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2025 NNSP Annual Conference
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Venue: TBA clear filter
Wednesday, February 5
 

1:45pm EST

Approaching Difference with Curiosity: A Student Perspective
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA
How can we inspire students to embrace curious disagreement on both everyday topics and pressing societal issues? How can we equip them to engage constructively across differences in a college setting? In this interactive workshop, join the Institute for Multipartisan Education—a student-founded and student-led initiative—as we delve into the power of curious disagreement. Together, we'll examine its value, uncover the cognitive and social challenges it presents, and share practical strategies to cultivate meaningful, curious engagement in your classroom.
Speakers
JV

Jason Vadnos

Program Associate and Trainer, Institute for Multipartisan Education
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA

1:45pm EST

Creating a Community of Engaged Learners: Connecting Education with Real World Impact
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA
This engaging session delves into the transformative power of integrating civic and community engagement into classroom curricula. This session will explore how educators can effectively infuse civic principles into instruction to foster a sense of responsibility and active participation among students. Participants will gain insights into the measurable benefits of embedding civics into student learning, including enhanced critical thinking, leadership skills, and community awareness._x000D_
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Key takeaways include understanding the definition of civic engagement, exploring ways to connect classroom content with real-world impact, and discovering tangible examples and resources to implement these concepts effectively. Attendees will leave equipped with strategies to develop civic competencies in students, align civic projects with grade-level standards, and utilize curricular resources to create meaningful learning experiences that extend beyond the classroom.
Speakers
avatar for Mallory Lawler

Mallory Lawler

Instructional Coach, Bellwood School District 88
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA

1:45pm EST

Degrees of Impact Part 1: Mission and Vision Alignment and Outcome Definition
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA
The 3-part Degrees of Impact series is grounded in NNSP's signature summer programming that has successfully run for the past five summers. The series will guide educators in structuring or redesigning a comprehensive community engagement program. Each session builds on the last, offering a step-by-step approach to align mission and outcomes, repurpose existing programs, and integrate meaningful opportunities into the curriculum.
Part 1: Mission and Vision Alignment and Outcome Definition
Explore how aligning your school’s mission and vision with community and civic engagement goals can create meaningful outcomes. This session will guide educators in defining clear objectives for social impact initiatives that resonate with their school’s values and support student growth. Participants will leave with tools to connect their institutional purpose to actionable, measurable results.
Speakers
avatar for Laura Day

Laura Day

Director of Innovation and Collaboration, The Hockaday School
Currently working on many public private partnerships in Dallas. Would love to talk about that or anything related to changing a city with the power of student voices!
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA

1:45pm EST

Developing Global Citizenship
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA
This workshop will focus on the process of thinking through and designing effective global citizenship and global competence oriented programming for students. Participants will reflect on how they can guide students in taking action for social impact on the most pressing global challenges. The facilitator will present strategies and examples to show how programs can be designed to allow for authentic, ethical, and sustainable community engagement and social impact work on the local, national and global scale. We will discuss how to guide students in critically reflecting on the issues they explore while on experiential programs, on how those issues manifest back home in their local communities, and on how they can implement projects for social impact to contribute to addressing said issues.
Speakers
KM

Kevin Murungi

Director of Global Social Impact, Brooklyn Friends School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA

1:45pm EST

Education for Civic Engagement: A PK3 - 12th Grade Integrated School Model
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA
As PK3-12th grade educators, we wrestle with how to adequately prepare our students for active, engaged citizenship. In late adolescence, our students transition to legal adults, inheriting the rights and responsibilities associated with citizenship. Research studies consistently suggest decline in nearly every measure of civic and political engagement among American citizens, including participation in civic activities, rallies, political campaigns, and public meetings. To combat this trend, I engaged in a 4 year dissertation research study to propose a center for democracy intervention model. This PreK-12 integrated, holistic model is designed to address civic identity development, critical service learning, and civic leadership development. The proposed program is not a prescriptive curriculum, but a framework based on a learning outcomes approach, emphasizing 21st century skills, including inquiry-based learning, collaboration, and experiential practices that bring learning outside of the classroom.
Speakers
LB

