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Students in Berger Hall Theater

CA Curious

Diversity alone is not enough

March 28, 2019

CA students address the 2019 Triangle Diversity Alliance conference, which brought together more than 200 students from Triangle area schools to discuss the roles of diversity, inclusivity, and equity in our respective communities and on our campuses.

Creating a diverse and inclusive community has always been one of CA’s core commitmentsWe feel strongly that our campus should reflect the wealth of diversity represented by our broader Triangle community.

And for good reason. We know that as students are exposed to a variety of perspectives, they are challenged to think more deeply, to broaden their worldviews. In effect, they become more compassionate, well-adjusted, and better equipped to succeed in the world beyond our campus.  

Recent research has even established that non-homogeneous teams are, in fact, smarter.   

Heidi Grant, a Columbia University professor writing in the November 2016 Harvard Business Review, outlined findings from various studies that showed diverse teams focus more on facts, process those facts more carefully, and are more innovative.

More recent studies, including 2018 research from Harvard’s Paul Gompers, have shown that diversity also translates into improved business returns.  

All of this matters at Cary Academy, where our mission is to be a learning community committed to discovery, innovation, collaboration, and excellence.  

While we are rightfully proud to be the most diverse independent school among our self-defined peers in North Carolina, and more diverse than many public charter schools, we must also remember that diversity is not the outcome … it is the starting point.

Diversity alone is not enough; it must be coupled with an unwavering commitment to equity and inclusivity. It is imperative that each member of our community have equal opportunity to participate fully in the CA experience; that all feel valued to share their unique voices, experiences, and perspectives; and to be heard with respect, kindness, and integrity.   

To that endwe have put in place many things to foster inclusivity in our community. Importantly, this is one area where we have also given students a tremendous voice. There are myriad groups and clubs across campus that offer opportunities not only to bring groups together around various identifiers, causes, and perspectives, but also offer opportunities to work collaboratively across them, and to provide important educational opportunities across the community.

For example, various Upper School affinity groups have hosted a range of activities throughout the year, including:

  • a lunch symposium on Asian-American issues, 
  • a sexual assault awareness workshop, 
  • a symposium series on education equity, 
  • a speaker for Indigenous People’s Day,  
  • a series of activities for Mental Health Awareness Week,
  • several cross-group conversations (called intersectionality), including a Roman Catholic and Christian faith discussion,  
  • a Diwali lunch, and 
  • several “Courageous Conversations” on topics varied as the prison system, hip-hop and culture, and mental health. 

Affinity groups help support three large scale activities as well: the Triangle Diversity Alliance Conference (hosted by Cary Academy this winter), Ubuntu, and MLK Day.

Coming up in April, we have the Day of Silence in recognition of the bullying and silencing often experienced in the LGBTQ community (4/12), a celebration of the Hindu Holi festival (4/26), and the National Day of Prayer (5/2).

While the Middle School has its own affinity groups (and sometimes partner with their Upper School peers), many discussions of diversity, inclusion, and equity are embedded into the programming run by faculty in their classrooms or through Charger Trails. These include:  

  • sixth grade conversations about cultural universals, building respectful relationships, world religions, and establishing community norms; 
  • seventh grade conversations about connections, the legacy of slavery, and the independence and protest movements; and 
  • eighth grade conversations on learning differences, the Holocaust, healthy sexuality, and Civil and Women’s Rights.  

This curricular work helps teachers put into context various activities that happen around campus, such as Ubuntu, MLK Day or the Day of Silence.  

 Of course, a culture of inclusivity does not mean a culture of universal agreement. Quite the opposite, inclusivity requires that we hold a safe space where a diversity of perspectives and identities can respectfully co-exist.  

It is for this reason that one of our all-community themes over the past few years has been what we call Dialogue Across Difference, an effort to build skills necessary to listen to one another. 

This work, done in partnership with Essential Partners, has included workshops for employees, students, and parents.  

Earlier this year we held an all-school dialogue with various topics on the theme of political values. It is important to us that these formal dialogues are not singular events, but that the art of dialogof leaning into difference with genuine curiosity and respect and a desire to learn, to discover more—is a skill that we develop in all our community members.  

To that end, teachers have continued this dialog work with grade-level dialogue work on a variety of topics such as identity, culture, and storytelling. This month, the 11th and 12th grade students will be self-selecting to participate in dialogues on a variety of topics of their interest. This work has intersected with that of other groups, such as our National Honor Society, which has sponsored a series of conversations around the theme of Civil Discourse.

