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Students in the “Will It Float?” enrichment took to the pool this week to test their creations.
Opening Message
15 Years of Wearing Two Hats
Brendan Largay, Head of School
Post Date: June 9, 2023
In my professional life as an educator, I have worked at three independent schools. My first stint at The Park School in Brookline ended on June 11, 2004. Generally speaking, I am a big believer that dates matter in history, and this one was significant to me because the very next day, my first child was born. Four years later, he enrolled at The Meadowbrook School, the second of my three schools, in September 2008. Thus began a stage of my career in which my children attended the school where I worked.
When my daughter graduates from Belmont Day this Wednesday, her home for the last seven years, it will mark the end of an extraordinarily special run for my family and me: fifteen years of working where my children learn. Not a day has passed in those years when the privilege of this circumstance is lost on me. (In fairness, my children may look differently on this than I do. I certainly don’t envy the potential challenges of being the child of the head of school.)
But over these past fifteen years, I have learned a few things about how schools work for parents, students, and teachers. Wearing the two hats of a parent and educator can bring out your very best and, from time to time, your not-quite-best. So, before my youngest graduates, I decided to use this space to comment on a few lessons I have learned as a parent over these years of living a double life.
School of 300, N of 1. I get the question often: what’s the biggest challenge of sharing school with your children as the head of school? Truthfully, I work hard to keep those hats as separate as possible. When they blur, however, the greatest challenge for me is balancing the feedback I get from a community of nearly 300 families with the experience of and feedback from my child. It is a unique experience hearing my daughter explain—to sometimes exhaustive and painstaking detail—what is ‘wrong’ with BDS. I work to hold the perspective of 30,000 feet, even while she and I discuss things at ground level. It is equally interesting to know of systemic challenges and see how they play out for her and her friends.
I would tell other parents that the feedback they or their children provide based on their lived experiences is never brushed aside. In fact, it is often the N of 1 that gives the most crystalline clarity to the experience of the 300.
Never underestimate the power of the morning commute. Few moments rival those spent between places together, despite the challenge to get everyone in the car, on time, with all of their requisite stuff—sports equipment, last night’s homework, lunch money for Belmont Center, the science project, and did I mention last night’s homework? Ridiculous stories of classmates, teachers, and teammates. Hard moments of navigating friendship or a disappointing result on an assessment. Joyful moments of anticipation or triumph. And all of it with a soundtrack of their choosing. Once they get to the front seat—a fourth grade rite of passage in the Largaymobile—control of the radio dial is lost to the kids’ whims.
As my daughter and I make our last few commutes together, I find myself tearful at the thought of how I have taken each of these in-between moments for granted. I will miss them. I counsel you to capture the moments somehow—the first day of school pictures in front of the carpool, bus, or garage. The sleepover invitation that results in a carful of ebullient sixth graders. The early morning wake-up for the special breakfast or field trip. These moments will flash by, so grab them while you can. They are worth the price of a few years of the Jonas Brothers.
Trust this faculty. Whether your family is in year fifteen or year two, the Belmont Day journey is your child’s. As much as we parents seek to be the helping hand along the way, much of that responsibility falls to the BDS faculty. Allow me to say, wearing either hat, that you are in excellent hands. The faculty sincerely care about every one of the students in the school. So, my guidance here would be to trust them. Not everything they tell you will be positive. Not everything they tell you will be critical. But, everything they tell you will be honest, and everything they tell you is borne of their professional experience as educators dedicated to children this age.
Consider that they have been in the less than enviable position of occasionally delivering hard news to their head of school about his children. Yet, the professionalism, care, honesty, and thoughtfulness with which they have done so should give us all the confidence that they are willing to have the sometimes tricky conversations because our children are worth it. I say it a lot, but they really are the best.