Lori Bush

Social Studies Teacher, Metairie Park Country Day School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 1:45pm - 2:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Activism, Power & Identity: Developing & Teaching a Critical Culturally Sustaining Civics Curriculum
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
“Activism, Power & Identity”' is a culturally-sustaining, civics curricular intervention in a time of socio-political upheaval. Harkening back to Septima Clark’s Citizenship Schools and SNCC’s Freedom Schools, students co-create an anti-oppressive educational space that centers analyzing their positionality within the US political system alongside enacting their own freedom dreams. This workshop will share historically and culturally-responsive pedagogical frameworks, example lesson plans, and whole-school engagement strategies to successfully implement critical civics curriculum. This session is geared towards social studies educators, curriculum specialists, and others who will gain (1) pedagogical analysis to situate critical culturally sustaining civics curriculum in our current time, (2) tools to cultivate family, educator and administrative buy-in, and (3) space to freedom dream their own interventions in their schools and communities.
Speakers
SG

Sharina Gordon

Assistant Director of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Mary McDowell Friends School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Leaning Into Controversy: Our Journey to Being a School That Values Diverse Voices
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
In this session, we will share the journey that San Francisco University High School (SFUHS) is on to become a school that teaches students to engage in discourse across difference and support teachers in developing classroom lessons about controversial issues. In the 2023-2024 school year, SFUHS became disabled by the conflict in Israel and Gaza and shifted away from teaching into its mission. Rather than retreating, school leaders made the decision to lean hard into the lessons of the 2024 school year to transform our school culture into being a school that not only supported discourse across difference, but brought along our board of trustees, families, students and faculty as part of this transformational work. We have engaged in teacher training, student workshops, parent education and policy change to become a school that shows up best when learning about controversial issues and fostering a supportive environment in which students and teachers can engage together safely.
Speakers
avatar for Nasif Iskander

Nasif Iskander

Acting Head of School, San Francisco University High School
SO

Sarah Odell

Dean of Faculty, San Francisco University High School
EL

E-Chieh Lin

Director of Equity and Community, San Francisco University High School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Practical Strategies for Teaching Civil Discourse Skills in Social Science Classrooms
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
Teaching students how to enter conversations with curiosity and humility grounds everything we do in schools. In particularly fraught times, these skills and competencies counter contempt and inspire students to seek a deeper understanding of the people around them. (1) As much as we try to surround ourselves with like-minded individuals whose values and views support our own, it’s impossible (and perhaps boring!) to imagine a life that doesn’t offer intellectual challenge. Even so, we go to great lengths to insulate ourselves from opposing perspectives by curating our news, carefully selecting which information we are exposed to, how it is analyzed, and by whom. Social media amplifies our tendency toward echo chambers by employing algorithms that only expose us to ideas and people that align with our beliefs. (2) A 2022 Stanford study concluded that the resulting polarization and partisanship are having disastrous consequences for the American public and for children. (3)_x000D_
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According to the work of Lynne Marie Kohm, Lynn D. Wardle and others, “when alternative viewpoints, opinions, and arguments are significantly absent from any community… it results in an ‘echo-chamber effect.’ The lack of intellectual diversity results in the community hearing only itself, hearing the ideas it wants and expects to hear, and hearing nothing but echoes of the arguments, and viewpoints it prefers and supports. Consequently, the discourse in that community becomes narrower and more extreme as it is unchecked by ideas from outside.” (4) This dynamic can fracture relationships, leaving people feeling bitter and isolated. (5) If we seek to counter these trends in exchange for a culture of care and compassion, we need to model empathy and provide students with opportunities to practice doing so, as well. _x000D_
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This workshop invites participants to consider how to deliberately teach productive dialogue skills in history and social science classrooms. We will briefly explore research by Hess, McAvoy and Cohen regarding the crucial role of civil discourse education in safeguarding democracy, nurturing belonging, and promoting humanity. Building from a civility self-reflection that can be used in the classroom or to support faculty professional development, participants will examine sample lessons that can be adapted to various content areas. By the end of the session, individuals will have learned practical tools and strategies for amplifying competencies and skills instruction related to civil discourse._x000D_
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(1) Arthur C. Brooks, Love Your Enemies: How Decent People Can Save America from Our Culture of Contempt (New York, NY: Broadside Books, 2019), 34._x000D_
(2) Matteo Cinelli, Gianmarco De Francisci Morales, Alessandro Galeazzi, Walter Quattrociocchi, and Michele Starnini. “The Echo Chamber Effect on Social Media.” National Academy of Sciences Volume 118, no. 9 (March 2, 2021). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2023301118._x000D_
(3) Matthew Tyler and Shanto Iyengar. “Learning to Dislike Your Opponents: Political Socialization in the Era of Polarization.” American Political Science Review Vol. 117, no. 1 (2023): 347–54. https://doi.org/10.1017/S000305542200048X._x000D_
(4) Lynne Marie Kohm and Lynn D. Wardle, “The ‘Echo-Chamber Effect’ in Legal Education: Considering Family Law Casebooks,” University of St. Thomas Journal of Law and Public Policy, Volume 6, Issue 1 (Fall 2011): 104 https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/217155846.pdf _x000D_
(5) Geoffrey Skelling and Holly Fuong. “3 In 10 Americans Named Political Polarization As A Top Issue Facing The Country.” FiveThirtyEight, June 14, 2022. https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/3-in-10-americans-named-political-polarization-as-a-top-issue-facing-the-country/.
Speakers
SS

