Strategic Plan 2020-2025
The King School 2020-2025 Strategic Plan provides a framework for our future. First and foremost, we affirm our commitment to the student experience as our top priority. To achieve our bold vision, we strive to be the country's premier PreK-12 research-driven institution in which students embrace open minds and courageous thinking. We invite you to learn about our strategic plan and to join us as we set the standard in preparing students for a world that requires nimble, courageous thinkers who own their futures.
View the Strategic Plan
Learn how students are engaging in research and project-based initiatives
Watch the videos below to hear Head of School Dr. Karen Eshoo describe the Strategic Plan vision and to learn how students in our early childhood program and in each division are actively engaging in research and project-based initiatives.
Strategic Plan Vision
Early Childhood
Lower School
Middle School
Upper School
FAQ
- Q: What is King School’s strategic vision?
- Q: How will King students benefit from this strategic vision and this plan?
- Q: Is there data that informs King’s strategic vision?
- Q: How will King School achieve its strategic vision?
- Q: What are the areas of commitment in the plan?
- Q: When will changes start?
- Q: What’s likely to happen in 2020?
- Q: How will King help staffulty be able to achieve this strategic vision?
- Q: How bold is this strategic plan?
- Q: How was the strategic plan created? Who was involved?
- Q: How will the success of the Plan be assessed, and how will this be communicated to the King community?
- Q: How will we pay for the programs envisioned in the Plan?
- Q: As a member of the King School community, how can I best help people understand King’s strengths and vision for the future?
- Q: If I have questions about the Plan, who can I speak to?
Q: What is King School’s strategic vision?
Q: How will King students benefit from this strategic vision and this plan?
We are committed to doubling down on our commitment to the way students engage in their learning. King takes childhood and adolescence seriously, so we are committed to ensuring that students’ experience as they are learning is truly excellent and optimal. At King, students do not merely “do school” because we appreciate that students’ journey is as important as the destination.
This plan calls us to apply the skillsets of research, inquiry, and problem solving more intentionally, broadly across disciplines, and deeply, so our students build mastery as they leverage curiosity; ask excellent questions; engage in experiential learning; and analyze and synthesize information to construct meaning and take action. Through the initiatives in this plan, King School will continue to set better standards which lead to engaged, healthier students who have a greater sense of purpose; who remain curious to learn; who perform better than their peers; and who are guided by a deep understanding of themselves as learners.
Q: Is there data that informs King’s strategic vision?
Yes! As most American students go through school, their sense of curiosity, creativity, and motivation decrease. This research is summarized effectively here, here, and here. Researchers, including KH Kim, Tony Wagner, Yong Zhao, and Ken Robinson, attribute these declines in part to standardized models of schooling that stigmatize failure - which is necessary to innovation - and force singular ways of thinking onto students. Real-world problem-solving, on the other hand, taps into students’ own motivations to understand and impact their world, leading to deeper learning more akin to expertise. As researchers Jal Mehta and Sara Fine write, “The more we can . . . [give] students the freedom to define authentic and purposeful goals for their learning, [create] opportunities for students to lead that learning, and [help] them to refine their work until it meets high standards of quality — the deeper their learning and engagement will be.”
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King’s new Reggio-Emilia-inspired Early Childhood program and our Upper School Advanced Science Program for Independent Research and Engineering (ASPIRE) and Tom Main Liberal Arts Fellowship. Under this Strategic Plan, our aim is to integrate these modes of learning - with opportunities for students PreK-12 to apply the skillsets of research, inquiry, and problem solving - so that all King students will be meaningfully engaged, personally motivated, and comfortable with the ambiguity and challenge of creating solutions to the complex problems so often found in the world.Q: How will King School achieve its strategic vision?
The 2020-2025 King School Strategic Plan weaves together the imperative of Academic Excellence with -
- Athletics and Community Partnerships to enhance it;
- Wellness to sustain it;
- Strategic Enrollment Management to support it;
- Inclusion to humanize it;
- Financial Sustainability and Facilities Development to fulfill it; and
- Institutional Identity to share our pride in who we are.
Q: What are the areas of commitment in the plan?
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The plan weaves together the imperative of Academic Excellence with eight other areas of commitment. These initiatives, all briefly defined below, each have an associated set of tactics to move the plan forward.
Academic Excellence
Deliver project- and research-based learning experiences that will enable students to gain a deep understanding across the liberal arts and sciences while building academic, social-emotional, and leadership skills, and research and digital literacies.
Athletics
Strengthen the competitiveness and consistency of performance for our athletic programs, particularly in terms of student-athlete leadership, wellness, and commitment, while continuing to support and grow our pool of talented coaches, and raising school spirit and Viking Pride! Continue to help launch our most dedicated and successful athletes onward to careers in college and beyond.
