Lifelong Learners

NCS faculty and staff are dedicated to sharing their knowledge and discoveries with students.

Through professional development fellowships, five educators explore new horizons, feed their curiosity, and travel the world.

In addition to the featured fellowship recipients, over 25 faculty members benefited from resources provided by the Woodcock Development Fund in 2022-2023. These NCS teachers used the additional funding to enhance their curricular instruction and strengthen their teaching approach.

Whitney Kelly
Assistant to the Head of Middle School; Middle School Dean of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging

The Luis-Akbar Family Fellowship promotes peace and cultural understanding through the advancement of dynamic teaching. It supports the professional growth of the recipient(s), enhances their professional role at NCS, and encourages innovative teaching and learning.

When Whitney Kelly traveled last summer to Rome, Florence, and Milan, her main goal was to enhance her work in DEI by deepening her understanding of how religion relates to educational institutions. In fact, the lessons she took away are broader. She came away with context and ideas not only about NCS’s teachings on and approach to religion, but also issues of identity and even the dress code.

Kelly was struck by the prevalence of religious spaces and memorabilia and also observed a deep respect for religion even among non-practicing Catholics. She welcomed the opportunity to expand her knowledge of the breadth of Italy’s religious communities, including learning about the history of Judaism in Rome.

Visiting beautiful houses of worship, Kelly appreciated the respect that locals hold for their sacred spaces. She reflected on how our school community shows respect in religious spaces and how those spaces conflict or coincide with one's identity.

Kelly notes that intersectionality is taught at NCS all the time, but it sometimes doesn’t include religion. She plans to expand her knowledge of religion using a lens of DEI and integrate it into the curriculum.
 
Jordan Peterson
Associate Director of College Guidance

The Porter Family Fellowship funds research, training, and enrichment experiences for faculty and staff to support the professional growth of the recipient(s), enhance their professional role at NCS, and encourages innovative teaching and learning.

An increasing number of NCS students are looking beyond the U.S. for college. Thirty percent of the students in the Class of 2023 submitted at least one application to an international school. Two-thirds of those students (approximately 20 percent of the class) applied to schools in the UK. In recent years, typically 5–10 percent of an NCS class enrolls in an overseas institution.

To better serve these NCS students who submit applications to international colleges and universities, Jordan Peterson was awarded a fellowship to better understand international admissions in the UK and Ireland. Her specific plan was to travel to a conference at Cambridge University over the summer. When that conference was canceled, she pivoted to planning her own trip to the U.K. in February 2024, Peterson plans to visit Dublin through a counselor program sponsored by University College Dublin and travel for a week throughout Scotland visiting University of Glasgow, University of Stirling, and University of Aberdeen with a program sponsored by the Scottish universities. As part of these visits, she will meet with admissions offices, current students, and student-support staff to learn about the admission process and student life on each campus. Her goal is to increase her understanding so NCS’s College Guidance office can offer the best advice and support to students around international application processes while making families feel more at ease with a potentially big international transition for college.

David Sahr
Middle School Social Sciences Teacher

The Hanbury-Kang Fellowship for Leadership in Education, Academic, and Development provides support for intensive training, study, and preparation that advance and sustain an intentionally inclusive culture and curriculum.

When David Sahr was teaching his year-long American Government course to 8th graders a few years ago, a student pointed out that the 13th Amendment did not entirely abolish slavery and that the atrocities in fact continued in the United States for many years.

Through the fellowship, Sahr researched this issue and developed a new unit for his 8th grade American Government course. To better understand the impact of the 13th Amendment, he traveled to selected civil rights landmarks and visited museums in Memphis, Tenn., and Montgomery, Ala. He also read widely and met with civil rights activists.

Sahr’s research showed that the practice of convict leasing, widespread in the South following the passage of the 13th Amendment, essentially enslaved tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of Black people for decades after the Civil War. This fall, Sahr’s 8th graders are researching this practice, an issue that has relevance to current prison work requirements. He will incorporate the student research into his approach with future classes, allowing Middle School students to contribute to class content that will be used for future students.
 
Sophia Torres
Lower School Librarian

The John S. Wood "Great Cities" Fellowship, established to honor John S. Wood, former European and World History teacher at NCS, provides financial support for a project outside of the United States that will enhance teaching.

When the Lower School Library closes for the summer months, librarian Sophia Torres worries about falling behind on book trends. Not this year! She attended the Edinburgh Book Festival, the world’s largest international book festival, and was immersed in the flow of ideas and conversations between Festival goers and authors/illustrators. She gained insights into book trends, including climate change and an emphasis on #ownvoices titles (books about characters from under-represented and marginalized groups with which the author shares the same identity). Torres particularly enjoyed sessions when kids asked the questions. She observed how they delved into the material, asking intricate questions about specific scenes and character personalities.

NCS students can expect to see more books from international authors in the Lower School Library. Torres also hopes to bring some Festival authors to NCS for a reading. Based on a workshop that Torres attended in Edinburgh, fifth graders will create recipes based on Chews Your Own Tasty Adventure, by Dr. Sai Pathmanathan.

Ted Xu
Upper School Chinese Teacher

The Katharine Lee International Travel Grant, established in honor of former Head of School Katharine Lee, supports international study or travel.

With the goals of broadening his perspective, connecting with fellow educators, and highlighting the value of embracing technology in language education, Ted Xu attended two Chinese language pedagogy conferences. The first was the 16th International Conference on Chinese Pedagogy held at Shanxi University in Taiyuan, China. Xu presented at this conference, sharing his expertise on “Generative AI and Chinese language teaching.” The second was the 19th ChinaCALL Conference, hosted by Computer Assisted Language Learning Association, held in Hohhot, China. At the conference, Xu explored teaching methodology, virtual reality, and generative AI to improve his knowledge of language teaching and technology usage.

Xu is using the knowledge and insights he gained at the conferences to create a more engaging and effective learning experience for his students. He has started using AI-powered online exercises and games to help students practice translations, new characters, and grammar patterns.

The conferences have sparked Xu to probe major questions about how teachers should face the opportunities and challenges of the AI era, how education will be reshaped, and how educators should guide and lead our students in using these tools.
 
A correction was made on Feb. 6, 2024: The print version of this article in the Fall/Winter 2023 National Cathedral School Magazine & Annual Report included an inadvertent, historically inaccurate statement about Jewish communities in Italy. We sincerely apologize for this error and thank those community who brought it to our attention.
Back
    • Whitney Kelly

    • Jordan Peterson

    • David Sahr

    • Sophia Torres

    • Ted Xu