The Brunswick Trust N E W S L E T T E R
Brunswick Trust Report – Fall 2023
O
ur youngest Bruins, the boys in our Pre School building, have six Pillars of Character to guide them. Caring is one of those pillars and stands as a reminder to all in our Brunswick community of the importance of caring for ourselves, for others, and for the world that surrounds us. Brunswick boys have been actively engaged in Trust discussions, lessons, activities, and projects this fall that exercise this critical character strength and develop our abilities to cooperate, to collaborate, and, most of all, to care.
Character & Leadership
E
lite listening and speaking skills were the topic of a fun and spirited Words Matter assembly at the Lower School.
Olympic Listeners featured students divided into three roles — Viewer, Communicator, and Creator. They were tasked with recreating an abstract drawing using only their words and listening skills. The resulting, six-minute rounds of play provided much fodder for discussion and included time to “debrief” and discuss what went right. Every student was given a chance in every role. “The assembly was really fun,” said Kate Duennebier, Brunswick Trust coordinator. “Everyone got a turn on each of the roles. It was impossible to be perfect and funny.” The assembly was inspired by Upper School English teacher Taryn Petrelli, who brainstormed with Lower School Head Katie Signer over the summer to find ways to incorporate more public speaking opportunities for boys in first through fourth grade. “It was almost like a little game of telephone,” Petrelli said. “We had three teachers model the activity.”
“It’s a great book to build a positive and supportive community — a great focus for adults and for our community at large,” said Signer. “Lots of great messages in there that we are putting into practice.” SMART goal-setting has once again been the focus at the Middle School this fall as boys rounded the corner of the first marking period with a mid-semester reflection exercise designed to dovetail with midpoint comments students received from teachers.
Further inspiration came from Be the Sun, Not the Salt by Dr. Harry Cohen, which faculty read over the summer.
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CHARACTER
D I V E R S I T Y, E Q U I T Y,
H E A LT H
SERVICE &
& LEADERSHIP
INCLUSION &
& WELLNESS
S U S TA I N A B I LI T Y
BELONGING