Stefanie Santangelo

Upper School History Department Chair, Princeton Day School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Service Learning Teams: Making Service Learning Work for Your Institution
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
Speakers
NE

Nathaniel Elijah Sivin

Director of Service Learning/Sustainability Coordinator/History Teacher, Poly Prep Country Day School
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Transformative Civic Engagement: How Students Can Influence Decision-Makers and Drive Community Change
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
The session delves into the presenter’s original methodology of the Civic Empowerment Pyramid, a strategic framework developed to guide minors and individuals in navigating the complexities of civic engagement. This step-by-step methodology provides actionable insights into how young people can leverage their unique perspectives and energy to influence decision-makers, from local leaders to policymakers.
Speakers
DN

Dr. Nancy Pearson

Author and Speaker
Wednesday February 5, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
 
Thursday, February 6
 

9:00am EST

Data-Driven Transformation: Unleashing the Potential of Social Impact Programs
Thursday February 6, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EST
TBA
Speakers
ND

Nathan Dietz

Research Director and Associate Research Professor, Do Good Institute, University of Maryland
Nathan Dietz, Ph.D., joined the School of Public Policy in March 2017 and his research with the Do Good Institute focuses on social capital, volunteering, charitable contributions, civic engagement and social entrepreneurship.Dietz is the author or coauthor of all Institute research... Read More →
Thursday February 6, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EST
TBA

10:15am EST

Civic Engagement: Student Poll Workers and Cross-Curricular Learning
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA
In the age of TikTok and Instagram, supporting and engaging students to become educated and involved citizens can be challenging. Many young people believe their vote will not matter and that decisions made by elected officials are not something that they can influence. We still teach kids today the same way that we did 50+ years ago where they go to one room for math and a different room for history and a different room for every other subject, but we live in a world that is more interconnected than ever._x000D_
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We have to meet students where they are and engage them on the issues that matter to them. We need to connect them to the process and show them how to access it so that they can see themselves as engaged citizens. The best way to do that is by actually making kids a part of the process. By encouraging students to work the polls on Election Day, they get to see the process up close. For my students, they quickly realized that the people who came in to vote at our school did not reflect the diversity of our neighborhood and school community. By working with students at the polls, they get to ask questions about the process, the candidates and different roles of all of the elected officials. They get to see first hand how the process works and begin to connect the issues to the process. Engaging kids before they leave high school provides the opportunity to connect them in a way they may not on their own._x000D_
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As a science and special education teacher at a very diverse comprehensive neighborhood high school in Philadelphia, and a degree in both political science and biology, I know all too well how disengaged students can be. Join us for a conversation about engaging students in civics outside of the history or social studies classroom and across a broad range of interests an abilities. Learn how inclusion is possible for students of diverse abilities and the excitement of kids engaging in the process, working the polls and voting for the first time.
Speakers
SC

Sarah Caswell

Science and Special Education Teacher, School District of Philadelphia
TQ

Tom Quinn

Social Studies Teacher/PA Youth Votes, School District of Philadelphia/PA Youth Vote
RN

Rachel Newman

School District of Philadelphia, Law Teacher
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA

10:15am EST

Civil Discourse: Listening in Community
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA
This session introduces participants to the world of social entrepreneurship, interweaving design thinking, systems thinking, and the power of storytelling for social impact. Through compelling narratives of young changemakers, participants will learn three key processes for innovation: spotting opportunities in their communities, testing and refining ideas through real-world prototyping, and implementing viable solutions to address pressing social issues. The session empowers participants to challenge preconceived notions about innovation and overcome common myths surrounding youth-led change, emphasizing that age is not a barrier but a unique advantage. Through interactive storytelling exercises and case studies, participants will discover how to harness stories of changemakers and entrepreneurs as inspiration for students to take meaningful action and create lasting impact in their communities.
Speakers
KM

Kenann McKenzie-DeFranza

Founder and Principal, Aspiring Spirit, LLC
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA

10:15am EST

Degrees of Impact Part 2: Repurposing Programs and Identifying Challenges
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA
The 3-part Degrees of Impact series is grounded in NNSP's signature summer programming that has successfully run for the past five summers. The series will guide educators in structuring or redesigning a comprehensive community engagement program. Each session builds on the last, offering a step-by-step approach to align mission and outcomes, repurpose existing programs, and integrate meaningful opportunities into the curriculum.

