2018 Conference Schedule

Monday, June 25

1:00     - Check-in Open; refreshments & tours available

2:00     - Conference Opening, Welcome & Introduction of keynote speaker

2:15      - Opening Keynote - Alfie Kohn: Teaching Children to Care

4:30     - Session 1

Strategic Planning Through Community Involvement, Kevin Gailey, Midwest Academy, Carmel, IN

Gender Identity Inclusive Athletic Programs, Jen Cort, Jen Cort Educational Consulting

5:45     - Glassblowing Studio open - Please sign up for a time slot to experience The Crefeld Glass Studio and make your own paperweight.

7:00      - Group Dinner (included in registration): El Poquito, 8201 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19118

9-ish    - Late night informal gathering at the Iron Hill Brewery, 8400 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19118

 

Tuesday June 26

8:00     - Breakfast (light fare + coffee & tea)

Heads of School Breakfast Meetup

Breakfast (and more) with Starr (open to everyone) - Join Starr Snead for a moderated group discussion and question and answer session, drawing on her years of work as an independent school development and governance consultant extraordinaire! Starr will also be available before, during, and after the conference to meet with conference participants for 30 minute individual sessions. 

9:00     - Session 2

The Board-Head Partnership: Articulating Roles and Responsibilities in a Small School, Brooke Carroll, Acies Strategies; Liz Dover Baker, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Embracing Difficult Conversations in the Classroom, Rebekah Jordan, Indian Mountain School, Lakeville, CT; Bryan Pannill, Salisbury School, Salisbury, CT

Building a Gifted and Talented Program With Little Money and Few Students, Kristin Zappie, Brocton Elementary School, Brocton, NY

10:30    - Session 3

Identity Awareness for Advocacy in Action, Jason Heisserer, Crossroads College Preparatory School, St. Louis, MO

7 Deadly Words: Does Your Website Say What You Think it Does?  Jill Goodman, Jill Goodman Consulting, Baltimore, MD; Liz Dover Baker, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD; Ashely Inman Krug, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Evergreen Enrollment Contracts, Carl Parke, The Gooden School, Sierra Madre, CA

12:00    - Lunch (included)

Glassblowing Studio open - Please sign up for a time slot to experience The Crefeld Glass Studio and make your own paperweight.

CrEF Lab Tour - Visit the new CrEF Lab, a small school solution to a STEAM lab, and learn how to create your own. Tour starts at 12:30pm.

1:30      - Featured Speaker - Leslie Gomez: Preventing and Responding to Child Abuse: Building a Compliance Program in Small Schools

3:45     - Session 4

Strategies for Developing Content for your School’s Marketing Programs, Lisa Howell, Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA; Kelly Adams Keller, Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA

Initiating Institutional Change Through SCDL and DEI Work, Katie Culver, Temple University & Student-Centered Deeper Learning Collaborative, Philadelphia, PA; Carissa Casey, Malvern Prep, Malvern, PA

5:30     - Dinner Reception - Lobby of Mansion Building

9:30     - Late night informal gathering at Iron Hill Brewery (in Chestnut Hill)

 

Wednesday, June 27

8:00     - Breakfast (light fare + coffee & tea)

Heads of School Breakfast Meetup

Breakfast (and more) with Starr (open to everyone) - Join Starr Snead for a moderated group discussion and question and answer session, drawing on her years of work as an independent school development and governance consultant extraordinaire! Starr will also be available before, during, and after the conference to meet with conference participants for 30 minute individual sessions. 

9:00     - Session 5

Small Schools Collaborating for Big Change: The Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative, Jeri Bond Whatley, The Miquon School, Conshohocken, PA; Rod Stanton, The School in Rose Valley, Rose Valley, PA

Empowering Faculty to Support All Students, Claire Price, The Advent School, Boston, MA; Gretchen Vice, The Advent School, Boston, MA

10:30    - Closing Keynote - André Robert Lee

12:00    - Closing Address - George Zeleznik, The Crefeld School

2018 Conference Sessions

 

Session 1

 

Strategic Planning Through Community Involvement

Kevin Gailey, Midwest Academy, Carmel, IN

Small schools have a family feel and inclusion that in many areas makes sense. However, budgets are small and ideas can become big and expensive very quickly. For this reason small schools can appear to invert themselves philosophically when topics related to planning and budgets are concerned. Come see how an inclusive approach to planning allows everyone to be heard while the budget is maintained.