Wellness
Broaden our focus to the wellness of our whole community of students and adults, with a goal to inspire the development of fulfilled young people who embody a sense of purpose and who maintain wellness and balance.
Community Partnerships
Develop a network of partnerships that enable King students to experience meaningful work in action, and to better understand how collaborative team learning and empathy create positive change in the world.
Inclusion
Enhance our culture to ensure we are welcoming of all - leveraging new approaches to understand the myriad ways community members experience life at King, and responding appropriately to our community members’ needs.
Facilities Development
Envision facilities that will be flexible enough to support new programs, and that will set a better standard for innovative teaching and learning environments.
Strategic Enrollment Management
Design and implement a long-term enrollment model that will enrich our diverse student body, provide financial access to the best students for King School, and position us for success in our academic programs and our institutional advancement efforts.
Financial Sustainability
Maintain our commitment to strong financial management, focusing in particular on developing cutting edge practices that will make King compelling and accessible to the best students, developing the best financial models, and continuing to act responsibly in stewarding our resources to sustain King far into the future.
Institutional Identity
Create opportunities to partner with all members of the King community to champion a cohesive, compelling reputation that encapsulates our singular identity and purpose: to provide a truly student-centered, relevant, and dynamic learning experience that best prepares students to thrive in our complex and rapidly changing world.
Q: When will changes start?
Through this plan, King will expand upon our foundation of Academic Excellence so students will continue to strengthen skills in their current areas of study while also mastering skills to analyze, synthesize, and solve complex challenges. As the plan calls us to be intentional in our focus on the student experience, we can expect that students’ opportunities and our classroom environments will change - we think for the better.
Changes are already underway! Here are just some examples of student engagement in recent research and project-based initiatives:
- The new Reggio-inspired early childhood program places research and project-work in the center of students’ PreKindergarten and Kindergarten experience.
- All Lower School students are exploring new, open-ended learning opportunities. In the Makerspace, students experiment with hundreds of new, hands-on, construction material.
- The Middle School math program has adopted an important focus on teaching students to ask the right questions to build skills in how to think through and solve complex problems.
- The Grade 6 Team is developing interdisciplinary learning experiences guided by similar themes and skills. This past year, students explored both the ancient and contemporary history of South Sudan in History, while reading the book A Long Walk to Water in English and investigating water as a natural resource in Science. This provided a guiding framework for students to dive deeper in their study of cultural conflict, natural resources, and refugees. This unit culminated in a partnership with a local organization, IRIS, a poetry slam, and an open-ended debate about U.S. involvement in South Sudan.
- Upper School students are observing, hypothesizing, designing experiments, testing solutions; analyzing data; and reasoning through all that information to form strong, valid conclusions to issues they identify -- for example, in Science courses, in History field study classes and simulations, and in the Global Studies directed research class. By deeply engaging with the Scientific Method, students are building transferable skills that will serve them well in any discipline.
- In December 2019 - partly in response to research on student wellness from Dr. Denise Pope - who then spoke to King faculty and parents in January - the Upper School piloted an experimental schedule
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- Students are increasingly developing and putting into practice their leadership skills through initiatives including: Upper School Captain’s Council, the Upper School Senior Leaders program, the 8th Grade Leadership Lab, and Lower School A-day assemblies led by Grade 5 students.
- Through the Visual Arts Department’s new O.P.E.N. (Original, Personal, Experienced, Novel) curriculum, students in all divisions are learning to work independently to understand and express their personal vision in original ways, experimenting with novel approaches.
Q: What’s likely to happen in 2020?
In the first year of the Strategic Plan, we will build upon the foundational work that’s already started while also actively researching, debating, planning, piloting, and assessing best practices for meaningful, deep learning experiences at King that set the standard in preparing each student for a world that requires nimble, courageous thinkers who own their future.
New initiatives are already being identified for 2020; some examples include:
- Upper School: The Visual Arts faculty and students are collaborating to build an O.P.E.N. mentor program that will connect students with experts in the field in which they’re interested. This teaching approach acknowledges that learning today must connect students to community partnerships and to real practitioners beyond the classroom who can inspire King students with possibilities for future study.
- Middle School: Primary focuses are the concepts of relevance and application. This requires us to identify and develop skills that are transferable between disciplines. Reflection on process and growth will be a throughline for our Middle School program. As part of developing themselves and their own voices, Middle School students will develop digital portfolios in coordination with their advisors and their classroom teachers. These portfolios will travel with them through their time in Middle School, providing a real time snapshot of growth and learning that does not exist in any one discipline or subject. Grade level teams will also develop interdisciplinary learning opportunities, such as an exploration of logical fallacies or the establishment of a mock UN.
