At this month鈥檚 Parent Association meeting, 绿帽社 parents gathered together to hear from students and faculty about the power of excellent teaching at 绿帽社. Below you will find transcriptions of the speeches given at the meeting.
Speech given by Andrew Menke, Head of School:聽
绿帽社鈥檚 vision to inspire students to pursue a life of meaning and purpose is aligned with the foundational purpose of a liberal arts education to prepare a democratic citizenry. In each division, our faculty teach your children exceptional written and oral communication skills, literacy and numeracy, to reason and analyze, to think critically and foster intrinsic curiosity. We teach your children how to think 鈥 not what you think 鈥 all in an effort to nurture a deep love of life-long learning. Last month鈥檚 alumni panel powerfully affirmed the impact of a 绿帽社 education. If you were not in attendance, watch the recording of the panel here.
Most important to your child鈥檚 experience are teachers and 绿帽社 teachers are strong. 70% have advanced degrees with an average tenure of 16 years. They have deep content knowledge, passion for their discipline, and are skilled at building the kind of relationships that engender stretching and commitment that results in exceptional growth and excellent preparation for college and career.
So what characterizes liberal arts learning and teaching? The liberal arts tradition is grounded in the idea of holistic education, offering a depth and breadth of experience. From literature and history to science and the arts, a liberal arts education connects disciplines, encouraging students to make interdisciplinary connections and understand their education in the context of the wider world. Excellent liberal arts pedagogy emphasizes inquiry-based learning and thoughtful discussion. In each division, students ask questions, debate ideas, and engage in meaningful dialogue with peers and teachers.
For Lower School students, this might look like asking why the seasons change or exploring character development in their favorite story. For Middle or Upper School students, it could be debating ethical dilemmas, analyzing historical events, or solving complex scientific problems. This emphasis on dialogue helps students become confident communicators and attentive, analytical listeners.
In today鈥檚 fast-changing world, it鈥檚 not enough to memorize information; students need to know how to analyze, interpret, and apply knowledge. Again, excellent liberal arts pedagogy trains students to think critically. In history, students learn dates and events and they examine primary sources, consider multiple perspectives, and connect historical events to current issues. In math and science, they solve equations and explore why formulas work and how they can be applied in real-world situations. Alongside intellectual skill building in the classroom, a liberal arts education helps to instill and reinforce our core values 鈥 integrity, excellence, curiosity, responsibility and caring.
Through literature, students might learn to see the world through others鈥 eyes. In community service projects, they experience the importance of giving back. In class discussions, they wrestle with ethical questions, learning to form opinions grounded in reason and analysis and, we hope, empathy and compassion. We want our students not only to excel academically but to grow into kind, principled leaders who will forge their own paths and make a positive impact on the world.
What makes liberal arts pedagogy truly distinctive is its dual focus on timeless content that is timelessly relevant. While students engage with enduring works of literature, art, and philosophy, they explore the application of our classic curriculum to modern, real-life challenges. This balance ensures that they鈥檙e not just ready for college and careers, but that they are prepared to lead fulfilling lives as adaptable, thoughtful, and engaged citizens.
I hope this is the environment your child experiences here each day at 绿帽社. A place of wonder, curiosity, and passion. A place full of rewarding success and ample challenge. We know 绿帽社 can be hard, and that is purposeful. All in an effort to help your child develop, as I have said, the competence and confidence to do anything 鈥 to be anything 鈥 they want to be in the world, that life of meaning and purpose.
Speech given by Finn C., Class V student:聽
Hi, I鈥檓 Finn Caldwell; I am in Mr. Johnson鈥檚 5th grade class and this is my eighth year here at 绿帽社. I love computers, art, and math, and outside of school, I love to paint, solder, draw, make crafts, and play video games. No, I can鈥檛 play video games at school, but I get to explore my other interests, and I am very lucky to be at this awesome school.
I would like to mention two of my favorite teachers this year. I鈥檇 talk about more, since there are many amazing teachers here, but I only have a few minutes.
