Change Sings in Kindergarten

Kindergarteners have been learning about civil rights leaders - both in the past and in the present. One of the current leaders they’ve been learning about is Amanda Gorman. They read her book Change Sings, and shared ways they were inspired by her book.

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DEIKatelyn O'Donnell
We Shall Overcome: Grade 3

In music class, third graders explored the long history of the song, We Shall Overcome. It is believed the song may have originated as far back as the days of slavery in the 1800’s, became an anthem for the civil rights movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s, and continues to inspire and unite those whole believe in the ongoing struggle fro freedome, justice and equality for all people in our nation - and across the world.

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DEI, StudentsWhitney Buckley
Fostering Connectivity + Facilitating Joy

As I take a moment to reflect on my years of teaching, I am struck by how my journey with mindfulness has evolved into an essential part of my being and at the core of my teaching. I am blessed to teach, to be in a profession that fosters connectivity and facilitates joy.

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FacultyElliott Buck
New Year Appreciation

As we continue to ease into the new year, I wanted to reach out and express my appreciation. My name is Alen Yen, and my daughter Miya is in the 8th grade; I’m also the President of the GUS Board of Trustees, volunteers charged with protecting the School, furthering its mission, and supporting our Head of School.

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Board of TrusteesAlen Yen
Positive Leaders: Grade 4

In fourth grade, students have been learning about what makes a person a positive leader. They discussed leadership traits and simple ways that students can be positive leaders in school. They read biographies, watched videos and discussed the lives and attributes of leaders such as Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Gandhi, Roberto Clemente, Wilma Mankiller, and Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, Christine Darden (the mathematicians from Hidden Figures).

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DEIWhitney Buckley
Henrietta Lacks: Grade 7

In science class, seventh graders created graphic novels based on the story of Henrietta Lacks. Henrietta Lacks was a black woman who lived in the 1940s and was diagnosed with cervical cancer. When she went to receive treatment at one of the only hospitals that treated black people, they extracted some of her cells without her consent.

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DEIWhitney Buckley
Who is Gloria Richardson? Grade 8

This March, 8th grade students will travel to the Eastern Shore of Maryland for Service Week. In addition to brainstorming with the World Leadership School on how to protect the area’s important environmental resources, we will visit Cambridge, Maryland - home of the most important civil rights activist you have never heard of: Gloria Richardson.

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DEIJulie Wyman
Gratitude

In my family, Thanksgiving is a favorite holiday. When I think about why that is, it’s not about yummy food or holiday hooplah, it’s about the simplicity in how my family celebrates. For us, this is a time to slow down, come together, and take a moment to be grateful for life’s many blessings. Every year, there seem to be more reasons to be thankful. Over the last few years, the reasons to be grateful keep multiplying, especially here at GUS.

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(More Than) a Few Words from Mr. Bartsch

Jeffrey Bartsch began his journey at GUS in 2010, when he agreed to spearhead the new humanities program. Over the course of eleven years, his humanities 8 has come to be an important cornerstone of the 8th grade year, helping to define a GUS education. Here, he shares his unexpected path to teaching, his approach to teaching, and some changes that lay ahead.

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FacultyJeffrey Bartsch