This workshop will outline a method of strategic planning that is both icon driven and inclusive of numerous constituents, but is still directed by key stakeholders, such as board members and the Head of School. This method allows for many groups to be heard an for new and unexpected ideas to be brought forth while the expected and appropriate parties maintain and drive the direction of the school.

 

Gender Identity Inclusive Athletic Programs

Jen Cort, Jen Cort Educational Consulting

As we expand our understanding of gender, gender identity, and transitioning between genders, our schools must provide support and opportunities for all students. Athletic programs are often asked to make the most changes including facilities, uniforms, leagues, and educating coaches. This workshop examines the questions for schools to consider in developing their programs, including:

  • Answer ‘Why focus on gender identity now?’
  • Define terminology
  • Examine your school’s values
  • Consider legal considerations
  • Define your reputation
  • Responding to myths and stereotypes
  • Answer ‘Now what?’
  • Know your risks
  • Use your opportunities
  • Use your resources
  • Remember the guidelines of coaches
  • Consider ‘What is my school’s commitment?’

Session 2

 

The Board-Head Partnership: Articulating Roles and Responsibilities in a Small School

Brooke Carroll, Acies Strategies

Liz Dover Baker, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Running a small school is challenging, rewarding, exhausting, and complex. One aspect that is often particularly tricky for Heads of Schools is understanding and managing the roles and responsibilities within the Board-Head relationship. A question we hear frequently is “Who is in charge here?” The Board is the Head’s “boss,” but often the Board relies heavily on the Head for direction. Well-meaning Trustees sometimes don’t have the experience to know how to govern. How do Heads navigate roles, responsibilities, and expectations with their Boards?

Join Liz Baker, current Head of The GreenMount School, and Brooke Carroll, former Head of a small school and current consultant, for a round-table discussion to share insights on the issues related to Board-Head roles and relationships as they play out in small schools, and develop strategies for developing clear, effective, and positive expectations and boundaries. Our goal is to leave this session with concrete examples of ways Heads of Schools can communicate with their Boards in order to ensure a positive, productive relationship.

 

Embracing Difficult Conversations in the Classroom

Rebekah Jordan, Indian Mountain School, Lakeville, CT

The world outside of our schools is a complex one, and one that is increasingly making its way through the walls of our institutions and into our classroom conversations. There is a tension between our responsibility to grow students of character who will think critically about the world and the natural feeling that sometimes we are unprepared to have these difficult conversations, particularly when the issues are emotionally or politically charged.

In small schools, where every teacher and every classroom conversation is highly visible, having these conversations responsibly becomes even more important. In this workshop, participants will:
• identify concerns around having (or supporting) challenging conversations in small schools;
• explore different ways of approaching these conversations in the classroom that allow for multiple perspectives and root the work in the curriculum;
• discuss ways that teachers and administrators can support each other in this work;
• identify opportunities to establish parents as allies and valuable members of the conversation; and
• locate boundaries, both personal and institutional, that can provide structure, support, and strong footing.

The end goal of this workshop is to help teachers and administrators have the tools to invite the conflict of the world around us into our classrooms so we can empower our students to find and use their voices for positive change. This workshop is also appropriate for development, admissions, and communications team members who are faced with questions from constituents about how our schools are addressing these complicated topics.

 

Building a Gifted and Talented Program With Little Money and Few Students

Kristin Zappie, Brocton Elementary School, Brocton, NY

Three years ago, I began a crusade to bring a STEAM enrichment program to our very small district in upstate New York. Without federal or state funding, this was nearly impossible, but it is now blossoming. This is something that every school should and could have. Our elementary school has fewer than 400 students in grades Pre-K through 5, and is in an extremely high poverty area. Despite this, we are creating opportunities for our students and your small school could too!


