Is there anyone alive who remembers their Middle School years with fondness? I’m afraid the answer to that question is not many. Even I, the woman who loves her work with Middle School students, remembers reaching Upper School at my independent school in New York City and thinking “Phew, I never have to go back there again.” “There” was Middle School and the distance was but one floor in the nine story building that constituted my school campus on the edge of Central Park. I smile at the obvious irony, for I am most certainly back in Middle School. That memory, however, meaningfully informs every conversation I have with Middle School students in distress or even in a bit of trouble.
I have reflected back on that memory often, trying to recall what was at the heart of my relief around growing up and out of Middle School. I have concluded with some certainty that kindness, or the lack thereof, was a good part of it. Since becoming Middle School Dean, I have looked for ways to incorporate kindness into our ongoing discussions in Homeroom and Assembly time. In fact, “Kindness and Community” are our anchor words this year as we focus on our theme of “A Responsible Life”.
Much has been written in recent years about whether or not kindness can be taught and if so how on earth do you do it? Happily, there is much to suggest in research and in life experience that there is an inherent human capacity or inclination toward kindness. Our bent toward kindness, however, can be overshadowed it seems when things become too stressful, too uncertain or too complicated.
Lest you have forgotten, Middle School years are complicated. They are years of exponential physical, emotional and intellectual growth. They are also the years when young adolescents begin the incremental process of individuation and independence. Additionally, they are years fraught with the ever distilling questions of who they are and what they want to become. Overarching it all is the need to find their place, their tribe, their true blue friends. Every day I see how hard it is to be a true blue friend while experiencing an unrelenting need to be accepted and included by everyone. The competing needs to fit in, find yourself and be accepted by your classmates can often lead to hurt feelings, social drama and seemingly inevitable moments of unkindness.
Over a number of weeks this term in Middle School assembly, we have heard faculty and students reflect on how they have experienced kindness in their lives. These personal accounts have been both simple and profound. They have moved audience and speaker to tears as they have shared truthful accounts of how a seemingly simple kindness has impacted them. For some, the stories stretched back several years, for others the acts of kindness were fresh and equally moving. Their stories touched a chord that now binds us in all the ways that make us human.
Next term, a group of Middle School students on our Community Builders Committee will help lead and further a kindness movement that we hope will inspire acts of kindness across the grades and across our campus. I believe that Middle School students can lead their peers in ways that can make kindness more common in our community. As always, there will be adults of influence standing by their side, giving guidance and cheering them on. Kindness, for all the reasons mentioned above, may always be a struggle in Middle School. But, it is a struggle worthy of our best efforts.
November 9, 2016
April 19, 2017
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Celebrate 5 years since graduation with your classmates. Reconnect, reminisce, and enjoy an evening of conversation, shared memories, and celebration with fellow members of the Class of 2021. Hearty appetizers and a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.
Celebrate 10 years since graduation with your classmates. Reconnect, reminisce, and enjoy an evening of conversation, shared memories, and celebration with fellow members of the Class of 2016. Hearty appetizers and a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.
Celebrate 15 years since graduation with your classmates. Reconnect, reminisce, and enjoy an evening of conversation, shared memories, and celebration with fellow members of the Class of 2011. Hearty appetizers and a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.
Celebrate 20 years since graduation with your classmates. Reconnect, reminisce, and enjoy an evening of conversation, shared memories, and celebration with fellow members of the Class of 2006. Hearty appetizers and a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.
Celebrate 25 years since graduation with your classmates. Reconnect, reminisce, and enjoy an evening of conversation, shared memories, and celebration with fellow members of the Class of 2001. Hearty appetizers and a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages will be provided.
Come together with ÂÌñÉç alumni from across the entire 1990s for an evening of reconnecting and reminiscing! This combined reunion is a chance to celebrate the friendships, memories, and moments that made your ÂÌñÉç years so special. Enjoy hearty appetizers and a variety of drinks, including alcoholic and non-alcoholic options, while catching up with old friends and sharing laughs about your school days.
Saturday, May 16 | 7:30 – 11:30 AM | Murray Science Center
We’re bringing back birding! Who remembers the Class IX Bird Project? Don’t miss your chance to join this fun, family-friendly event with Mark Bromley, James Harris, Mike Johnson ‘88, and Bekka Joslin. We will meet at ÂÌñÉç and take a bus together. Don’t forget to bring your binoculars (we will have extras on hand if you don’t have your own).
Friday, May 15 | 6:30 – 7:30 PM | East Field
We’re excited to see ÂÌñÉç Alumni at our annual Alumni Soccer Game! This ÂÌñÉç tradition gives former players the chance to return to the field, reconnect with old teammates, and showcase their skills in a friendly atmosphere. Whether you played with us just a few years ago or several decades ago, we look forward to seeing you back on the field. Make sure to bring friends and family to cheer you on!
Friday, May 15 | 5:00 – 7:00 PM | Main Quad | No Registration Required
Join us for a fun BBQ bash at ÂÌñÉç with current families and ÂÌñÉç staff and faculty. It’s a great way to connect with your ÂÌñÉç classmates and enjoy delicious food before the Alumni Soccer Game!
No registration is needed for the Spring BBQ. Please join us!
Friday, May 15 | 4:00 – 5:00 PM | Haught Visual Arts Gallery at ÂÌñÉç | No Registration Required
ÂÌñÉç has always been a place where creativity thrives. Join us for the first-ever Alumni Art Show in the Haught Visual Arts Gallery and reconnect with the creative spirit that shaped your time here. This exhibition features work by 16 ÂÌñÉç Alumni artists, reflecting a range of disciplines, perspectives, and practices.
Brief Remarks at 4:00 pm will be offered by Gallery Manager and Curator Charlie Tadlock, followed by remarks from some of the Alumni Artists.
Click for a campus map
Friday, May 15 | 2:15 – 3:30 PM | Miller Student Commons | Registration Highly Recommended
Ever wish you could go back and sit in your favorite class one more time? This Alumni Weekend, you can. We’re bringing you back “Back to Class” where you’ll have the chance to slip into a real, live Upper School classroom and experience ÂÌñÉç exactly as it exists today. Same teachers, same energy, same magic. Come relive the feeling.
Friday, May 15 | 12:45– 1:00 PM | Miller Student Commons | No Registration Required
Don’t leave lunch just yet. Immediately following the Kick-Off, Head of School Andrew Menke will take a few minutes to share what’s been happening at ÂÌñÉç; the changes, the milestones, and the exciting things on the horizon. It’s a chance to hear straight from the source about the school you helped shape and where it’s headed next. No sign-up needed, just pull up a seat.
Friday, May 15 | 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM | Miller Student Commons | No Registration Required
Kick off Alumni Weekend the right way — with good food and even better company. Join us in the new Miller Student Commons for ÂÌñÉç’s all-inclusive dining experience, and spend the lunch hour reconnecting with the faculty who made your time here unforgettable. Pull up a chair, catch up with old favorites, and let the weekend begin. No registration is required for this event.
Friday, May 15 | 1:00 – 2:00 PM | Miller Student Commons | No Registration Required
For many of you, Assistant Head of School, Todd Winters, was the first person who ever showed you and your parents around our 41 acre campus. Now he’s back to do it again! Todd will lead you through ÂÌñÉç’s beautiful newest additions and recent transformations, giving you a firsthand look at what your years here helped build. Whether it’s your first tour with Todd or your second, you won’t want to miss this one.