Part 2: Repurposing Programs and Identifying Challenges
Learn to leverage existing programs within your school to enhance civic engagement and social impact efforts while addressing potential obstacles. Educators will examine strategies to redesign or strengthen current initiatives for greater community impact, using resources from the National Network of Schools in Partnership. This session also offers insights into navigating challenges like resource limitations or stakeholder buy-in.
Speakers
avatar for Laura Day

Laura Day

Director of Innovation and Collaboration, The Hockaday School
Currently working on many public private partnerships in Dallas. Would love to talk about that or anything related to changing a city with the power of student voices!
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA

10:15am EST

Future-Funded: Unlocking 21st Century Tools to Fuel Social Impact Dreams
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA
Young changemakers have unprecedented access to tools that can amplify their voices and turn ideas into impactful movements. This session will equip educators and mentors with strategies to help students harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) to secure funding for their social impact projects. From grants and pitch competitions to fellowships and unconventional funding sources, participants will learn practical ways to guide students in using AI tools for research, storytelling, proposal generation, and outreach.
Speakers
RW

Rasheda Williams

Founder and Chief Empowering Officer, Empowered Flower Girl
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA

10:15am EST

How Stories Change the World
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA
This session introduces participants to the world of social entrepreneurship, interweaving design thinking, systems thinking, and the power of storytelling for social impact. Through compelling narratives of young changemakers, participants will learn three key processes for innovation: spotting opportunities in their communities, testing and refining ideas through real-world prototyping, and implementing viable solutions to address pressing social issues. The session empowers participants to challenge preconceived notions about innovation and overcome common myths surrounding youth-led change, emphasizing that age is not a barrier but a unique advantage. Through interactive storytelling exercises and case studies, participants will discover how to harness stories of changemakers and entrepreneurs as inspiration for students to take meaningful action and create lasting impact in their communities.
Speakers
avatar for Reilly Brooks

Reilly Brooks

Director, Schoolyard Ventures
Thursday February 6, 2025 10:15am - 11:00am EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Hobart’s Run: A Game-Changing Town-Gown Initiative
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
The 174-year-old Hill School is closely tied to Pottstown, Pa. – and, in 2014, a variety of factors led it to strengthen its connections to this “gritty” small city by creating Hobart’s Run, a comprehensive initiative to make Pottstown safer, cleaner, and more inclusive. Learn about this now 8-year-old, still-evolving neighborhood engagement project and how it has made a tangible, appreciated impact on our hometown while addressing School concerns such as Pottstown’s role in student and faculty recruitment and enhancing Hill’s community service culture.
Speakers
CS

Cathy Skitko

Director of Communications & Community Relations / Coordinator of Community Service, The Hill School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Politics in the Classroom: Teaching Civic Engagement while Maintaining Neutrality and Protecting Marginalised Students
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
The last decade has seen an intensification of three of our roles as classroom teachers: the desire and need to teach civics, including supporting students' curiosity with the political process, the duty to protect marginalised students and uplift silenced voices, and professional responsibility of maintaining partisan neutrality in the classroom. However, the polarisation in the political environment of the past few presidential administrations has made teachers feel as if some of three responsibilities take precedence over the others or -- worse -- that backing away from these discussions is the easy way out. Instead, I will aim to make a convincing case for the importance in helping our students productively engage in civic discourse and embrace their viewpoints, and help to equip teachers in all disciplines to do so safely.
Speakers
HS

