The Rivers Edge - December 2020

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THE RIVERS EDGE Vol. LI, Number 2

The Rivers School, Weston, MA

December 17, 2020

New COVID policies and plan allow for safe return to campus BY MAX MEYERHARDT ’21 EDITOR IN CHIEF

After a successful fall trimester with only a few days of remote learning, the Rivers COVID-19 plan has surely enabled the entire community to have school in the most ‘normal’ way possible. When considering the near two month long stretch of online learning in the spring of last school year and the hybrid opening to school this year, not many would have predicted the fortunate situation members of the Rivers’ community find themselves in today. With many other public and private schools closing and shifting into hybrid learning as the school year progressed, Rivers’ plan worked wonders and enabled everyone to have a safe and authentic learning experience. The new procedures and customs this year such as spaced out desks, wipes in each classroom, lunch in the field house or gyms, and many other changes that have enabled school to resume in person this year are all due to the efforts of Rivers’ Committee on Reopening, or COR. The COR worked in consultation with a company called Environmental Health and Engineering which also partners with many other independent schools and colleges to best open schools safely during COVID. COR “worked to keep the

three basic principles we promised everyone would be front and center throughout foremost in our minds: a safe learning environment; face-to-face instruction as much as possible; excellent teaching, no matter the mode of delivery,” said Head of School Ned Parsons. Mr. Parsons is proud of the work the COR has done so far and speaks to the qualifications of its members who have made learning in person conceivable this year. “[The committee] did have two physicians on it, as well as trustees with legal backgrounds, educational technology backgrounds, and financial backgrounds, all of which were helpful as we weighed how to open.” Despite being able to successfully complete the fall term, it is important to note that Rivers was, inevitably, struck by the pandemic like most other communities in the world. Although the community lasted over a month without a single case, in a bubble almost too good to be true, Rivers’ first student COVID-19 case was confirmed in early November which brought with it the cancellation of school for three days. “The shutdown in early November was a result of our inability to gather all the information about contacts before we would have been back in school, so we needed more time to know who Continued on page 2

Coffee House Delights- The fall Coffee House took place under the tent in late Oct. Despite the chilly weather, it was a just what the community needed. See story on page 9. Photo by Jess Bargamian ’21.

Four senior girls, new committee rewrite school’s election policy “Throughout my four years at Rivers, I have never once had a female class co-president,” said senior Jess Bargamian. This statement is one that stands true for every member of Rivers’ Class of 2021. Each year, several male and female students ran for class copresident, but two self-identified boys were elected year after year. Although they have always respected their male co-presidents and their roles, this past summer, four seniors–– Jess Bargamian, Emma Pfannenstiehl, Avery Caggiano, and Maddie Wambach–– decided to do something to ad-

dress the voting system that had perpetuated this kind of outcome of Rivers elections. Last spring, after two male school co-presidents were elected to represent the class of 2021 for their senior year, Bargamian, Pfannenstiehl, Caggiano, and Wambach spent hours drafting a letter to Head of School Ned Parsons, 12th Grade Dean Nicholas Jordan, Assistant Head of School Jim Long, and Upper School Dean of Students Will Mills, addressing the issues they saw with the voting system and the widespread sentiment that the female student body was underrepresented in student council. Over the summer, Bargamian, Pfannenstiehl, Caggiano, and

Wambach, along with Mills, Director of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Ava Archibald, Director of the Center for Community and Civic Engagement (CCCE) Amy Enright, and Middle School Dean of Students Sarah Freeman, formed a committee and met several times to develop the new voting policy that went into effect this fall. This policy states that the co-presidency for each grade must consist of two individuals of different gender identities. The new policy is very similar to the previous one that Rivers used until the Transgender Policy was enacted five years ago. According to Mills, the administration made the decision to switch to Continued on page 6

the CCCE, “brings to our community the thought leaders who are shaping opinion right now: men and women whose research, writing or activism have people talking and thinking in new ways about how to strengthen our democracy.” Since the creation of the Hall Family Speaker Series in 2019, Rivers has welcomed two speakers whose work in their respective fields captures the essence of the speaker series’ goals. Inaugural speaker and founder of Citizen University, Eric Liu, spoke to the community last October about the importance of being an active citizen. During

Liu’s visit to Rivers, he addressed the student body at an All-School assembly, and he also spoke at an evening event for 300-plus alumni, parents, and the public. Both events received top-notch reviews. A year after Liu visited Rivers, Dr. Jamil Zaki spoke to the Rivers community (virtually), as the second speaker in the series, and his talk was nothing short of gripping. Zaki himself is a leader in the research on empathy and has received his BA in cognitive neuroscience from Boston University and his Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University. Speaking from his home in

the Bay Area of California via Zoom, Zaki began his talk by thinking outside the box. Literally. Students were challenged to connect nine gridded dots using only four lines. To the surprise of many, the solution included drawing lines, not within the limits of the gridded dots. Zaki connected the exercise to the discussion of empathy. “We don’t just draw lines between the inside and outside of a box; we also draw lines between people,” he explained. To empathize, he suggested, we also need to reach outside our social box. But what is empathy? “Empathy is the ability to share,

Dr. Jamil Zaki speaks over Zoom. recognize and care about other people’s emotions,” Enright explained. “It is a crucial component in a healthy human Continued on page 10

Addressing the rising mental health issues among teens during the pandemic.

Artist Profile: the many talents of senior Maddie Wambach.

Point guard and co-captain Nicky Johnson ’21 has made an impact on and off the court. Page 13

BY HANNAH LAPIDES ’22 ASSISTANT EDITOR

Hall Speaker Series: Dr. Jamil Zaki on need for empathy BY ABBY SIKORSKI ’22 STAFF WRITER

On Oct. 21, students and faculty gathered across campus in advisory groups to participate in an interactive conversation with Dr. Jamil Zaki, a professor of psychology at Stanford University. Zaki’s speech left the audience more educated and engaged in a topic more relevant than ever: the power of empathy. Organized by The Center for Community and Civic Engagement, Zaki’s speech served as a part of the Hall Family Speaker Series. The series, explained Dr. Amy Enright, the director of

I N S I D E

NEWS

How the new make up of the Supreme Court will impact our future. Page 2

FEATURES

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ARTS

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SPORTS

AROUND CAMPUS

Remembering Travis Roy, who spoke to Rivers just weeks before his death.

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