ON CAMPUS | SCHOOL
Inspiring Confidence:
An Education Crafted
for Tomorrow’s Leaders
STORY BY ALLEX (SAMMULI) JESPER (US’12, C’16)
WHILE "SCENARIO-BASED" AND "INTEGRATED LEARNING" ARE NOT NOVEL CONCEPTS AT PRINCIPIA, a fresh and exciting academic framework is taking shape across the School.
Take a peek into any classroom and you’ll see future-ready learning in action—whether it’s fifth-grade apiarists preparing their harvested honey to sell at the Lower School Fall Festival or Upper School engineers in the making, programming a helpful bot designed to assist with a good night’s sleep. The School continues to push boundaries, providing rich opportunities to build confidence and competency.
In the Lower School, Principal Heather Tibbetts explores how to infuse reading, writing, science, social studies, STEM, and art into real-world projects. Launching this fall, the Lower School academic program incorporates more integration between subjects and more intentionality around hands-on learning. Students are getting their hands dirty, testing their theories, and putting their understanding into practice.
“Like most learners, we learn by doing,” says Heather. “Under this new framework, students make connections between different subjects and dive into real-life situations where they need to work together to make decisions and understand the impact of their actions. To run a program like this successfully, it takes constant collaboration, creativity, and flexibility. This is something our colleagues in the Middle School learned early on when overhauling their academics years ago.”
Principal Tibbetts has initiated a smooth transition including moving Rissa (Harlow) Arens (US’91, C’95), a former first-grade teacher, to Teacher Leader. Rissa works closely with each grade level in the Lower School to bolster the blended learning model.
Meanwhile, in the Upper School, a new freshman and sophomore experience known as “CoLAB” follows suit. CoLAB, as the name suggests, is a laboratory-style learning framework that teaches transferrable skills through student-led project work. Projects may include creating inventory and financial plans for a new business idea, improving sustainable practices across campus, or programming a new system or app to improve student life on campus.
“Immersive, relevant learning experiences help our students become more invested and engaged while cementing important skills that can be transferred to other experiences,” says Upper School Principal Samantha Dry. “We’re setting our freshmen and sophomores up for success by cultivating confidence and drilling in necessary skills for the rest of their academic journey and beyond.”
For Upper Schoolers craving additional learning opportunities outside the traditional core curriculum, “Quests” are now offered as independent study opportunities. Co-designed between students and teachers, students pursue an area of interest—from interior design and culinary arts to rocketry and aerospace engineering.
These educational enhancements mark the beginning of an exciting school-wide approach and curricular vision that will propel its students forward with the confidence and savvy they need to thrive in a world of unknowns.