As you can see, there is A LOT going on — too much to fit into a single overview. Students hear about these activities or opportunities through regular communication from their peer leaders. Faculty or administrators may share out to students when activities bridge into the curriculum. Where applicable, our CA Weekly also tries to capture the breadth of activities happening, even if we can’t get a special communication about each and every activity.  

Look for more in our upcoming print Magazine, including a Q&A with our new Director of Equity and Community Engagement.

Written by Mike Ehrhardt, Head of School

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More than ‘a fresh coat of paint’

March 21, 2019

With T3 well underway, the communications office is in full swing. Now fully staffedthanks to the addition of Dan Smith, our new Digital Content Producer and Social Media Manager, who joins myself and Web Manager Dean Sauls—we’ve increasingly been able to turn our attention to more of the long-term strategic communications work that I’ve been itching to dig into since my start last July. 

Hopefully, you’ve noticed some of the fruits of these labors, including revised print materials that reflect our “curious” brand; a more robust and engaged social media presence on Facebook and Instagram; a new regular “spotlight on learning” storytelling video series; and ongoing tweaks to the CA Weekly to make it as useful as possible to our community.  

In the near future, we’ll be launching a communications survey to get your feedback on these efforts. We want to hear what you think we’re doing right, where we might be missing the mark, and how else we might be able to capture and share (and hopefully improve) your CA experience. Keep an eye on your inbox in the next couple of weeks for that survey. 

But, all that good stuff aside, perhaps what has my office the most excited is the behind-the-scenes work that is currently underway: the long-awaited website redesign project (altogether now: “Hurray!).  

Kicking off that process, at the beginning of March, I crafted and launched a request for proposals (RFP), targeting over fifty well-respected and innovative design firms all over the country.  

The RFP articulates five overarching objectives in service of a larger strategy to create a site that best supports the information needs of our community, positively differentiates us from our peer institutions, and positions us as nationwide leader of independent schools.  

Specifically, these redesign objectives include: 

  • Increased storytelling capabilities  
    • Develop a design that allows us to effectively share the stories that set CA apart through written articles and/or blogs, compelling visuals, video, and multimedia. 
    • Prominently integrate CA’s social channels into our web presence. 
  • Increased capacity for community-building 
    • Strengthen our community by presenting engaging and informative content that invites return visits, accurately and compellingly represents the CA experience, and instills pride in our institution.  
    • Create a space to highlight and promote campus events. 
  • An “outside-the-box” visual design that reflects brand values of discovery, innovation, collaboration, and excellence 
    • Bring the website’s visual identity into alignment with CA’s core mission, differentiating CA as an innovative leader in the education space through a clever, innovative, thoughtful design. 
  • Improved user experience and overall site usability with well-designed site architecture and information design  
    • Present comprehensive information and resources in user-friendly and engaging formats that leverage best practices of website design, including intuitive navigation, site hierarchy, and functional search.  
  •  Refined and new content that supports strategic objectives 
    • Develop and deliver concise and compelling messages in consistent and singular voice. 
    • Create a robust presence dedicated to the new Center for Community Engagement that allows us to highlight our equity and inclusion work, experiential learning, service learning, and social entrepreneurship initiatives as core commitments. 

I’m pleased to say that the RFP has been well received. I’ve had numerous follow-up phone calls with agencies that are planning to bid, and I anticipate over twenty proposals will cross my desk by tomorrow’s deadline.  

Over the next couple of weeks, we will review the bids, select our finalists, conduct interviews, and, finally, select a partner agency. After that, we will be solidifying a timetable for the project. We’re hoping to kick-off the official start of the project in April, with the completed site being delivered in the fall.  

As we move forward with this process, I’ll be reaching out to some of you to collaborate at various points along the way. That might include sharing your insights during an initial discovery process, providing feedback on early design options, serving as subjects for new video or photo story assets, or helping with beta testing as we approach launch.  

We’ve laid out an ambitious and exciting visionone that is truly going to showcase the diversity of the CA experience and the special learning community that we have built. I’m excited to dig in and get this project underway and to work with the community to see it through to fruition.  

Onwards! 