Mr. Johnson is my homeroom teacher this year. Whenever I am having a hard day, Mr Johnson understands and tries to help me feel better or help me solve the problem. Another thing he does to help us is whenever someone isn鈥檛 understanding a history concept, for example, he tries to explain it in other words or more simply so that everyone can understand. Sometimes, this is for others, and sometimes it鈥檚 for me! Mr Johnson makes sure we use every minute of class time, either for learning or for fun. If we all stay focused and use less time than he planned to learn something, he gives us free time or rewards us with a game. Sometimes we even win prizes. When we all do well on a test, he will give us a surprise too! For those of us who like math, Mr. Johnson has an after-school math club. We have fun exploring math concepts by finding solutions to different problems, and he always makes sure the word problems are silly enough that we all have a good laugh. Mr. Johnson is an amazing homeroom teacher and makes sure everybody in his class not only understands our work, but has a fun time doing it! He really cares about each of us and does a great job motivating us to be our best.
Ms. Johnston is one of the specialists in Lower School and teaches computers. But she doesn鈥檛 just help us use computers, she lets us experiment with new software such as GarageBand and Pages and Britannica. Currently, in computers, we are researching states such as Massachusetts and Georgia to make a teaching and interesting video. We are using this research to make a project with three teammates. Each team has a Project Manager, Artist Director, and Video Director. I am the project manager of my team, but that does not mean I am the boss. Everybody gets a say in what we do, such as our team name, that we all voted on. Through projects like this, she is teaching us about more than just computers and helping us learn other skills too that can help us later, even in a job. Last year, Ms. Johnston helped the lower school learn to code with codeblocks. The students that finished (including me) got to start learning JavaScript, with a combination of codeblocks and text. I love that she always has more for us to learn if we finish the main thing she is trying to teach us. Ms Johnston isn鈥檛 just teaching classes. She has a coding club that was new this fall where we learned about Micro Bits, which are small computers. Ms. Johnston is an amazing teacher who cares about her students and shares her love of technology with us. In her class I鈥檝e learned to love exploring technology, how it works, and its uses too!
I am very glad to be at this amazing school with excellent teachers and classes we would not normally have at most other schools, and I am excited to explore everything 绿帽社 has to offer.
Speech given by Joclyn N., Class XII student:聽
My trembling hands grasped the paper. Wicked red pen circled my grade鈥擨 was horrified. The worst math score I鈥檇 ever received in high school.
Mr. Sayes passed everyone鈥檚 tests out to them, sighs and groans indicating the general discontent. Then:
鈥淧reston, what did you get on your test?鈥
My stomach dropped. Horror. Adrenaline.
鈥淲hat?鈥 Preston said, unsure if what he had just beheld was the truth of reality or a figment of his imagination, a hallucination ripped from a nightmare come to torment him in the waking world. 鈥淵ou heard me,鈥 our grinning teacher replied. 鈥淭ell me your score.鈥
The whole classroom squirmed with Preston鈥檚 anguish as he was forced to share his grade. And we all winced at the score just as he must have. One by one, Mr. Sayes plucked us off, like a wolf killing a sheep herd, making us lay out our failures to the entire class. Of course, there were the students who got fantastic scores鈥攎ath geniuses that can be disregarded. But you know what鈥檚 funny? When I told everyone my score, that embarrassing score, the worst math
grade I鈥檝e ever gotten鈥攎y shame and worry just melted away. Just like that. Suddenly I didn鈥檛 care that the test score was so horrible. I saw that that鈥檚 not the thing that really mattered.
And that鈥檚 how Mr. Sayes undermined the misconception that education is for a grade. We worked through the problems that gave students the most trouble. There was no punishment for, or disappointment about, our scores (well, aside from the teasing鈥攐f course he was going to tease us about it). But by the end of the whole thing, I understood the topics that had been my demise on the test, and I never thought about the score again. I felt a sense of ease and comfort in the class from then on, not caring about the number representation of my performance, but rather the act of learning itself. The knowledge and the soaking in of it. And even though it wasn鈥檛 a priority to me anymore鈥攎y letter grade did increase from then on.