Hasani Sinclair

Teacher, Brentwood School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Redefining Community Service to Foster Passion-Driven Engagement Within School Hours
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
All schools aim to create successful, contributing members of society. Community service is often seen as a vital path to achieving this goal, with some schools making it a graduation requirement. However, community service has become another item to check off a list for college applications, rather than a meaningful experience. The term “community service” itself implies a one-way street of giving rather than a mutual partnership between students and organizations. _x000D_
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What if we could redefine community service to be more than counting hours? What if it became an opportunity for students to explore their passions and interests, using them to benefit the larger community? This question inspired me during a seminar series by the World Leadership School in spring 2021, leading to my “moonshot project” that integrated service into the school day. This integration is crucial as students are already overwhelmed with extracurriculars, homework, and family commitments. _x000D_
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In June 2021, I presented this idea to the administration, and with their support, we launched the Eagles with a Purpose (EWAP) club in the 2021-22 academic year. Utilizing our school’s block schedule and “X-blocks,” which provided almost two hours for specialized meetings, EWAP met regularly. In our first year, 10 students participated, engaging in various activities such as: hosting guest speakers, including a state Senator, who discussed using skills to benefit the community, writing cards for soldiers, visiting seven non-profits to volunteer, organizing a volunteer fair at our school, collaborating with local non-profits on projects like a kickball game with Gigi’s Playhouse and a bake sale for childhood cancer research. _x000D_
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The success of EWAP led the administration to recognize it as a .5 credit interdisciplinary class. The following year, our numbers grew to 14 students, and we expanded our activities to include a Passion Speaker Interview event, where students interacted with professionals about their career paths and community impact. This past year, with 17 students, we focused on researching issues important to them and partnering with non-profits to create spring action projects. _x000D_
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Students reported significant personal growth and community impact from their participation. Comments included: "EWAP helped me realize the importance of helping my community, even with small acts," "I learned how to host drives and fundraisers, which I can continue in college, " and "This class enhanced my sense of empathy and social responsibility." _x000D_
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Creating a program like EWAP does not require substantial financial investment. Schools need to allocate time in the schedule, have a passionate coordinator, and facilitate off-campus activities. Celebrating students’ work through events and sharing successes with the community can also help gain traction and support from students, parents, and the school board. _x000D_
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In the past three years, EWAP has: Volunteered over 515 hours, visited 15 local non-profits, hosted 13 guest speakers, created 23 projects for non-profits, and enabled 14 community engagement activities. _x000D_
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Schools should be places where students learn to engage with the community, developing skills that benefit them and society. By integrating service into the school day and aligning it with students’ passions, we create meaningful, fulfilling experiences that show students the value of their classroom skills in the real world.
Speakers
LS

Lindsey Seynhaeve

Director of Outreach and Sustainability, Indian Creek School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Social Impact in the curriculum: Concrete Examples of Clubs and atheltics and how we weave socil impact into the curriculum
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
Speakers
MM

Maria McIvor

Upper School Spanish Teacher/AASk Tutoring Coordinator, Oregon Episcopal School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Social Impact Project
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
This session highlights the Social Impact Project, a Government class capstone where students advocate for public policy solutions to issues they care about at local, state, or national levels. The project combines research, civic action, and reflection, helping students develop skills in argumentation, advocacy, and collaboration while applying concepts like policymaking and civic engagement. Through real-world interactions with policymakers and active civic participation, students leave empowered with the tools to effect change in their communities.
Speakers
EM

Emily Mosely

Upper School History Teacher, The Hockaday School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Student-Led Town Hall
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
This session will explore the concept of a Student-led "Town Hall" in which members of student forum (student government) gather all members of the US community, including faculty, to address and discuss issues within the community. This powerful gathering occurs three times per year and takes place in a unique format where everyone is seated in circular rows with everyone facing each other. The circle symbolizes unity and collectivism, and ensures that everyone can see and hear each other properly. Members of student forum initiate conversation with pre-determined prompts and then leave time at the end for open-forum format. Town Halls ensure that students and faculty feel both heard and engaged as active members of the community.
Speakers
JR

Jake Rainey

Student Life & Leadership Coordinator, The Key School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Sustainable Tourism: Travel and Civic Engagement
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
I believe that my session could be successful as either an Engage Workshop or an Inspire Mini-Session. _x000D_
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In this session I will discuss the concept of sustainable travel and how to combine service-learning and travel in a way that uplifts communities and prepares students for a meaningful experience that will inspire them to think deeper and take action. I will discuss the pre and post work necessary for non-harmful and meaningful service-learning travel and how you can "make global local" and use travel as a catalyst for creating civically engaged global citizens. _x000D_
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As a mini-session on trips I have led or as a 45-min session I would use ~20 min to present and the remaining time I would lead participants through the planning and research process of an intentional service-learning trip.
Speakers
RK

Roxanne Kruger

Director of Service Learning and Global Department Teacher, Lake Forest Academy
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Teaching for Impact: Partnerships for Purpose
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
The workshop highlights the conditions under which students learn best, stressing the significance of relevant content, active engagement, prosocial collaboration, and healthy mindsets. By connecting classroom learning to real-world applications, educators can make content meaningful, thus increasing student motivation and academic performance. This relevance bridges the gap between school and community, reframing knowledge to include lived experiences and everyday activities.
Using a case study from Girard College High School's partnership with Eastern State Penitentiary and the creation of a course on prisons and social justice, educators will learn how to build and measure the impact of these innovative programs. In the first program of its kind, Eastern State Penitentiary partnered with Girard to develop a yearlong curriculum on Social Justice and Mass Incarceration. Students debated issues of race and redemption while leading public discussions and participating in conferences regarding avenues for reform. From that demonstrated success, more partnerships were formed transforming the school culture.
Speakers
avatar for Arthur Ernst