Written by Mandy Dailey, Director of Communications

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Tell Me More

March 21, 2019

“That’s an awfully long title,” someone recently remarked while introducing me on my 8th day on Cary Academy’s campus.

My business cards may read “Digital Content Producer and Social Media Manager,” but I prefer “community storyteller.”

“Okay,” you say, “but what does that mean? Why does CA need a storyteller? And, in point of fact: why you?”

First, I have to commend you on your ability to get straight to the heart of the matter.

Basically, my job is to work with the other members of Cary Academy’s newly-established Communications team to tell stories… stories that speak to the everyday experiences and extraordinary things that go on here at CA, how they are often one and the same and, how that’s part of what makes Cary Academy different.

My job is to curate, cultivate and celebrate those stories across every corner of campus.  One week in, I already know that there are so many interesting, unique and downright exciting facets to learning, life, work and play at CA, that it would be almost impossible to know everything that goes on here, but I will share as much as I can. Connecting the different communities within CA will help strengthen our sense of community.

But ‘community’ and the importance of what makes Cary Academy such a special place extends beyond just our campus, past our homes and the dinner table conversations and the course of our day, into the broader communities in which we live, work and serve. Hence the second part of the job title: Social Media Manager. The work isn’t so much about drafting hashtags, amassing likes and inviting retweets as it is about building the modern world’s digital equivalent of the town square, in order to foster a place for the CA community’s connections to grow and for the public, potential collaborating organizations and our peers to be able to share in the conversations, for the sake of engaging as many perspectives of our increasingly interconnected world, as possible.

https://www.facebook.com/CaryAcademy/videos/289253021718956/

“Okay, I understand what a storyteller does and can see why CA might need one, but, again: why you?”

First and foremost, I’m from Durham – but my journey to Cary Academy was a bit more complex than simply heading east on I-40 (one does not simply head east on I-40 at rush hour). My career has wound a circuitous path from photography and graphic design work as a high school student to researching and advocating in the halls of government and amongst the foreign policy establishment as a recent college graduate, in Washington, D.C. However, it was upon my return to North Carolina as Assistant Director of Duke’s Center for International Studies, that things finally came into focus.

While at Duke, I often collaborated with scientists, researchers and artists whose work concisely and compellingly reached across time and distance, bridged culture and language, and related powerful and poignant experiences. In that work, I personally experienced the pedagogical power of art and technology: how it drives change in our lives, forms connections, provokes exploration of ourselves and others, and transforms the ‘everyday’ into the ‘extraordinary.’ Driven by that discovery, I took a leap of faith, went back to school, stepped outside of my comfort zone and shifted the course of my life towards telling stories in order to bridge understanding, engage empathy and encourage connections.

Following this newfound path, I have stumbled upon challenging, surprising and fun stories to hear and tell. I love exploring the concepts of community, culture and the fundamental notions of how we relate to one-another. I revel in the opportunities I have been granted to walk in someone else’s shoes, to roll up my sleeves and learn, hands-on, from others and then to share those experiences with the larger world.

And that is how I found my way at Cary Academy, already awed by the myriad stories that I can’t wait to tell.

“Tell me more,” you say.

And I shall…

…with your help. Please, tell me about the everyday things at CA that catch your eye, your imagination, your inspiration. Things that make you smile or stop and think, things that touch your heart and your mind. I want to know how you see this unique place and your place in this community.

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Subtle, Yet Powerful Acts of Positivity and Kindness

February 7, 2019

The Middle School years are exciting because of all the developmental changes (physical, intellectual, emotional and social) that occur across the course of three short years. While the changes are exciting, sometimes, the social aspects can be rocky. This is particularly true of how students choose to communicate about themselves, about others, and to others. While our students are committed to the CA tenets of “acting with integrity, respect, and compassion,” their actions, at times, can be at odds with these values. Peer groups, social media, advertising, and the latest TV programs and movies are huge influencers and, at many times, promote the opposite messaging.

Three years ago, via our Charger Trails focus on Digital Citizenship, Kim Karr, co-founder of the iCanHelp organization, spoke to our students about negative and positive messaging in social media. This national group is dedicated to educating students about social media and empowering students to be change agents in addressing negative messaging. Following the presentation, several students, inspired by the stories they had heard about how young people could make a positive difference through a small act, approached our counselor, Kelly Wiebe, about starting a Middle School iCanHelp club. While the national organization’s focus is primarily on social media, our students wanted to create opportunities to promote and sustain – in simple small ways – a positive climate within the halls of the Middle School.