Session 3

 

Identity Awareness for Advocacy in Action

Jason Heisserer, Crossroads College Preparatory School, St. Louis, MO

An essential component to Advocacy in Action is self-awareness, particularly as it relates to privileged status, identity, or resources. In order to work in effective partnerships, particularly when it comes to those with an action orientation, self-examination and the capacity to give up or take up space, influence, or power, is essential. Participants in this workshop will have an opportunity to name how their identity diminishes or stymies their work when it comes to the conference theme, Small Communities, Big Impact, name how to interrupt this in themselves and others, and rehearse with each other moments when they must put this into practice. Small schools must also commit to justice and equity work and often are better able to develop deeper action and sustainability around it due to their small size.

 

7 Deadly Words: Does Your Website Say What You Think it Does?

Jill Goodman, Jill Goodman Consulting, Baltimore, MD

Liz Dover Baker, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Ashely Inman Krug, The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

If your school is more than 10 years old, there are words and phrases that have become part of your school’s lexicon that may no longer mean what you think they do. As the needs of students and families change, so have the words and phrases that indicate types of pedagogy, philosophy, academic support, and programming.

In this workshop participants will learn at least 7 Deadly Words that could be barriers to attracting best fit families to your school. For the past 5 years, The GreenMount School processed about 70 applications for 12-20 spots. The volume of candidates was overwhelming for the admissions staff of one, but the truly difficult part was managing the disappointment of so many applicant families for whom GreenMount was not a good fit. Using The GreenMount School in Baltimore as an example, participants will learn how to identify deadly words, evaluate website copy, and steps to take to create new copy.

With more and more families stealthily deciding about a school before even meeting with admissions staff, it is vital that the website communicate clearly and truthfully the school’s mission, philosophy, and brand messages.

 

Evergreen Enrollment Contracts

Carl Parke, The Gooden School, Sierra Madre, CA

Has your school ever considered evergreen/continuous enrollment contracts? Your phone company, cable company, gym, bank, and magazines have. In today’s economic environment, many independent schools face unprecedented enrollment challenges. Is your school helping families make the decision to re-enroll as easy as possible? Does your school spend precious time and energy “chasing” families who you know will eventually re-enroll? Do your families complain about the hassle of re-completing the same forms and entering the same information at re-enrollment time year after year? Evergreen enrollment contracts help address just such questions, and are thus a growing trend in independent schools. This workshop will explore the potential benefits of such an approach for your school, along with implementation issues and legal concerns, a sample timeline, and first-hand accounts from schools that have embarked on this path.


Session 4

 

Strategies for Developing Content for your School’s Marketing Programs

Lisa Howell, Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA

Kelly Adams Keller, Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA

There are a number of wonderful tools that school marketers can use to develop content-rich marketing communications - from CRM systems to online publishing tools to integrated social media managers. But how do you keep feeding whatever "beast" you've created with fresh, timely content about what's happening in your school? This becomes even more challenging when you are a multi-tasking department of one responsible for admissions, marketing, and even sometimes development.

Lisa Howell and Kelly Keller from Delaware Valley Friends School will share several different strategies for creating and capturing content for a variety of marketing communications that they have worked to develop and implement.

 

Initiating Institutional Change Through SCDL and DEI Work

Katie Culver, Temple University & Student-Centered Deeper Learning Collaborative, Philadelphia, PA

Carissa Casey, Malvern Prep, Malvern, PA

What would a truly inclusive community look like? We often get “stuck” measuring success through means that fuel and perpetuate systems of dominance. Sometimes the culture of our schools celebrates visible successes but fails to recognize and support the invisible needs or struggles of our community members. While many small schools initiate Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) programming, often the approach is more “add on” than truly authentic work. Student-centered deeper learning (SCDL) is an approach that challenges the current paradigm of education, cultivating an environment where true DEI work can thrive. The innovative approach encourages critical thinking, collaboration and communication, which without, DEI work would be inauthentic.

