Oakwood School is only fulfilling our mission when we strive to meet the needs of each and every student. I’d like to tell you more about recent things we’re doing to live out our belief that everything we do is rooted in relationships & community.
SUPPORTING THE WHOLE STUDENT
Oakwood’s Student Support capacities continue to grow and adapt to the changing environment our students are living and learning through. A number of new roles were created at both campuses dedicated to academic and social-emotional learning. At the secondary campus, new Learning Specialist Mary O’Malley teamed with Director of Support Services Wendy Weicker, our principals, and teachers to reimagine the Study Center. This has provided students with drop-in support on everything from gaining conceptual understanding across subject areas, to managing workload, and building organizational skills.
Last school year, Dr. Kavita Ajmere joined the secondary campus as our full-time Director of Counseling and Wellness. Along with Adriane Steinheimer, our Counselor & Human Development Coordinator, and Wendy Weicker, our Director of Support Services, they were instrumental in shepherding students through the most troubling months of the pandemic. This took place during daily individual sessions, with students and families, lunchtime, and after-school.
At the elementary campus, Ramsey Merritt is in his first year as our Math Specialist. He is supporting kindergarten through 6th-grade students in developing positive, growth-oriented mindsets on Math. He also collaborated with secondary campus Mathematics chair David Hammett on a pair of workshops for 5th and 6th-grade parents & guardians. Titled Inquiry-Based Math, How and Why it Works, this is an example of how we’re working on curricular alignment across grade levels, in all subjects, this year and in years to come.
Another new face at Oakwood is Maia Morgan. As our elementary campus counselor, Maia joins us at a time when teachers, not to mention parents and guardians, are trying to understand how living through the pandemic has affected social-emotional development in children. Maia’s helped our youngest learners with being able to name emotions and express themselves in ways that are appropriate. Anxiety is present, and teachers have observed that kids may be struggling to remember what it’s like to play with one another. As their advocate, Maia’s worked to develop toolkits for students to re-learn what it means to be part of a school community—which sets the stage for learning.
As we know, social-emotional and academic learning go hand in hand, and it’s our teachers who are tasked with carrying out both, in the classroom. Maia’s collaborated with the elementary campus team on a number of workshops aimed at re-empowering teachers to navigate student emotional challenges. This is a hand-sized, quick reference guide to help teachers apply Restorative Justice principles to resolve conflicts.
I can tell you from firsthand experience, and I’m sure Denise, Kevin, and everyone at both campuses would agree—our students have shown tremendous resilience and empathy. As so often happens, students lead the way by showing us they are stronger than they know and that Oakwood students truly care for one another. Taking care of one another is what holds us together as a community. Caring sustains the work we do and the connections we make.
THE OAKWOOD KITCHEN
The new Oakwood Kitchen cares for, and literally feeds bodies and minds, while creating new opportunities for connection over shared meals.
Our new secondary campus Kitchen & Cafe, the elementary campus Servery, and our K-12 meal plan program is transforming the school day for students, teachers, and staff. In addition to providing healthy and affordable meals every day, our outdoor dining spaces are alive with conversation, laughter, intense discussions, purpose, and play.
Preparing and serving these meals is quite an undertaking—here are some facts: in the past 60 days, the Oakwood kitchen has served 489 deli sandwiches, 937 fresh strawberry lemonades & OJs: 1740 beef, fish, and poultry entrées, 1290 vegetarian entrées, and an incredible 1547 house-baked cookies. That’s a lot of food and a lot of fun. The Oakwood Kitchen and meal plan are still relatively new, and just like any restaurant in its first year of operation, we’re working to improve. Soon you’ll be receiving a survey from us seeking feedback on the complete kitchen experience. We want your suggestions on the food, ordering system, and to better understand how your student is enjoying mealtimes at school.
LOVE, JOY & BELONGING
Being truly rooted in community calls on us to care for the whole of every person—their emotional and physical health—with an emphasis on their sense of belonging. Toyin Augustus, our new Director of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging has hit the ground running in her first year, collaborating with fellow administrators, teachers, students, parents & guardians, and alumni on work that reaches into every part of the Oakwood School experience.
Oakwood has continued its affinity group work, including for the first time students in 5th and 6th grade. There are also more adult groups meeting this year, such as our Jewish-identifying parents and guardians, and an ever-growing number of White Anti-Racist faculty and staff are gathering to do the essential work of recognizing harm and critically examining systems of oppression.
In classrooms and on campus, students have partaken in celebrations and class projects drawn from all the cultures and heritages that make up our school community and Greater Los Angeles, including so far this year: Latinx Heritage Month, Indigenous People’s Day and Native American Heritage Month, Dia De Los Muertos, Diwali, Hanukkah, Christmas, Kwanzaa, International Holocaust Remembrance Day, Lunar New Year, and Black History Month. And we look forward to more observances and celebrations later this year for Women’s History Month, Holi, Ramadan, Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month, Jewish American Heritage Month, and LGBTQ+ Pride Month.
I’d like to add another undeniable thing that Toyin, in collaboration with Kevin and our PGODEIB committee, have brought to Oakwood this school year: joy and love. If any of you have seen photos of cultural celebrations on campus, attended a Voices Envisioned talk, or gathered in an affinity group, you know what I’m talking about.
The experience of belonging is one that brings us love and joy. I want to thank these individuals for reminding us of that, and for providing so many opportunities to feel it.