Arthur Ernst

Data Analyst, New Jersey Department of Education
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

The Journey to Balance: A Wellness Retreat for Students
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
This session will explore the multifaceted concept of wellness, encompassing physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being. We will discuss practical strategies to promote wellness within educational settings, such as the creation of our SWELL spaces, facilitation of a Junior Wellness Retreat, and ensuring easy access to support specialists. By fostering autonomy and mental health, we can empower youth to navigate life's challenges with resilience and positivity.
Speakers
RS

Rosemarie Steinhoff

Upper School Counselor, Chadwick School
SM

Sara Mactavish

Upper School Learning Specialist, Chadwick School
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

The Myth of the Quick Fix: Using Implementation Science to Drive Outcomes
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
Due to the myth of the ‘quick fix,’ outstanding results are more often the exception than the norm. A successful initiative in education follows a formula for success informed by implementation science and human-centered design. This session explores an adapted, streamlined implementation framework, drawing on the work of Komesidou & Hogan (2023). Three evidence-based drivers are introduced: Knowledgeable Educators, Curriculum and Instruction, and Multi-Tiered Systems of Support. In this session, leaders will use a needs assessment to evaluate their ‘Knowledgeable Educators’ driver and examine phases of implementation and enabling contexts that support one’s ability to achieve intended outcomes. Briefly engaging in a mock focus group, participants will learn what educational systems facilitate and impede the implementation process, and how critical adjustments or adaptations may be needed to support the intended goals.
Speakers
MG

Megan Gierka

Head of Implementation, AIM Institute for Learning & Research
NO

Nicole Ormandy

Head of Research and Product, AIM Institute for Learning & Research
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

11:15am EST

Why Local Politics Matter: Empowering Communities Through Civic Engagement
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA
A15-minute mini-session that will inspire participants to understand the critical importance of engaging in local politics. While national elections often capture the most attention, local politics shape everyday life in more immediate and tangible ways. In this session, we will explore how being actively involved in local governance from school boards to city councils can help shape policies, create equitable opportunities, and empower communities. Through a case study, audience interaction, and a call to action, attendees will leave with a deeper understanding of their role in local politics and practical steps they can take to make a meaningful difference.
Speakers
DV

DAngelo Virgo

Executive Director, Civically Engaged
Thursday February 6, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Empowering Problem Spotters: Increasing Engagement, Agency, and Empathy in Elementary Students
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
In this immersive, hands-on session, educators will explore strategies to help elementary students become "problem spotters"—those who actively identify challenges in their surroundings. By teaching students to recognize and solve real-world problems, educators can increase student engagement, foster deeper connections to the world around them, and cultivate essential skills like agency and empathy. Participants will leave with practical tools and approaches they can implement immediately on their own campuses to enhance student learning and community impact.
Speakers
LL

Laura Laywell

Assistant Director of Institute for Social Impact, The Hockaday School
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Good Trouble: Creating a Model for Student Community Activism
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
In this session, educators will learn about how Dr. Chattin incorporated civic engagement and social justice in a public charter middle school and also an independent school. This model encourages students to take pride and ownership of their local communities in the form of community activism.
Speakers
LC

Latrisha Chattin

Head of Middle School/ DEIB Coordinator/ SS Teacher, Benchmark School
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

Politics in the Classroom: Teaching Civic Engagement while Maintaining Neutrality and Protecting Marginalised Students
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
The last decade has seen an intensification of three of our roles as classroom teachers: the desire and need to teach civics, including supporting students' curiosity with the political process, the duty to protect marginalised students and uplift silenced voices, and professional responsibility of maintaining partisan neutrality in the classroom. However, the polarisation in the political environment of the past few presidential administrations has made teachers feel as if some of three responsibilities take precedence over the others or -- worse -- that backing away from these discussions is the easy way out. Instead, I will aim to make a convincing case for the importance in helping our students productively engage in civic discourse and embrace their viewpoints, and help to equip teachers in all disciplines to do so safely.
Speakers
HS