Trust your child. Even though I work at the school and have a handle on what is best for all our students, not just my children, sometimes what I think they need and what they actually need is different. I found this to be especially challenging in the early childhood years as I wanted to protect them however I could, and sometimes that got in the way of my ability to trust that either they or their teachers saw something different. Parenting is, ultimately, the most humbling profession we have, and these were the most humbling years of all.
Borrow their perspective from time to time. The grown-up world can be stressful. We can sometimes carry an emotional weight because of the challenges of a work decision or some other conflict in our lives. The quickest antidote to that weight is to take a moment and cherish our children’s joy, curiosity, and wide-eyed perspective. Too many times to count, my children have been the ones at the dinner table or in the car ride to ask, “What are you spacing out about, Dad?” The honest answer may be a loose thread from the workday I’m still trying to tie up. The best way for me to work through something is usually the time with my children, reflecting on their day and hearing about their challenges and triumphs. That brief respite to enjoy the story about an ensemble rehearsal, a friend’s success in math class, or tomorrow’s psych for the big game often provides a better insight into my work challenge, primarily because it puts it in a much clearer perspective.
As a parent, you are meeting some of your closest friends. I use the same line each year at the first pre-kindergarten social: “You may not know it yet, but you are standing among some of your closest friends.” Invariably, throughout your time at Belmont Day—from second grade showcases and Greek festivals to Friday Night Lights and Winter Concerts to sleepovers and pool parties—you will find your own social life is shaped by your child’s. For my part, I couldn’t imagine a better group of parents with whom to have enjoyed this ride. Whether I worked at the school or not, the pride I felt in each of my daughter’s friends as they delivered their Capstones and how the whole parent body celebrated their success together is something I won’t soon forget. As our children graduate together next week, I take heart that BDS lives on for them in our relationships as much as our children’s.
Gratitude matters. The list of things I have learned is so long; this column could continue forever if my editors let me. Rather than put them in that spot to cut away, allow me to close with this: From time to time, my children have thanked me for something having to do with their Belmont Day experience. My middle child graduated in our first full year of navigating the pandemic. You might recall that it was a tiring year. Out of nowhere, right around this time of year, unprompted, my son offered his thanks for the school year. I nearly drove off the road through my tear-filled eyes. The students here—your children—really are grateful to you and their school for everything that goes into a year of growth, challenge, opportunity, and learning. So, in that vein, I wanted to return the favor here to my children and wife.
Thank you. Thank you for fifteen years which I will cherish forever. Thank you for enduring a change of career that moved you all from one school to another and taking that risk with me when let’s be honest, none of you were ready to join me at first. Thank you for believing in what Belmont Day could be with me as the head of school when my parental track record of remembering to get the groceries or ensuring that everyone had packed up their stuff for the day or surviving during the weeks your Mom was traveling would allow for some genuine doubt. In short, thanks for taking this ride with me. I will never forget it.
Have a great summer, everyone.
Upcoming Events
Coming Up This Week
Monthly Calendar
The 2023 Yearbooks Are Here
All students who ordered a yearbook will receive them on Tuesday, June 13. Yearbooks will be given to homeroom teachers and advisors for distribution.
We have a very limited number of extra copies that will be available for purchase on a first-come, first-served basis. Copies are $10 each. Please contact Elisabeth Klock if you would like to reserve one or if you have any questions.
Thank you to the students and faculty who worked on the yearbook!
ICYMI: Grades 1 & 2 Play Video
Yesterday, our youngest performers delighted us from to the Palandjian Arts Center stage with their wonderful production of “Humpty Dumpty: Was She Pushed or Did She Fall?” If you missed it, or if you’d like to relive the magic, click here for the video recording of the show.
Moving Up Assembly
Tuesday, June 13
11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
Barn Gym
Please join us on the last day of school for Moving Up Assembly, a beloved BDS tradition. Each student will be acknowledged by name and welcomed by the teachers who will be teaching them next year. For our eighth graders, this is a symbolic “moving up,” recognizing that they will move on to high school in the fall. Pre-kindergarten students will present their eighth grade partners with a small gift—a handmade paper flower.
