Blog: Faculty

Ekgmowechashala is not a household word. Paleontologists usually just call this critter “Eggymo.” Many years ago, a nice two-centimeter long fragment of a lower jaw, showing four teeth, including three molars, was found in South Dakota, and was named Ekgmowechashala—invented from local Native American words. What made this discovery special, was that the molars, if they looked like anything, looked like primate molars. No other bones were found, but also exciting was the date: the Oligocene-Miocene border, or about 25 million years ago.

Mark Terry
April 30, 2012

This year 20 NWS students spent two weeks in Cambodia with Rod Kov, Cecilia Tung and Scott Davis. The group visited Phnom Penh, Battambang and Siem Reap, traveling between the cities in a bright pink tour bus. This was the second school trip to the country, the first having been in 2010.

Scott Davis, Rod Kov & Cecilia Tung

Each year, roughly 20% of the Upper School—in three or four groups of about 20 students and several faculty members—departs Northwest for two to three weeks of intense experiences overseas. These trips offer opportunities to experience other cultures, to be immersed in other languages, to exit familiar comfort zones, to embrace a new and challenging status as “outsiders.” They form a key part of our work to nurture global perspective.

Ben Lee

The NWS Spain Trip, led by Lisa Blodgett, Daniel Sparler, and Suzanne Bottelli, headed out last Saturday, and the students are settling into life in Seville. They're living with their host families, attending intensive Spanish classes, and just visited the Alcázar—the royal palace in Seville.

Lisa Blodgett, Daniel Sparler & Suzanne Bottelli

From February 6th to 17th, Northwest School hosted a group of 19 French students and two teachers from our partner school in Angers, France, the Lycée Emmanuel Mounier.

David Montero, Françoise Canter & Sarah Porter

On February 18, I will travel to Singapore as part of the Fulbright Distinguished Awards in Teaching program. I will return to Seattle mid-August. Each year, the Fulbright DAT program sends 18 teachers abroad to research, teach, and observe classrooms in countries throughout the world. More information about the DAT program can be found on the Fulbright website.

Jen Kulik
February 5, 2012

From February 6th–11th we will celebrate the school’s third annual Green Week. During Green Week the entire Northwest community focuses on environmental issues and actions that affect us at school, at home, and our broader communities—local, regional, national, and even international. In 2010 the student-run Environmental Interest Group launched the first Green Week, and they now organize the event annually.

Jeff Blair, Adrie C. '12 & The Environmental Interest Group
January 16, 2012

"Sooner or later all the people of the world will have to discover a way to live together in peace, and thereby transform this pending cosmic elegy into a creative psalm of brotherhood. If this is to be achieved, man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love."

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. from his 1964 Nobel Prize acceptance speech

Orion Baker

Northwest’s philosophy states, “all interactions in the School community can and should be directed toward the development of courtesy, common sense, mutual support, the creative spirit and independence.” Since our school’s founding this sentiment has consistently defined how we celebrate and steward our community.

Bob Evans & Scott Guettinger, Annual Fund Parent Co-Chairs

During Faculty Orientation two weeks ago, I shared with our new teachers a wonderful source of inspiration to which I find myself returning year after year. I confess to being a fairly jaded consumer of education “literature” and conference presentations, impatient with much of the jargon and trendiness which pervade them, so when I encounter a jewel like Sir Kenneth Robinson’s TED talk, “Schools Kill Creativity,” my immediate impulse is to spread the word.

Mike McGill