Members of the Middle School iCanHelp club in front of the ‘Take One, Give One’ Post-It Note board.

Over the past three years, iCanHelp members have written grade-level specific newsletters with tips on how to be a positive community member. A ‘Take One, Give One Board’ was created on the first floor as a place where all students could contribute encouraging messages. Students are leaving sticky notes with upbeat comments that are available for other students to take for themselves or to share with a friend. There are also ‘Compliment Jars’ where individual students can be recognized by classmates for a kind act. For example: a note to the student who stopped to help another student pick up dirty plates that had tumbled off the cart during lunch. Students also created paper snowflakes following an advisory discussion about how each member of our community is unique and adds to the school’s fiber, emphasizing the message that everyone is beautiful, yet different, like a snowflake.

Right now, the Middle School is in the first week of a three-week positivity challenge. The 8th grade iCanHelp group has challenged students to write an email or a note to teachers or other students thanking them for helping in some way. Teachers are also participating in this challenge by thanking students and/or, colleagues for providing inspiration. Next week, the seventh grade iCanHelp members will challenge students to share messages they have received in the past that helped brighten their day. The illuminating thoughts will be posted on star-shaped notes in every grade level hall. The sixth-grade group will bring the trimester to a close with another positivity challenge.

The actions of the iCanHelp group are subtle, yet powerful. The more we see and hear positive messaging and recognition of small deeds and actions, the more we shape and foster a culture of support and caring. I recently sat down with members of the club to learn about their experiences and observations of the impact of the iCanHelp initiatives. The students felt good that they personally were helping to “spread positivity” and that the club “encourages others to act kindly”. They noted that their classmates had shared the experience of feeling good when doing something positive for another – the sense that the giver as well as the receiver benefits from an act of kindness. While recognizing that getting everyone on-board will take time and that persistence is important, the iCanHelp members feel that they are making a difference and are seeing peers being thoughtful and positive in their communications. This motivated club is modeling and encouraging the principles of its motto: i Can Help, i Will Help, i Did Help.

Written by Marti Jenkins, Head of Middle School

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Wisdom from the Senior Corner

October 18, 2018

On Monday of this week, I broke an unwritten rule of the Upper School: I traipsed upstairs, and rather than follow the well-trod path toward the teacher lounge and the coffee machine, I turned right, threaded my way between the book bags, and plopped myself onto a couch in the Senior Corner.

The seniors politely tried to ignore me.  An adult—an administrator, no less—had intruded into their sanctum sanctorum, their happy land overseen by cheerful painted mountains and the cardboard cut-out of Bob Ross.

I cleared my throat and said, “I’m writing a blog, and I would like your thoughts.  Would you mind?”

They paused, and after a brief moment of internal debate, they all declared, “Of course not.”  Even if I was an intruder, they would be polite.

“As you think about the classes that you’ve taken at CA,” I asked, pen in hand, “what jumps out at you?”

“10th grade English,” one student stated almost immediately.  “That was the first time that we had to analyze the literature really deeply and write a long essay about it.  That was such an important learning experience.”

Other students added their thoughts.

“Turbo-Calc.  It was flexible.  It was my first blended class, and I chose whether to do the homework—if I didn’t need the practice, I didn’t have to do it.  But it was my choice.”

“Advanced Chemistry.  It was practical.  I started to see how it related to every day.  We talked about the forces that held my water in my water bottle.  And I learned why my car works better in the morning in the summer than in the winter.”

“Advanced Biology.  I learned about myself.  There was no place to hide in the class, so I had to be on top of the material.”

“Advanced Environmental Science.  I loved the homework, just because it was so different.  Sometimes it was a blog post.  Sometimes, a tweet.  But we had so many different activities.”

The next period, after lunch, I ambushed three more unsuspecting seniors in the Collabo-lounge.  I repeated my story—blog, student thoughts, help—and then asked them, “Looking back, what classes or experiences stand out to you, and why?”

They also answered, almost before I had finished asking the question.

“The exchange trips were transformative.  We were immersed in a culture, and we had to speak the language—there was no other choice.”

“When I was on the exchange trip, it was the first time I thought in a different language.  I was starting to write a text to my mom, and then I realized, ‘wait, I should write this in English.’”