Moving Up is a chance to cherish the community we have been in the past year and contemplate the community we will become in September. We hope to see you there.
Dismissal Following Moving Up Assembly
At the conclusion of the assembly, students will return to their classrooms with their teachers, and families will remain seated.
For those in attendance, please pick up your child from their classroom and walk together to your vehicle.
For those who will not be in attendance, please pick up your child at their regular dismissal location at 12:25 p.m. Adults on dismissal duty will call students to that dismissal location. Please note that there is no After School on Tuesday, and school closes for the summer at the conclusion of dismissal.
If you have any questions about your child’s dismissal location, please call the front desk.
Lunch & Snack Menu
June 12 to June 16
Monday
Snack: fruit cups; tortilla chips
Lunch: Breakfast for Lunch: pancakes, gluten-free pancakes, scrambled eggs, bacon, vegan sausage patties, and syrup; balsamic roasted broccoli; greens with balsamic
Tuesday
Last Day of School
Moving Up Assembly
Snack: bananas; assorted dry snacks
Faculty Lunch
Wednesday
Graduation Day
Faculty Lunch
Thursday
Closing Meetings
Faculty Lunch
Friday
Closing Meetings
Faculty Lunch
For a more detailed and updated weekly menu, please click the button below.
BDS News
BUSINESS OFFICE
2023-2024 Tuition Payments Are Due July 3
While we are all looking forward to summer break with great anticipation, parents are reminded that tuition payments for the 2023-2024 school year are due by July 3 for families who elected the Single Payment Plan and the Two Payment (60%/40%) Payment Plan. For families who elected the Ten Payment Plan, the third payment is also due on July 3.
Please check your accounts for any outstanding balances from the 2022-2023 school year. Some families still have balances due for the After School program and other incidental charges.
Your invoice for tuition and incidentals can be reviewed and payments made by logging in to the Parent Portal and clicking on the “Invoices and Payments” button in the top right corner of the homepage. For those who are enrolled in autopay, the payments will be drawn from your bank account on July 3, as the first occurs on a weekend. For everyone else, you can make an online payment through the Parent Portal, or you can mail a check to the school at 55 Day School Lane, Belmont, MA 02478, and mark it to the attention of the business office.
Please contact the business office team at business@belmontday.org if you have any questions about your bill.
While I will head off into retirement, the rest of the team looks forward to seeing everyone in the September. Please make sure to attend to your account before heading out on summer adventures. I hope you will give a warm welcome to David Gordon, the new chief financial and operating officer, when he arrives in July. Thank you for making my time at Belmont Day such a joyful experience.
– Fred Colson, chief financial officer
TECHNOLOGY NEWS
Tech To-Dos for the Summer
Returning Tech Office Equipment
For families with students in middle school, 1:1 devices will be collected early next week. Students should plan to return their device, zippered carrying case, and charger. Please take some time to ensure that all of these items are accounted for and ready to be returned.
G Suite Accounts
Following the last day of school, G Suite applications will be turned off for the summer for students entering grades 4-7. Students will still be able to use their school G Suite account to sign in to certain apps/sites that use Google single sign-on, such as Typing Pal and BrainPOP. Other applications may be turned on/off at the discretion of the technology department.
Rising eighth graders (Class of 2024) will have access to their BDS G Suite account over the summer so they may complete work related to Capstone. Applications not required for Capstone work will be turned off.
The Class of 2023 will continue to have access to their accounts to allow some extra time for content transfer. Graduates received an email this week notifying them of when their accounts will be disabled and how to transfer content if they wish to do so.
– Annie Fuerst, director of technology and innovation
SUMMER CAMP
Remaining Openings at Belmont Day Camp
Still looking for fun summer activities? BDS Camp begins on June 20, and we still have a few openings available in the following programs:
June 20-23
Magic The Gathering: Deck Masters (grades 5-8): For four days, campers will explore the planes of the Magic: The Gathering Multiverse and learn different game modes, practice deck-building skills, and test their mettle against each other. BDS will provide cards, but campers are welcome to also bring them from home.