SCDL is a pedagogy that by nature, incorporates and requires the teacher AND student to both co-learn multiple perspectives and stories as part of the curriculum. It is also a pedagogy that requires educators to highlight the unique strengths of each student instead of using the traditional 'one size fits all' model, a much easier feat in small schools where students are better known. The SCDL approach to teaching and learning compliments and enhances DEI strategies to better reach and ensure the success of a diverse group of students. Through this session, educators will have the opportunity to think about their own “blindspots” that can lead to learning experiences or policies that are not equitable to all learners. They will also think about how to initiate and engage in conversations that bring institutional change and address the larger system of oppression.


Session 5

Small Schools Collaborating for Big Change: The Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative

Jeri Bond-Whatley, The Miquon School, Conshohocken, PA

Rod Stanton, The School in Rose Valley, Rose Valley, PA

Elementary and middle schools face unique challenges when it comes to creating developmentally appropriate diversity experiences for our students and schools. Research has shown that discussing difference with children as early as two-years-old is healthy, yet too often resources and funds are skewed to older students. The Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative (GPDC) was formed as a forum for teachers of younger students to share resources on social justice and equity in the classroom and school community. GPDC is twelve schools strong, each a small school serving preschool through eighth-grade students. This group demonstrates a wonderful alternative, possible when smaller schools join forces to accomplish goals they cannot alone. This workshop will include an overview of GPDC formation, membership, communication, resource sharing, and successful events. Participants are invited to share questions, challenges, and successes related to discussing diversity topics with younger students at their own schools. We hope that as a result, there will be many more collaborative efforts among small schools!

 

Empowering Faculty to Support All Students

Claire Price, The Advent School, Boston, MA

Gretchen Vice, The Advent School, Boston, MA

Five years ago, The Advent School initiated an internal structural change from employing reading/math specialists to support specific students to a model in which instructional coaches empower teachers with tools to support all students. As leaders within a small school, we found that by working strategically with our faculty to build their expertise, more students were able to get learning support comprehensively and consistently.

In addition to supporting teacher growth, the Department of Learning Services (as we called ourselves) was formed to support the academic and social emotional development of every child. To this end, we developed protocols and systems in which teachers learned how to talk about students and the interventions that help students learn best. The most significant outcome of this change is securing our identity as a school that knows our students extremely well.

Within this workshop, we will describe the process we used to move to this instructional coaching model. Participants will engage with the protocols we have developed to ensure that all students get targeted, worthwhile instruction as well as have time to think about their own systems in how they service their students.

2018 Conference Speakers

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Opening Keynote: Teaching Children to Care

Alfie Kohn

We can’t blame “human nature” when children act aggressively or selfishly. Extensive research has shown that these qualities are no more natural than the impulse toward empathy or generosity. But how do we nourish those positive inclinations and help children to act on their capacity to care? Alfie Kohn, author of THE BRIGHTER SIDE OF HUMAN NATURE, discusses the roots of prosocial attitudes and actions, and invites educators to think about what promotes children’s concern about others’ well-being. He urges activities (and a curriculum) that enhance understanding of how others see the world, as well as a commitment to replace isolation and competition with a feeling of community in the classroom and school.

Alfie Kohn is the author of 14 books on education, parenting, and human behavior, including PUNISHED BY REWARDS(1993), BEYOND DISCIPLINE (1996), THE SCHOOLS OUR CHILDREN DESERVE (1999), UNCONDITIONAL PARENTING (2005), THE HOMEWORK MYTH (2006), THE MYTH OF THE SPOILED CHILD (2014), and, most recently,SCHOOLING BEYOND MEASURE (2015). He has written for most of the leading education periodicals and has appeared twice on “Oprah.” Time magazine described him as “perhaps the country’s most outspoken critic of education’s fixation on grades [and] test scores.” Kohn works with educators and parents across the country and speaks regularly at national conferences. He lives (actually) in the Boston area and (virtually) at www.alfiekohn.org, @alfiekohn on Twitter. 

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Closing Keynote Speaker

André Robert Lee

André Robert Lee has taken a very interesting path through the worlds of education and entertainment. Upon completion of undergrad at Connecticut College, André came to New York City on a fellowship to teach in Central Park East Secondary School’s Secondary Senior Institute. After teaching in East Harlem, and upon receiving his Master’s Degree, he went to work at The Ford Foundation, where he discovered the world of grant-based, independent filmmaking. 