“Critical thinking—that’s what I’ve gotten from my CA classes.  We apply it to our learning and the work that we create.”

“I love the change in the schedule—it’s allowed me to pursue an internship in art during my long block!”

Another student added, “I actually don’t like the change in schedule.  But you’re not going to put that in the blog, are you?”

***

Several years ago, members of Cary Academy’s Strategic Planning Committee reinvigorated our mission by crafting a guiding statement: “Cary Academy will create learning opportunities that are flexible, personalized, and relevant.  We will cultivate self-directed and bold life-long learners who make meaningful contributions to the world.”

That statement has guided the changes to the Upper School schedule, which allowed us to provide more flexibility in several departments.  We opened the science curriculum, offering more choice for all students.  We also expanded the times for art classes, allowing students to take multiple arts classes in a day.

That statement has guided the development of the Center for Math and Science, which will allow us to engage our students in deeper collaborative experiences.

Courtesy of the space provided by the CSM, that statement will guide us as we re-envision the Upper School building to match the needs of our students taking their humanities classes.

And that statement, in small and large ways, has filtered into the experiences and language of the students.  I did not share this statement with any of the students, yet—unbidden—they all referenced some aspect of the goal in their responses, much to my joy.

***

On Tuesday of this week, I had the chance to listen to two different student panels: one answered questions of prospective parents, the other spoke to underclassmen.  Both of those groups of students emphasized the idea of curiosity, even if they didn’t use that word.  They spoke of the joy when discovering a passion, of the need to focus on the personal journey, of the gift of flexibility.

In other conversations with students over the past few weeks, I have heard the joy derived from classes across all departments and grade levels.

So as a community, we have revised our schedule and rebuilt our buildings in order to facilitate that curiosity—and the students have embraced all of those opportunities.

And we will do more, nurturing that curiosity by creating additional opportunities for students to develop their paths, delving into the experiences that hold meaning and relevancy for them, and—ultimately–for the world outside of Cary Academy.

Even if not all the students are completely in favor of the schedule changes.

 

P.S.  Thanks again to the seniors who willingly put up with my questions during their free periods.

 

 

Written by Robin Follet, Head of Upper School

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Dialoguing across difference

October 18, 2018

As a learning community committed to discovery, innovation, collaboration, and excellence, we believe in recognizing, respecting, and celebrating the unique array of experiences, perspectives, and contributions that each person brings to our community. It is imperative that students feel our school is a supportive space where their unique voices and perspectives will be received with respect, integrity, and compassion.

As such, it is crucial that we equip students with the requisite skills to constructively dialogue and learn with those whose opinions and beliefs might be different from their own.

To that end, last year we embarked on a schoolwide process to build individual empathy and collective capacity for conversations around challenging topics. For this important work we have collaborated with Essential Partners, a consulting firm that is known internationally for their expertise in using structured dialogue to bridge differences and build community. Last March, the Upper School worked with Essential Partners to use these protocols to discuss feelings of safety and security after the mass shooting tragedy in Parkland, Florida.

This moment—with the national conversation saturated with political discourse in advance of midterm elections—presents a timely opportunity to not only continue the meaningful dialogue work started last year but broaden it to include our entire community. Next Thursday, October 25, both the Middle School and Upper School will participate in their first facilitated dialogue of the year, focusing on personal values and beliefs.

To ensure that students feel comfortable, empowered, and supported in this work, these conversations will happen in trusted advisory groups and be co-facilitated by a faculty and staff member who have been trained in Essential Partners’ dialogic techniques. Faculty and staff will not be participating in the dialogue themselves but will provide and hold the framework for student discussion.

I want to underscore that these reflective dialogues are not about debate or persuasion, but about equipping students with the needed skills to create respectful dialog with people that may have different perspectives. They are personal, not partisan. They are an opportunity to talk about personal experiences and how they have shaped held values. They are an opportunity to listen to others’ experiences with resilience and curiosity, particularly if it involves hearing something that differs from a personally-held point of view.

An Invitation for Parents

Thursday’s activities will begin with an assembly for the Middle and Upper Schools where John Sarrouf of Essential Partners will connect our conversations with his wider work in communities and schools around the world. Then at 1:45 pm, while students are in their meetings, Essential Partners will also host a dialogue in the Discovery Studio for parents interested in experiencing the process first-hand. That session will end at 3 pm. Finally, at 6 pm in U201 (second floor, Upper School building) Essential Partners will host an information session open to all parents, where you will have an opportunity to ask questions about the day’s activities.