June 26-30
Session A1 still has openings for Pre-k, K, and grade 2.
July 3-7 (no camp July 4)
Session A2 has openings in every grade.
June 26-July 7 (no camp July 4)
Wire Crafting/Jewelry Making (grades 6-9): Middle school Spanish teacher Ana Maria Restrepo will lead two weeks of crafting with wire and creating jewelry. This camp includes participation in Pioneer electives.
July 10-21
Nature Investigations (grades 3-5): Experienced naturalist, high school science teacher, and former BDS After School staff member Zach Melisi will lead two weeks of investigation of the habitats that surround the BDS campus.
August 21-25
Ultimate Camp (grades 6-9): Campers will learn the fundamentals of the ultimate in this week of clinics, skill building, and scrimmages led by experienced ultimate players. They will also have time to relax and swim.
For more details on these camps and for registration, please visit belmontday.org/summer.
ENSEMBLES PROGRAM
Opportunities Abound for a Very Musical School Year
At Belmont Day, we cherish every opportunity to let our students shine. One of the ways that we do that is through our extra-curricular ensembles program. Playing with a large group of other musicians is a unique experience that builds skills and opens the door to fantastic connections and opportunities through music-making. We offer a diverse range of musical groups and styles, from orchestra to world drumming to chorus to our new middle school jazz band and more. If your child is interested in enriching their music education, sign-ups for ensembles will be available near the end of the summer. Check out the Ensembles page on the Parent Portal to learn more.
– Tyler Cotner, music teacher and ensembles coordinator
CLUBS NEWS
Model UN Members Plan, Host Mini-Conference
On Tuesday, the Model UN club ran a special conference for sixth and seventh graders who wanted to participate and learn about Model UN, and 20 students participated! The MUN club worked over several weeks to plan this unique event. They designed and created background guides for two issues, one based on a real-world conflict and one based on a sci-fi scenario. They created a video to advertise and explain the format of the conference, as well as guidelines for running it. One group of participants discussed the energy shortage in Europe caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Another group debated important issues between a group of humans and a group of aliens. Each participant was assigned a role, and they stayed “in character” for the 90-minute simulation.
The Model UN club students ran the debates and discussions and guided the participants toward resolutions that could provide solutions to the issues presented. All participants were engaged and brought thoughtful and also fun-filled ideas to the event. The next day they received individualized recognition certificates designed by the club. The organizers impressed everyone with their leadership, their creativity, and the generous way they got their classmates involved. Thank you, Model UN students Gideon Borisy, Duncan Beirne, Ariel Duan, Madoka Hubbard, Simon Wright, Tadhg O’Sullivan, Sam Leviton, and Vatche Balikian!
– Jennifer Friborg, French teacher, Capstone coordinator, and club advisor
Learning Updates
Arts Update: The Positive Power of Words – Making and Wearing our BDS Legacy
Students in the seventh and eighth grade silkscreen printing elective ended this trimester with a challenge to design and print a t-shirt focused on the theme of their “BDS Legacy: The Positive Power of Words.” After gathering ideas, the fourteen students in the class chose three designs—Believe, Be Joyful, and You Belong—and printed a shirt for each of their seventh and eighth grade classmates. All three designs incorporate the Belmont Day ‘B’ logo.
The class spent the past week furiously printing more than 100 shirts which were delivered to Advisories this week. Keep an eye out for the positive messages and limited-edition t-shirts around campus.
A shoutout to the silkscreen printing students: Brendan, Duncan, Quinn, McKenna, Ariel, Perin, Rami, Oliver, Alex, Rhys, Sam, Anurag, Kesariya, and Petros. Great job!