Hasani Sinclair

Teacher, Brentwood School
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA

2:45pm EST

U2L Teen Corps: A Model for Developing Purposeful Leaders
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
Join the Community Activation team from United to Learn (U2L) in Dallas, Texas to learn about bringing the service learning classroom into the field. In this session, U2L staff will share about its Teen Corps Program to model a practical example of collaboration between private and public high schools actively engaging with a local nonprofit organization to build purposeful leaders and advocates for educational equity. This session will showcase the Teen Corps flexible and differentiated program model to complement varied and diverse educational spaces and audiences. Attendees will also learn about ways to sustain Teen programs by providing opportunities for students to exercise their own agency, influencing the program vision through participation in organizational leadership structures.
Speakers
ME

Mariah Eleazor

Program Manager for Teen Corps, United to Learn
CM

Cheryl Mathis

Program Manager for Community Activation, United to Learn
Thursday February 6, 2025 2:45pm - 3:30pm EST
TBA
 
Friday, February 7
 

9:45am EST

Beyond the "woke" and "anti-woke" tug-of-war: Staying the course toward justice in our communities
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA
In less than 10 years, the term “woke” has been resurrected as shorthand for antiracist and social justice consciousness, appropriated to disparage liberalism, deployed to polarize and obscure dialogue about the urgency and relevance of DEI work in our communities, and misused to object to just about anything perceived as progressive. Increasingly challenged for being too woke or not woke enough, organizations are playing heavy defense, too often on someone else’s terms. At stake aren’t just equity and inclusion initiatives, but the promise of mission and core values, and the mutual safety, dignity, belonging and thriving of our communities. In discussion with each other, participants will:_x000D_
• Deepen understandings of “wokeness” and “anti-wokeness;” _x000D_
• Recognize how the “woke” v. “anti-woke” tug-of-war sets us up and prevents progress; and_x000D_
• Practice using the language of mission and core values to engage resistance to DEI, and clarify and own what their community stands for.
Speakers
avatar for Alison Park

Alison Park

Founder, Blink Strategic Consulting
Let's talk about your organizational strategy for DEI. How you're building a culture grounded in your diversity, with equity and inclusion as the core design principles of your systems, structures, programs and everyday practices. With curiosity and accountability for realizing the... Read More →
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA

9:45am EST

Degrees of Impact Part 3: Assessment, Reflection, and Curriculum Integration
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA
The 3-part Degrees of Impact series is grounded in NNSP's signature summer programming that has successfully run for the past five summers. The series will guide educators in structuring or redesigning a comprehensive community engagement program. Each session builds on the last, offering a step-by-step approach to align mission and outcomes, repurpose existing programs, and integrate meaningful opportunities into the curriculum.

Part 3: Assessment, Reflection, and Curriculum Integration
Discover how to assess the effectiveness of engagement programs, reflect on their impact, and incorporate these opportunities into your curriculum. Educators will explore methods for embedding social impact lessons into various subject areas and creating a sustainable framework for civic learning. Gain actionable strategies to ensure these programs enrich students' academic and personal growth.
Speakers
avatar for Laura Day

Laura Day

Director of Innovation and Collaboration, The Hockaday School
Currently working on many public private partnerships in Dallas. Would love to talk about that or anything related to changing a city with the power of student voices!
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA

9:45am EST

Hobart’s Run: A Game-Changing Town-Gown Initiative
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA
The 174-year-old Hill School is closely tied to Pottstown, Pa. – and, in 2014, a variety of factors led it to strengthen its connections to this “gritty” small city by creating Hobart’s Run, a comprehensive initiative to make Pottstown safer, cleaner, and more inclusive. Learn about this now 8-year-old, still-evolving neighborhood engagement project and how it has made a tangible, appreciated impact on our hometown while addressing School concerns such as Pottstown’s role in student and faculty recruitment and enhancing Hill’s community service culture.
Speakers
CS

Cathy Skitko

Director of Communications & Community Relations / Coordinator of Community Service, The Hill School
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA

9:45am EST

Learning Before Serving: The Importance of Needs Assessments and Social Awareness in High School Volunteering
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA
Participants will discuss and learn more about the recent focus on "learning service" (versus service learning). In addition, I will share the details and outcomes of a recent large-scale event we organized here for 10th graders on the subject. This year we reimagined our annual 2-day service retreat for 10th graders into a 2-day focus on a specific social issue. 155 students were broken into 11 different groups focused on different social issues. Over their 2 days of their "microcourse" they engaged in both learning inside the classroom, service in the community, and conversations and meetings with local experts and nonprofit organizations. The outcome was multiple groups of a students who deepened their understanding of a complex social issue and made connections for future volunteer work.
Speakers
BM

Becca Marcus

Upper School Service Learning Coordinator, Brentwood School
Friday February 7, 2025 9:45am - 10:30am EST
TBA