There is room in this process for everyone, and we would love to have you involved. Over the next week, we encourage families to consider some “dinner table” conversation starters that might help spark student reflection and sharing on the 25th. You might consider talking about any one of the following:

  • What school core value—respect, integrity, compassion—resonates most with you, and why?
  • Share a story from your past that you think of as one of the first moments you remember caring about an issue or a political idea.
  • Who in the world (other than your parents) do you most admire and why?
  • What local issue in the community is most concerning to you?
  • If you had more time to volunteer, what would you do? Why is that important to you?

Thank you for supporting your students as we undertake this critical work, which is directly linked to our strategic vision to cultivate self-directed and bold life-long learners who make meaningful contributions to the world. I hope to see some of you next Thursday, October 25, at the parent dialogue at 1:45 pm or in the 6 pm evening information session.

 

Written by

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September 20, 2018

How does a $5 senior donation build a new chemistry lab? What does STEM have to do with my passion for the arts? Why is an updated fitness center considered innovative?

These are all questions floating around the school lately. As we embark on our fourth year of the five-year Campaign for Cary Academy, our community is asking all the right questions.

How do we help? Where do we fit? What are we doing?

To answer these questions, one needs to look no further than our vision statement:

Cary Academy will create learning opportunities that are flexible, personalized, and relevant. We will cultivate self-directed and bold life-long learners who make meaningful contributions to the world.

As we enter the final phases of the Campaign for Cary Academy, now more than ever, our vision defines our fundraising priorities and next steps.

The new building is important not only as a top-notch facility for math and sciences, but because it has created flexible learning spaces that are available to all students for group study, individual study, and interdisciplinary learning. Moreover, its completion represents the first domino, triggering a chain reaction of classroom transitions that will unlock significant opportunities to enhance and reconfigure other spaces to emphasize the value of the arts and humanities.

A renovated athletic fitness center offers opportunities, not only for physical fitness, but a chance to emphasize and highlight the importance of day-to-day healthy living in ways that are relevant to students’ lives.

Endowed support for faculty and students allows us to recruit and retain top-notch faculty with the required creativity and expertise to create personalized life-changing educational opportunities for well-deserving students. And to provide those faculty with transformational professional development opportunities that keep our programs on the leading edge of innovation and continually improve how we support our students.

Many members of our community have already stepped up to join us in fulfilling our fundraising goals. To date, we have secured $9.5M towards our $12M goal – and we still have two years left and numerous families considering their commitments. The generosity and thoughtfulness shown by our friends and supporters is humbling. All of us look forward to crossing this finish line together in 2020.

And to circle back – how does a $5 senior gift donation help to get us to our goals? Because it takes a community. Because a single student, reflecting on their experience and deciding to put $5 towards the CA Fund instead of Starbucks latte, sets a tone, an expectation, a signal for others. It contributes to a community ethos of giving. And that’s powerful.

At the heart of philanthropic giving is an understanding that it is not about the money, per se, but a commitment to a mission and to what giving can do. How it reflects a shared commitment to an idea. To a community. And to a shared vision of the future.

As a community, if we believe in that shared future, and we express that belief by giving what we can, we can make that vision a reality. Together, we can carry Cary Academy forward as the leader in discovery, innovation, collaboration, and excellence that we all know it to be.

 

 

Written by Ali Page, Director of Development

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Students spearhead Hurricane Florence response

September 20, 2018

As Hurricane Florence bore down on the Carolinas last week, our students sprang into action to help their community, both here at Cary Academy and beyond.

As news of the storm overtook media on Wednesday of last week, our Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) students—led by our Director of Safety and Security Jeff Wacenske—put their training to work, helping to ready the campus for the predicted high winds and torrential rain. Typical of our students, others quickly jumped in with helping hands to move all outdoor furniture safely inside.

Varsity baseball players hang wind guards in preparation for Hurricane Florence.

Offering a fantastic example of community spirit and teamwork, the varsity baseball and tennis teams used their practice times to survey all of CA’s athletic facilities, securing equipment and installing protective wind guards.

And while our local community collectively breathed a sigh of relief when the storm turned, leaving CA with minimal damage, focus quickly shifted to how we could help those to the east who were left in Florence’s debilitating wake.