Since then, he has become an acclaimed filmmaker, director, and producer. André wrote, directed and produced the autobiographical documentary, The Prep School Negro. André served as Producer on the documentary feature I’m Not Racist…Am I? The film falls under the banner of The Calhoun School’s Deconstructing Race Project. He has embarked on international outreach workshop tours and has held hundreds of workshops at high schools, colleges, gatherings and conferences around the world for both films.

In addition to serving on many boards and juries for art and education foundations and competitions, André is also developing two books right now. One is a memoir. The second is a collection of essays from the educators, administrators, and friends he has made along the journey with his film The Prep School Negro. Additionally, André has launched the Government Cheese Clothing line in 2016. It is an apparel line dedicated to his Grandmother who was in charge of distributing the government cheese product in his North Philadelphia neighborhood.  Find André at: ManyThingsManagement.com, ThePrepSchoolNegro.org, govcheesedre.com, PointMadeLearning.com; on social media @Andremanythings and @GovCheeseDre.

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Featured Speaker: Preventing and Responding to Child Abuse: Building a Compliance Program in Small Schools

Leslie M. Gomez

Leslie Gomez, Vice Chair of Cozen O’Connor’s Institutional Response Group, focuses her practice on the institutional response to sexual and gender-based harassment and violence, child abuse, and other forms of harassment, discrimination, and criminal conduct. Leslie provides consulting, counseling, and legal advice on all aspects of the institutional response to misconduct. She assists institutions in designing effective institutional responses that integrate the complex federal and state regulatory framework with the unique dynamics of trauma and the impacts of interpersonal violence on individuals and communities. 

Leslie regularly advises presidents, boards, senior leadership, counsel, student affairs, human resources, campus law enforcement, Title IX Coordinators, and other campus partners in implementing trauma-informed, fair, and impartial processes. Leslie helps institutions develop comprehensive policies, procedures, systems, and training programs in compliance with Title IX, Title VII, the Clery Act, as amended by the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013, and state and local laws. Leslie conducts comprehensive policy audits; drafts policies, procedures, and internal operating protocols; develops and trains multi-disciplinary teams; serves as an expert adviser to campus task forces and working groups; consults and advises on Title IX investigation, adjudication and appeal proceedings; and assists educational institutions in meeting federal compliance obligations and responding to investigations by the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and the Clery Compliance Division. Prior to entering private practice, Leslie served as an assistant district attorney at the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office.

 

Session Presentors

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Liz Dover Baker

Head of School at The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Session: 7 Deadly Words: Is Your Website Saying What You Think it Does?

As the Head of School of The GreenMount School since 2014, Liz Dover Baker has brought the school to a new level of success through a multi-level strategy that addressed curriculum, teacher training, board development, admissions practices, and major gift fundraising. She has led and served on multiple accreditation teams for the Association of Maryland and DC Schools, and understands how important is it for schools to do what they say they do.

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Jeri Bond Whatley

Teacher at The Miquon School, Conshohocken, PA

Session: Small Schools Collaborating for Big Change: The Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative

Jeri is the co-founder of the Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative (GPDC). Issues of equity and social justice, both historical and current, are of great concern and intrigue to her. She has taught at The Miquon School for 22 years, primarily 5th & 6th grades.

 
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BROOKE CARROLL, PhD

Principal Consultant and Coach at Acies Strategies

Session: The Board-Head Partnership: Articulating Roles and Responsibilities in a Small School

Brooke Carroll, Ph.D. is Principal Consultant and Coach at Acies Strategies where she supports small and mid-sized schools and nonprofits through Leadership Coaching, Board Development, and Strategic Goal Setting. Dr. Carroll holds a doctorate in educational psychology and has over 20 years of experience leading schools and nonprofits. She has served on several Boards in various roles. Prior to consulting and coaching, Dr. Carroll was Head of School for 9 years at Seneca Academy, an International Baccalaureate World School. 