10:45am EST

Empowering Students Through Community Engagement: Building Empathy and Leadership Skills
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA
This workshop will delve into how educators can effectively integrate community and civic engagement into the curriculum. Participants will explore systemic issues within their communities and how these can be woven into academic learning, fostering empathy and leadership among students.
Speakers
RV

Ryan Virden

Professor of Justice and Peace Studies, University of St. Thomas
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA

10:45am EST

Engaging your Community in Crafting a Statement on Civil Discourse
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA
As educators, our collective aim to prepare students to navigate a complex and polarized world, is more vital than ever. The fracturing of civil society across the nation and around the world underscores our duty to equip students with the skills they need to engage in respectful dialogue in order to promote equity, belonging and inclusivity. Recognizing this profound responsibility, this workshop empowers teachers and school leaders to advance civil discourse within their institutions. Formalizing a civil discourse statement fosters a collective commitment to the ideals it represents. It also encapsulates the essential work of schools and produces a roadmap that ultimately serves to ground programming across academics, advisories, co-curricular activities, athletics, and the arts._x000D_
_x000D_
This workshop invites participants to consider how they might lead their schools through the process of drafting a statement on civil discourse and provides suggestions for how to begin integrating it into academic and social programs. We will begin by exploring research by Cohen, Spencer, Brookfield, and Preskill, examining the crucial role of civil discourse education in safeguarding democracy, nurturing belonging, and promoting humanity. We'll share our school's journey in crafting a statement aligned with our mission to graduate students who “act knowledgeably, lead thoughtfully, share generously and contribute meaningfully.” Attendees will explore our methods for collecting and analyzing feedback from faculty in all three divisions, from administrators and senior leaders, members of the Board of Trustees and Parents Association, students, and staff members. They will examine how our collaborative process produced a statement that informs practices, policies and initiatives; shapes programming and instruction in academic classes and in social-emotional spaces; and further defines our identity, ethos and community interactions. We will demonstrate how we leveraged AI to synthesize large amounts of data to generate themes and patterns. Finally, we will offer practical examples of how schools can shift from drafting a statement to actualizing it in classrooms and in social-emotional learning spaces._x000D_
_x000D_
Through facilitated discussions and reflective exercises, participants will explore how to adapt the methods and frameworks to their own schools, drawing on their mission statements, visions and values. The workshop is designed to be adaptable, allowing participants to tailor the approach for specific divisions, departments, or a whole-school initiative. We welcome cohorts of cross-divisional school leaders and faculty seeking to partner with one another in pursuit of creating a statement on civil discourse.
Speakers
SS

Stefanie Santangelo

Upper School History Department Chair, Princeton Day School
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA

10:45am EST

Sustainable Tourism: Travel and Civic Engagement
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA
I believe that my session could be successful as either an Engage Workshop or an Inspire Mini-Session. _x000D_
_x000D_
In this session I will discuss the concept of sustainable travel and how to combine service-learning and travel in a way that uplifts communities and prepares students for a meaningful experience that will inspire them to think deeper and take action. I will discuss the pre and post work necessary for non-harmful and meaningful service-learning travel and how you can "make global local" and use travel as a catalyst for creating civically engaged global citizens. _x000D_
_x000D_
As a mini-session on trips I have led or as a 45-min session I would use ~20 min to present and the remaining time I would lead participants through the planning and research process of an intentional service-learning trip.
Speakers
RK

Roxanne Kruger

Director of Service Learning and Global Department Teacher, Lake Forest Academy
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA

10:45am EST

What stories can we tell? Civic Learning on The National Mall in 2026
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA
As we set our sights on the 250th anniversary of our country in 2026, we are building support, programs, and vision for both digital and onsite connection to quality Civic Learning and Engagement for educators across the country. Learn and share with our team as we explore the future of the National Mall. After an overview of Beyond Granite, March On, and virtual classroom programs, join a facilitated session on how education leaders can envision Civic Learning and storytelling in 2026 and beyond in onsite and digital environments. The 2026 commemoration on the Mall will be an opportunity to elevate the stories that have gone untold. Participants will be able to provide feedback and insights from their schools that will inform the future of the Nation's 'front yard."
Speakers
JE

Jennifer Epstein

NPS Ranger, Education Specialist, National Mall and Memorial Parks, The National Park Service
avatar for Jeremy Goldstein

Jeremy Goldstein

VP of Programs, Trust for the National Mall
DH

Destinee Hodge

Senior Director of Special Programs, Trust for the National Mall
Friday February 7, 2025 10:45am - 11:30am EST
TBA
 
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