Bullis Magazine Fall/Winter 2021

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FACULTY/STAFF

From the Desk of Faith Darling Dean of Faculty

As I would say to my statistics classes, the average is not the interesting measure, it’s those measures of variability, what makes things different from the average, that we really need to pay attention to. And lately we have been challenged by an intense amount of variability, haven’t we? Since mid-March, our worlds have been turned upside down in a way that we couldn’t have predicted or planned for. In my household, my family of five found new ways to coexist and connect while we navigated remote school and work. And in my role as Dean of Faculty, a relatively new step in my fifteen years at Bullis, I have been so moved by the creativity and care from our Bullis faculty, who have been rapidly responding and adapting to changing expectations, teaching modalities, and technologies for months. Once again, these fluctuations from the average steal our attention and grab our energies. Reflecting on all that has changed, I think we are starting to wonder… what will be our new “average”? Technology is often cited as a change maker—keep up or the curve may end up too steep. Throughout the pandemic, technology has become even more central to connecting us, perhaps in some new, maybe even strange, ways. Some I hope

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BULLIS | Fall-Winter 2020-2021

stick with us, as they have enriched our lives and relationships, but others I am eager to see exit with the pandemic. Those who know me well are aware of my propensity to “lose my phone” the minute I arrive home from school, as I find myself more than ready to disconnect from one world and connect with my other as a wife, mother and avid hobbyist. However, in these COVID times, I am sure you can relate to the almost exponential increase in emails and texts, necessitated by a world in need of speed. Fast- paced decisions and quick responses became the name of the game. The notifications on our phones have become the Morse code of our times— various pings and dings that let us know a meeting is coming up or a message awaits. On more occasions than I care to admit, our no-tech dinner rule has been broken by three or more dings coming in quick succession from a sender signaling urgency with texting fingers…or the sound of messages from multiple senders alerting me that some new information has been released that I should know about. Only a glance at my phone can tell. Teachers navigating, and sometimes creating, expectations and learning environments in response to constantly changing conditions. They continue to field emails and messages in an endless cycle that leaves them exhausted, perhaps tuned to be a little too sensitive to these tiny noises. I hope that the reliance on, and habit of, constant communication and high alert mode will once again give way to gentler

and more patient forms of connection and contemplation. That sounds delightfully Zen. However, it’s kind of remarkable how various meeting platforms once used primarily for conferences or business meetings have saved us in some ways, too, right? They remind us that we are not alone by connecting us to friends, preserve long-standing family traditions, and bring about new joyful celebrations. I look back and wonder why it took a pandemic for our far-flung family to use Zoom to stay in touch more regularly, connecting over virtual drinks and dinner, when before we may have settled for short phone calls or email exchanges with many participants and stilted dialogue. While screen fatigue is real, I can’t help but think about how video has helped our Bullis community connect throughout the pandemic. Of course, it became how we would teach our classes and hold meetings, but it also allowed us to see the emotions of a student struggling with a concept, and emote our care back. It helps us to unite in our challenges and join forces in our solutions by jumping on a video meet-up as so many teachers did this summer to ask questions and discuss plans for the fall. Even now that the campus is open and we might be able to meet in person, we continue to use video meetings on occasion, preferring to watch the effect of our words spelled out on another’s entire face. Video has also provided us some moments of much-needed levity and joy, helping us all feel a little more human. If someone had told me that I would be hosting happy hours, coffees, trivia, and


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Bullis Magazine Fall/Winter 2021 by Bullis School - Issuu