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Volu m e 6 2 , Is su e 2
Ju n e 3 , 2 0 1 3
A Student Publication of the Belmont Hill School
Belmont Hill Says Goodbye to Departing Faculty Members Mr. Brodie: A School praises the dedication of Mr. Kolovos, Mrs. Melvoin. Ms. de Kenessey, and Mr. Brodie By Robert Sayegh Panel Staff At the conclusion of nearly every school year at Belmont Hill, a select few teachers depart for a new job or a well-earned retirement. This year, four distinguished members of the faculty, Mr. Kolovos, Mrs. Melvoin, Ms. de Kenessey, and Mr. Brodie, are departing, together leaving behind a legacy that will not soon be forgotten. Mr. Kolovos has spent nine years at Belmont Hill, shaping the Global Education program and leading a generation of AP United States History scholars to success on the AP exam. Mrs. Melvoin has counseled numerous students in the confusing, but generally rewarding college process. Ms. de Kenessey, though having only taught at Belmont Hill for three years, pioneered the World Religions course. and Mr. Brodie has served this school for 21 years, and is always a favorite among students for his sometimes questionable humor. Belmont Hill is surely bidding farewell to some great faculty this year, but wishes all of them the best of luck in their future endeavors. ☐
By Matt Czarnecki Panel Staff
(from left) Mr. Kolovos, Mrs. Melvoin, Ms. de Kenessey, and Mr. Brodie
Bill Mahoney
Mr. Kolovos Departs after 9 Mrs. Melvoin: Special Teacher, Years of Remarkable Service College Counselor, Friend By George Holderness Panel Staff Since 2004, Mr. Kolovos has been a fixture of academic life at Belmont Hill. Hundreds of students have entered his classroom in the library corridor and emerged as more knowledgeable pupils, clearer writers, more expressive actors, sharper debaters, and more thoughtful global citizens. They have been the beneficiaries of his passion and talent for teaching and administration. After nine years at the school, Mr. Kolovos will be departing. Mr. Kolovos arrived at Belmont Hill somewhat by accident. His desire to teach traces its roots all the way back to his experience as a student at Roxbury Latin,
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but his path to teaching has been circuitous. After college, Mr. Kolovos spent time at a strategy consulting firm, at law school, and clerking for a judge. As he neared the end of his clerkship, however, something told him that teaching at a secondary school would “make him smile every day.” Mrs. Melvoin was Mr. Kolovos’s college counselor at Roxbury Latin, and she and Mr. Melvoin were mentors for him growing up. So Mr. Kolovos reached out to the Melvoins for advice while exploring teaching. By chance, a spot in Belmont Hill’s history department opened up, and Mr. Kolovos jumped at the opportunity. While most students recognize Mr. Kolovos as the AP US History teacher, he has taught continued on page 3
Melvoin Building pg 5 Prize Day Awards pgs 6 & 7 ISL Champions pg 11 Matriculation List pg 12
By Bernardo pacini Panel Staff Mrs. Melvoin has been at Belmont Hill for many years, and now, after a lifetime dedicated to education, has decided to retire. This will be very hard for our community of students that has grown very fond of her and has relied on her advice in many a situation. Mrs. Melvoin began her career teaching English at the Brattleboro Union High School in Brattleboro, Vermont. After some years of teaching, she became a college counselor though she had never really planned to enter this field. She took a job at Deerfield as an associate college advisor, not knowing entirely what the position entailed. The choice was the correct one, as Mrs. Mel-
Ms. de Kenessey Reflects on BH By Michael O’Neill Panel Staff
Departing Faculty pgs 2 & 3
Faculty Member Like No Other
After three years at the school, Ms. de Kenessey has decided that the 2012-2013 school year will be her last at Belmont Hill. She says the decision was not an easy one to make, and that she leaves Belmont Hill with nothing but fond memories of the school. “It’s tough to leave a good thing,” she explained. “I really love Belmont Hill, and I’ve really loved teaching. So my reason to leave has nothing negative in it.” Ms. de Kenessey first arrived at Belmont Hill in 2010 after majoring in history at Yale. She described to me what exactly it was that made her love to teach and to choose it as a career path. “The thing that’s best about teaching is taking a subject, or a book, or a period of history that I love and I’m excited about, and
trying to get the entire class fired up about it too,” adding, “I also really like working with kids. Students can really inspire you and make you learn sometimes.” She also revealed that the freedom offered at an independent school like Belmont Hill is unmatched at public schools, and that this freedom is what made her choose a private school teaching job. During her tenure here, she’s taught History 1, Modern European History, World Religions, and both First and Second Form English courses. As a teacher of Greek and Roman History, she of course participated in the yearly Greek and Roman field day.. In just her first year at school, Ms. de Kenessey led her class to victory, ending the nearly decade-long domination by Mr. Armstrong’s history classes. In addition to the classes continued on page 2
voin remarked, “that was one of the best decisions of my life.” After six years at Deerfield, Mrs. Melvoin moved to Boston and began working at Roxbury Latin, where she served as the Director of College Guidance and taught eighth grade English. After spending twelve years at the school, Mrs. Melcontinued on page 3
Harkness tables have replaced desks in all the English classrooms in the Morse Building. Except for one: Morse 23, “the end of the hallway on the left,” otherwise known as Mr. Brodie’s room. Described by one student as “unorthodox, unfiltered, and special,” Mr. Brodie and his unique teaching style have enlightened the minds of thousands of Belmont Hill students in the two decades that he has taught at this school. The lasting and profound impression that he bestows upon his students can be seen unmistakably in those whom he has taught many years ago. Mr. Brodie’s former scholars, returning to the Hill five, ten, or even fifteen years after graduation, can still impeccably recite the words to an 18th century Robert Burns poem. With broad smiles pasted across their faces, these alumni melodiously recite, “O my luve’s like a red, red rose / That’s newly sprung in June / O my luve’s like the melodie / that’s sweetly play’d in tune” and so on in flawless Scottish accents. Why does this, of all parts of the Belmont Hill experience, stick with students for so long? Well, for one, when his students learn this poem in continued on page 2
President Felipe Calderon of Mexico Visits Belmont Hill ern world. As a child in Mexico, Felipe Calderon was exposed to politics within his own family, On May 7th, the Hamilton where he assisted his father in Chapel was alive with excitement handing out leaflets to members as the boys at Belmont Hill await- of the community. From there, ed the much anticipated arrival of Felipe Calderon attended school a famous politician. While boys in Mexico, earning both his bachanxiously talked with their neigh- elor’s degree in law and a masbors, Felipe ter’s degree Calderon, in Ecothe former nomics; pre s i d e nt h o w e v e r, of Mexico, Calderon’s entered dedication the Chatowards pel, and politics the stuearned him dent body a role as rose as he National walked President through of the Nathe doors. tional AcF e l i p e tion Party Calderon’s ( P A N ) Bill Mahoney from 1996 visit was an “extraordi- Former Mexican President Calderon to 1999. In nary honor” in the words of Mr. 2006, Felipe Calderon narrowly Melvoin, and the visit marks the defeated Andres Manuel Lobeginning of a new program at pez Obrador of the Democratic Belmont Hill known as the Glob- Revolution Party to become the al Citizenship Speaker Series. president of Mexico. While servFelipe Calderon explained ing as president, Felipe Caldehis journey towards becoming a ron opened Mexico’s economy, prominent politician in the modcontinued on page 5 By Jay O’Brien Panel Staff