46

All Hail Haley Making College Football History

3min
page 45

COUNTRY Pursuits

1min
page 44

Sunset In The Field

1min
page 44

SURVIVAL

11min
pages 42-43

Middleburg Film Fest

2min
page 41

A NEW OLD GRANDSTAND FOR UPPERVILLE

4min
pages 38-39

Pot House Has History on its Side

6min
pages 36-37

Meet Middleburg’s New Postmaster

3min
page 34

Rory McEwen: A New Perspective on Nature

3min
pages 32-33

Up, Up In The Air

2min
page 31

The Virginia Fall Races

2min
page 30

“Tis The Season for Maintenance Musts

3min
page 28

Tranquility Abounds at St. Dominic’s Monastery

4min
page 27

Someone’s in the Kitchen at Buchanan Hall

3min
page 26

James Markham Marshall Ambler, Hero of the Arctic

7min
pages 24-25

ROOT to TABLE at AUDLEY FARM

3min
page 22

BOOKED UP

2min
page 21

The Middleburg Orange County Beagles

2min
page 18

'Tis TANNENBAUM SEASON

5min
pages 16-17

Carry Me Back: My Ghost Writer Had Just The Right Stuff

2min
page 15

HERE & THERE

1min
page 14

The Foxcroft Christmas Pageant Remains A Sacred Tradition

3min
page 12

A Garden to Honor Peggy Richardson

2min
page 11

A Buddhist Temple Offers Enlightenment in Aldie

3min
page 10

Love and Nutcrackers at The Christmas Sleigh

3min
page 8

Mike Donovan Sees the Forest Through the Trees

3min
page 7

A Plea for The Trees

3min
page 6

SO MUCH TO CELEBRATE

3min
page 4
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.