It鈥檚 teachers like this that make 绿帽社 great. Mr. Sayes, Dr. O, Mrs. Watabe, Mr. Rosett, Dr. Bennett, to name a few. The kind of teachers who know you aren鈥檛 perfect and are eager to push and stretch you, even despite your horror and the scary red pen. The kind of teachers that love learning for the sake of learning and show you how to love it too. The kind that make you forget about all the data and formalities and instead boil education down to the essential鈥攖he very purpose of it itself鈥攖he fact that you want to learn and there is so much to learn in this world and you are capable of learning it all. Even through the rough spots, and the imperfections, and the frustrations. All that matters is the hunger for knowledge and the real, honest work that you put into soaking it up.
Let me tell you about a teacher that really changed my life.
I鈥檝e spent eight years in the theater program. Fifth grade to senior year. 20 plays directed by Javen Tanner. All available high school classes (some twice) and two independent studies.
I wouldn鈥檛 be who I am without all of that. Mr. Tanner taught me about acting, and the history of Western theater, and dialects and movement and writing poetry and all of that, but he taught me about a lot more.
Mr. Tanner is one to be morbid. To lecture us about how even the names carved into our gravestones will eventually be eroded away. Gravestones sunk into the ground. The same fate for everyone who remembered us. Everything lost. But from there, you find something entirely new: real beauty.
As Wallace Stevens said, 鈥淒eath is the mother of beauty.鈥 That鈥檚 one Mr. Tanner loves quoting. In his classes, in his plays, we wrestle with the human condition. What it is to be alive. What it is to realize you鈥檙e alive. Without him, I don鈥檛 think I would be as conscious as I am in my life. There鈥檚 this moment, every so often, where you realize鈥擨 am. I exist. And one day I won鈥檛. And isn鈥檛 it so precious, so beautiful, that I am alive right now, in this very moment, standing here?
There are many incredible teachers here. And for me, I鈥檓 lucky to have had a teacher that not only taught me about the things I love, like theater and poetry, but helped me realize what it means to be alive. To be a human. For the rest of my life, I will carry that with me. There will never be a day that I am not infinitely grateful and indebted to Mr. Tanner.
Education is about so much more than the score and the performance. It鈥檚 about the real hunger for learning, because you鈥檙e only alive for so long, and it鈥檚 about the ability to soak up as much out of this life as you can while you鈥檙e still here. It鈥檚 about being human. I鈥檓 grateful to have found that spirit here at 绿帽社.
April 12, 2025
January 12, 2024
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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 绿帽社 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 绿帽社 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 鈥88, and Bekka Joslin. We will meet at 绿帽社 and take a bus together. Don鈥檛 forget to bring your binoculars (we will have extras on hand if you don鈥檛 have your own).
Friday, May 15 | 6:30 鈥 7:30 PM | East Field
We’re excited to see 绿帽社 Alumni at our annual Alumni Soccer Game! This 绿帽社 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 鈥 7:00 PM | Main Quad | No Registration Required
Join us for a fun BBQ bash at 绿帽社 with current families and 绿帽社 staff and faculty. It鈥檚 a great way to connect with your 绿帽社 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 鈥 5:00 PM | Haught Visual Arts Gallery at 绿帽社 | No Registration Required
绿帽社 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 绿帽社 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 绿帽社 exactly as it exists today. Same teachers, same energy, same magic. Come relive the feeling.
Friday, May 15 | 12:45鈥 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 绿帽社; 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 鈥 1:00 PM | Miller Student Commons | No Registration Required
Kick off Alumni Weekend the right way 鈥 with good food and even better company. Join us in the new Miller Student Commons for 绿帽社’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 鈥 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 绿帽社’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.