 
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Carissa Casey

Director of MS Learning Support at Malvern Prep, Malvern, PA

Session: Initiating Institutional Change through SCDL and DEI work

Carissa Casey is a leading member of the Middle School Support Team and one of the founding SEED (Seeking Educational Equity & Diversity) facilitators at Malvern Preparatory School, an all-boys 6th through 12th Catholic, Augustinian independent school dedicated to developing leaders who are (1) Augustinian; (2) Globally Literate; and (3) Entrepreneurial. She is fully dedicated to utilizing the student-centered deeper learning model as a platform for DEI work.

 
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Jen Cort

Jen Cort Educational Consulting

Session: Gender Identity Inclusive Athletic Programs

Returning to NSSC, Jen Cort's career blends her experience as a clinical social worker and educator.  Her educational administrative experiences are as an assistant head of lower school, head of a middle school and senior administrator.  Jen consults with schools to live out their missions regarding diversity and inclusion such that students can be seen and heard while learning to be visible and use their voices in productive ways.  Her goal is to build school capacity such that there is not a need for a consultant.  

 
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Katie Culver, PhD

College of Education, Department of Teaching & Learning at Temple University, Philadelphia, PA

Session: Initiating Institutional Change through SCDL and DEI work

Katie Culver teaches at Temple University in the College of Education and coordinates the newly formed Philadelphia SCDL  (Student-Centered Deeper Learning) Collaborative, a cross-sector network of schools that engage students through student-centered deeper learning pedagogy. Additionally, Katie facilitates teacher trainings and workshops on DEI and helped to establish parent/community conversations about diversity at the Shipley School.

 
 
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Kevin Gailey

Head of School at Midwest Academy, Carmel, IN

Session: Strategic Planning through Community Involvement

Kevin Gailey has been the Head of School at Midwest Academy in Carmel, Indiana for the last six years and has worked as an educator and administrator for the last 25 years.  Kevin has a background in non-profit business management, fundraising, and organizational consulting.  He employs an inclusive, progressive methodology as an administrator as well as an educator.

 
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Jill Goodman

Jill Goodman Consulting, Baltimore, MD

Session: 7 Deadly Words: Is Your Website Saying What You Think it Does?

Jill served as the Development Director and Marketing Manager for The GreenMount School for 9 years, growing the annual fund by 4-fold, establishing a major gifts program, completing two capital campaigns, and creating a complete branding and marketing strategy for the school. She launched Jill Goodman Consulting in 2017 that focuses on meeting the development, branding, and corporate culture needs of young or small schools and non-profits.

 
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Jason Heisserer, EdD

Head of School at Crossroads College Prepatory School, St. Louis, MO

Session: Identity Awareness for Advocacy in Action

Jason Heisserer is the Head of School for Crossroads College Preparatory School in St. Louis, Missouri. Jason's school and regional leadership centers just and equitable learning and school exepriences for all students.

 
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Lisa Howell

Director of Marketing & Communications at Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA

Session: Strategies for Developing Content for your School’s Marketing Programs

Lisa has been the Director of Marketing & Communications at Delaware Valley Friends since 2010. In addition to her work in marketing, Lisa is the faculty advisor for the school’s vocal ensembles and co-directs the spring musicals, which are all student original productions from the story to the script to the music and lyrics. Prior to coming to DVFS, Lisa was a Senior Consultant with a marketing and business strategy firm in Malvern, Pennsylvania, where she spent 10+ years working with corporate and nonprofit clients in the areas of branding and marketing strategies, succession planning, and critical communications. She is a graduate of The Agnes Irwin School, Trinity College in Hartford, CT, and has a Master’s in American History from Villanova University. 

 
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Rebekah Jordan

Head of Lower School at Indian Mountain School, Lakeville, CT

Session: Embracing Difficult Conversations in the Classroom

Rebekah Jordan is the Head of Lower School at Indian Mountain School.  She also serves on the teaching faculty of the New England New Teacher's Institute.  A progressive educator, she was the founding head of The Peak School in Frisco, Colorado and has worked as a classroom teacher, consultant, family advocate, and experiential educator.  