– Anne Armstrong, visual arts teacher and arts coordinator
Athletics Update: Athletics Banquet Celebrates Eighth Grade Excellence
This year’s Athletics Banquet filled the Barn Gym as the physical education/athletics department bid farewell to our graduating eighth grade athletes. In addition to recognizing every athlete individually, the program also included the presentation of the Coaches’ Awards, which were given to four athletes this year. When the Coaches’ Award was introduced fifteen years ago, there were only twenty-eight athletes in that year’s graduating class, the middle school program was still in its infancy, and the athletics program was gaining traction. As such, the award was created to provide an example for our rising middle school athletes of what our program valued and aspired to be. Today, Belmont Day is a different place. Forty-five athletes will graduate next week, the middle school program has expanded, and our athletics program is thriving. In an effort to recognize this change and recognize the excellence of our athletes, the Coaches’ Award expanded from two to four recipients this year. Congratulations to the recipients of the 2023 Coaches’ Awards: Avery Schneider, Liam Brodeur, Quincy Treisman, and Nebiyou Elias.
– John O’Neill, director of athletics
Parents’ Association News
Thank You and Happy Summer!
Next week, we will distribute gift cards to the faculty on behalf of all parents to express our gratitude to them. We would also like to thank YOU for attending meetings, helping at PA events, and making our community so vibrant and fun. We wish you all a restful and wonderful summer!
If you are interested in helping chair a committee next year or learning more, please contact any of the PA executive team—Karla Bays, Courtney Queen, Andy Stevenson, or Gigi Saltonstall or email bdspa@belmontday.org.
Beyond BDS
ARTS PROGRAM
LexPride’s Rainbow Artists Groups Open for Summer
Rainbow Artists provides an opportunity for LGBTQ+ youth and allies to learn and grow creative expression skills with a community of peers. An experienced creative expression art therapist and/or an art facilitator guide the meetings. New this summer is a group for people ages 16-19 in addition to ages 11-15 and 8-12. The groups will continue to meet by Zoom. Click here for registration.
Ages 8-11: Mondays 5 to 6 p.m., June 26-August 7, 2023
Ages 12-15: Thursdays 4 to 5 p.m., June 29-August 10, 2023
Ages 16-19: Thursdays 5:30-6:30 p.m., June 29-August 10, 2023
CLASSICAL CONCERT
Students To Perform at BEMF BEYOND BORDERS
Sunday, June 11, 10 a.m.
New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall
Catch Belmont Day musicians Jack Ward, Henry Ward, and Jovana Zivanovic as they perform at the BEMF BEYOND BORDERS 2023. The international, hybrid program features a performance by the Boston Early Music Festival’s Youth Ensemble and short, filmed performances from international partners on four continents: Kenya, Lebanon, The Netherlands, and Brazil. Reaching out to a new generation of players, BEMF seeks to expand our community by providing an opportunity for diverse groups of young players to perform with and for each other and to celebrate their shared love of music. Third graders from the Waltham Dual Language School will be joined by young music students from around the United States—as well as pre-professional early music performers and a selection of BEMF artists—in an inspiring performance of music from the new and old worlds. The program, led by Nina Stern, will include traditional early 19th-century Brazilian music, works by Juan del Encina and Juan Ponce, and a new composition by Melika Fitzhugh commissioned for the BEMF Youth Ensemble.
THEATER PRODUCTION
Twelfth Night in the Park
The Dream Role Players are coming to Raymond Park in Cambridge with a music and love-filled production of one of William Shakespeare’s most beloved comedies, Twelfth Night. A shipwreck, swordfights, and the misadventure of twins—Twelfth Night has it all.
This event is free to the public, though donations are gratefully accepted. Bring carry-in/carry-out food/refreshments and something to sit on. The event will be canceled in the event of rain.
There will be three 90-minute performances at Raymond Park, 106 Raymond St., Cambridge: Friday, June 9 at 7 p.m., Saturday, June 10 at 6 p.m., and Sunday, June 11 at 6 p.m.