- Lower School: In the new Global Studies initiative, all Lower School students will immerse themselves in an in-depth, integrated study of Central and South American countries. Students will pose their own research questions, gather data, and work to interpret that data to share information with others as they build a Lower School Global Studies Museum that highlights the importance of learning about other people and cultures.
- As part of our commitment to inclusion, changes are underway in our staffulty recruitment practices. We have researched and applied innovative human resource practices to cast a wider net for the best talent. This includes mind science tools to better ensure equal employment opportunity for all applicants and metrics to hire staffulty with skills, knowledge and competencies to guide our diverse student body towards self-realization and self-actualization . Changes in recruitment include: broadening our source base for talent acquisition in attending hiring fairs, conferences, and university employment open houses around the country that focus on educators of color; implicit bias training for all employees on hiring teams; new partnerships with recruiting firms that emphasize cross cultural competence as an essential skill in presenting candidates.
- As part of our commitment to inclusion, changes are also underway in our staffulty retention practices. Methods to retain and create an equitable and inclusive work environment include: training for staffulty in workplace collaboration and communication; a robust two-year faculty mentoring program for new hires; generous funding of professional growth development opportunities; and increasing the institutional commitment to and practice of cross-culturally competent teaching and innovations in curriculum.
- In support of our Wellness initiative, in 2020 we are already planning to increase our mindfulness training in the Upper School for all members of the community as well as redesign a space specifically for silent study and reflection. In the Lower School, the Physical Education department is refining the health curriculum. Plus, in Middle School, we will build a more intentional advisory program, which will connect to our core virtues of integrity, kindness, perseverance, and respect. Embedded in this work will be explorations of our own talents and growth, as well as our interactions within the community. Alongside these endeavors, we will critically evaluate our use of time during the school day and the types and amount of work we assign. Many classes already begin with mindful practices, which we will continue to expand throughout the Middle School.
- As part of continuing to strengthen our Athletics program, in 2020 we will enhance the curriculum for our student-athlete leadership program, partnering closely with our coaches and connecting more intentionally with the existing Upper School Leadership program. We will also expand our student-athlete health and performance services to include nutritional consulting, mindset and mindfulness training and support, and performance training and assessments. Furthermore, we plan to continue enhancing our global athletic and service opportunities.
Q: How will King help staffulty be able to achieve this strategic vision?
King is committed to continuing to invest in the substantial and meaningful professional growth and development (PG&D) that is so generously supported by our community. Faculty will receive in-house training through our Assessment and Instruction Meeting sessions, supported by personal and departmental goals, as well as external PG&D through targeting conferences that focus on this type of learning tailored for each faculty member. We will thoughtfully examine the ways we utilize time and space for learning, courageously pilot new learning experiences, and intentionally engage with other institutions that share our vision for modern learning.
Q: How bold is this strategic plan?
Q: How was the strategic plan created? Who was involved?
Providing a long-range view of future school priorities, the King School Strategic Plan 2020-2025 is the collective, comprehensive effort of the entire King community.
- We are grateful for the thoughtful input from our community of parents, trustees, students, staffulty, alumni, and parents of alumni who contributed through surveys (1,000+ responses!), focus groups, and working sessions.
- We are thankful for the leadership and vision of our Strategic Planning Steering Committee members. In partnership with Ian Symmonds & Associates, a leading firms in the field of strategic planning for educational institutions, our Steering Committee reflected on extensive input from our community plus focused on competitive and educational landscape analysis, SWOT analysis, demographic trends, market segmentation, and trends in the independent school and the education sectors.
Tom Conheeney Dr. Karen Eshoo Tom King Nina Newman Dan Ozizmir Ted Parker Marnie Sadlowsky Amy Vorenberg |
Board of Trustees, P’18, ‘15, ‘15 Head of School Board of Trustees President, P’23, ‘20, ‘20 Director of Admission and Financial Access Board of Trustees Second Vice President, P’22, ‘18 Associate Head of Upper School, Academic Dean Associate Head of School for Program, Head of Upper School Head of Lower School |
The Board of Trustees, Head of School, Leadership Team, staffulty, and indeed our whole community, will continue to partner in the years ahead to achieve the bold vision and forward momentum propelled by the King School Strategic Plan 2020-2025.
Q: How will the success of the Plan be assessed, and how will this be communicated to the King community?
King uses a range of assessment metrics and tools to evaluate progress on the growth of our students, programs, financial health, and institutional health. New in 2020, we will field a survey to our broad community in order to gather input that will serve as a baseline measurement as we evaluate progress over time. We are committed to keeping this plan moving forward and to sharing our progress at appropriate opportunities with the community, including State of the School events.