 
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Kelly Adams Keller

Assistant Director of Marketing & Communications at Delaware Valley Friends School, Paoli, PA

Session: Strategies for Developing Content for your School’s Marketing Programs

Kelly has been the Assistant Director of Marketing & Communications at Delaware Valley Friends since 2013. Prior to coming to DVFS, Kelly worked independently for 18+ years with local nonprofits in the areas of education, the environment, and women’s issues, and published her own monthly newsletter for English-speaking mothers in Switzerland. Her early marketing experiences included work at Ogilvy and Mather Direct and DOW Chemical Europe. She is a graduate of the Zurich International School, and the University of Arizona, with a BSBA in Marketing Communication. Kelly is a board member of both the Swiss Benevolent Society of Philadelphia, and Open Connections, a learning center for ages 3-18.

 
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Ashely Inman Krug

Admissions Director at The GreenMount School, Baltimore, MD

Session: 7 Deadly Words: Is Your Website Saying What You Think it Does?

Ashley has been the Admissions Director at The GreenMount School for two years and in those years, she assessed the admissions procedure and completely overhauled the program to better serve prospective parents, students and faculty, and attract best fit families to the school. Ashley’s perspective is unique: she holds a master’s degree in psychology and is the owner of Twinkle Toes Dance Academy, both of which help inform her understanding of GreenMount’s current and prospective families.

 
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Bryan Pannill

English Teacher at Salisbury School, Salisbury, CT

Session: Embracing Difficult Conversations in the Classroom

Bryan teaches English at Salisbury School in Northwest Connecticut. He has taught at a boys’ boarding school in Sherborne, England, and was born and raised in Woodbridge, CT. A graduate of Princeton University, he seeks to create a rich culture in his classrooms that combines rigorous intellectual inquiry, personal engagement, real-world relevance, and simple fun. On his free time, he writes poetry and essays, thinks deep thoughts about culture and religion, and cooks up new things to try in the classroom while running in the woods.

 
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Carl Parke

Head of School at The Gooden School, Sierra Madre, CA

Session: Evergreen Enrollment Contracts

Carl Parke is in his first year as head of school at The Gooden School and previously served for five years as head of school at LaGrange Academy. He began his independent school career as a history teacher at Tampa Preparatory School with a newly minted Masters in US History and later worked for eight years as a teacher and administrator at The Altamont School in Birmingham, AL. He also has extensive experience in adolescent community mental health advocacy and holds an undergraduate degree in English. He and his wife Christie have a seven-year old daughter, Sophie, and in his spare time he enjoys bicycling and fly fishing.

 
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Claire Price

Dean of Students at The Advent School, Boston, MA

Session: Empowering Faculty to Support All Students

Claire Price is the Dean of Student Services at The Advent School in Boston, MA. Her fourteen years in education include serving as a Literacy Specialist and Instructional Coordinator before her current role. Her passion as an educator is to help students, families and fellow educators better understand student learning profiles to drive intentional, authentic and meaningful learning experiences.

 
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Rod Stanton

Head of School at The School in Rose Valley, Rose Valley, PA

Session: Small Schools Collaborating for Big Change: The Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative

Rod is the Head of School at The School in Rose Valley, a progressive school in Rose Valley, PA that serves students in preschool through sixth grade. Prior to working at SRV, Rod worked at The Crefeld School, where he taught history and was Assistant Head of School. Rod holds a B.S. in Education from Saint Joseph’s University and an M.A. in Educational Leadership from Immaculata University. Rod is also a member of the Greater Philadelphia Diversity Collaborative.  He lives in Malvern with his wife and two children. 

 
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Gretchen Vice

Dean of Faculty at The Advent School, Boston, MA

Session: Empowering Faculty to Support All Students

Gretchen Vice is the Dean of Faculty at The Advent School in Boston MA. Her eighteen years working in education include serving ten years as an elementary classroom teacher and seven years as an Instructional Coach/Coordinator within both public and private schools systems. Her passion as an educator is to guide, create learning opportunities for, and collaborate with faculty as they design and facilitate learning experiences for and with their students. 

 
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Kristin Zappie

Teacher at Brocton Elementary School, Brocton, NY

Session: Building a Gifted and Talented Program With Little Money and Few Students

Kristin Zappie has taught in public school in Western New York since 2004.  Zappie is committed to the "bloom where you're planted" philosophy of generating large learning experiences for students in small districts with economic challenges.