In the wee hours of Sunday morning, Junior Parker Perkins, a cadet in the Civil Air Patrol—an auxiliary of the United States Air Force that carries out emergency service missions—deployed to Deep Run, NC to distribute supplies to affected areas.

Junior Parker Perkins deploys to help with Hurrican Florence relief effort

Closer to home, there have been numerous conversations amongst students, faculty, and staff in how to best serve those impacted. In the Upper School, Seniors Lyndon Wood and Milen Patel are spearheading a supply drive to collect pop-top canned meals, hygiene products, and cleaning supplies. The drive will run from Thursday, September 20 to Wednesday, October 3, with collection bins in the Upper School lobby.

In addition, an Upper School bake sale featuring baked goods from Key and Beta Clubs is scheduled for US morning break and community time on Thursday, September 20 and Friday, September 21. Proceeds will be donated to the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina.

In the Middle School, the Middle School Student Leadership Club is planning a supply drive to run Monday, October 1 through Friday, October 5.  In addition, Leadership Club students are working with their faculty advisors to grapple with some of the long-term effects of Hurricane Florence and ways that they can sustain relief efforts over what will be a prolonged rebuilding process. Stay tuned for details.

We thank all those that have stepped forward to provide help, both here on campus and in the wider community. And while we’re proud of the selfless outpouring of assistance from our community, we’re also happy to note that it isn’t altogether surprising. For a community that encourages students to make a positive impact on the world—both during their time here at Cary Academy and when they venture out into the wider world—meaningful community service and helping others is the norm. Hurricane Florence was no exception.

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September 12, 2018

Pictured above: Members of the Class of 2017 came back to talk to the class of 2018 before graduation to give them tips on making a smooth transition to college

Our alums (all 1,764 of them!) are a crucial part of the Cary Academy community. As networked problem-solvers and creative thinkers that are changing the world—look no further than our recent TEDxCaryAcademy, below, for proof of their impact—they exemplify the benefits of a Cary Academy education. As one of our greatest assets—the product of all the hard work of our teachers, staff, parents, and community—our graduates are a crucial resource and powerful inspiration for our current students and families. We are always excited to find new ways to bring them back, to learn from them, and to be inspired by them.

That’s why there is a lot of energy buzzing in the Cary Academy Alumni Office. With a new academic year underway and a new Director of Development on board, we’re renewing our focus on increasing engagement with our incredible graduates. By strengthening our existing relationships and building new connections, we hope to expand opportunities not only for our alumni base, but for the entire Cary Academy community.

We tried to kick-off the year with the first ever Alumni Weekend Celebration this weekend. We had looked forward to showing our Charger pride with Friday Night Lights, a Saturday picnic followed by a tour of all the new spaces on campus, and a night out on the town with good food and good drinks. Unfortunately, Hurricane Florence had other plans. While we’ve had to postpone those events, we’re working on rescheduling them. You’ll be hearing from us soon regarding new spring dates.

Thankfully, we’ve planned lots of alumni engagement opportunities (hopefully with less weather interference).

Read on to learn about just a few of this year’s events.

TEDxCaryAcademy

On September 7, 2018, we hosted TEDxCaryAcademy, featuring two Cary Academy alumni, seven students, and one faculty member. The videos will be up on the TED website in coming weeks. We were all inspired to hear the incredible work our alumni are doing to make the world a better place. We’re so proud of our speakers and our community.

Check out the speaker list and topics discussed at https://www.ted.com/tedx/events/30124 (full videos will be available here once submitted and approved by TED)

Lindsay Wrege (’17) was one of two alumni speakers at this year’s TEDxCaryAcademy

Alums cheering on our Chargers at Homecoming!

Homecoming

On December 14, we will host our annual Cary Academy Homecoming Alumni Party. It’s always great to see so many alumni come back to cheer on our Chargers. Be sure to come back to campus in December for a celebratory evening before the holiday season.

Career Connections

Every two years, CA hosts “Career Connections.”  This career fair offers an opportunity for Upper School students to learn about possible careers and learning opportunities that might be a good match for their skills and interests. With more than 30 members of the community coming to engage our students, half of speakers are Cary Academy Alumni! This year’s event will be hosted near the end of T2.

Uzma Rawn (’02) was the key note speaker of Career Connections 2017

Written by Kathleen Mason, Alumni Coordinator

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