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Walk the Walk: Planning and Running a Leadership Conference and the Positive Impact on Your School. Presenters: Dana Hall School - Liza Cohen, Director of Communications and Corinne Daniels, Director of Alumnae Relations
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Walk the Walk: Planning and Running a Leadership Conference and the Positive Impact on Your School Presenters: Dana Hall School - Liza Cohen, Director of Communications and Corinne Daniels, Director of Alumnae Relations Chelmsford County High School for Girls - Katharine Adams, Year Leader Year 11 and Richard Wilkes, Asst. Head of Sixth Form Marymount High School - LyndseyDeMuro, Academic Advisor /Student Activities Coordinator and Sarah Jallo, Director of Admission/Director of Summer Programs National Coalition of Girls School Annual Conference 2013
Statement of Purpose She Sails: Inspiring Dana Women creates connections among all Dana Hall women and provides a forum to learn from each other, share our stories, and encourage one another to be bold and dream big.
The Basics • Inaugural event 2012 • Second annual 2013 • Students, alumnae, parents, faculty and staff invited • Full-day, Saturday event (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.) in late April • On campus • Free • 450 attendees in 2012 • 570 attendees in 2013 • $20k in sponsorships in 2012 • $35k in sponsorships in 2013
Alumnae Engagement Goals: Bring alumnae back to campus; connect with alumnae beyond reunion and annual giving; leverage rich talents of alumnae. • Focus groups • Survey • Planning • Presenters
Alumnae Engagement • 28 alumnae presenters in 2012; 44 alumnae presenters in 2013 • Classes of 1957 to 2009 represented • Varied disciplines and experience levels • Varied prior engagement with the school
Alumnae Engagement Alumnae Board Involvement • Sub-committee • Alumnae hub • Networking breakfast • Volunteering • Marketing
Extension of the Dana Brand • Dana Hall stands for an unwavering commitment to developing leaderships qualities in girls • We back that up with our rigorous curriculum, our dedicated faculty, our supportive environment AND: • Countless leadership opportunities: Workshops, mentoring, skill-building, networking, Career Day, Girls Summer Leadership Program
She Sails: Walking the Walk in One Full Day • Keynote speakers as role models • Model different leadership styles • Professional mentoring and guidance • Range of opportunities • Promote ideals within internal community (include newly accepted students) • Generate buzz beyond the Dana campus
Event masterminds devised a theme, and planned and executed a memorable, unique day for all attendees. She Sails 2013
Lessons Learned • Survey to get volunteer alumnae presenters • Choose carefully who will work with alumnae presenters • All things to all people • Know your school and community, be yourself
WALK THE WALK Devising and Running a Student Leadership Conference in Your School NCGS Annual Conference Boston: June 2013 • Katharine Adams and Richard Wilkes • Chelmsford County High School for Girls, UK
Chelmsford County High School for Girls • Selective girls Grammar School • Strong academic standards • Publicly funded • IB World School • Ranked 10th in UK by ‘The Times’ • Successful entrants to Oxford and Cambridge Universities Our school context
CCHS Past and Present Miss Vernon Harcourt Headmistress Mrs Nicole Chapman Headteacher Founded 1907 : 76 students 2013 : 900 students
Inspiration! • AMGS Annual Conference October 2011 • NCGS Annual Conference Washington 2012 • WOW Conference 2012 International Influences
Inaugural CCHS Leadership Conference Friday 26th October 2012
Conference Aims • Promote and develop Leadership Skills • Develop the “whole student” beyond academic results • Encourage risk taking • Promote public speaking • Promote ‘Learning through Action’ Developing the Leaders of Tomorrow
Conference Outline • Conference breakfast • Key note speeches and panel session • Speaker-led workshops • Conference lunch • Student-led workshops • Plenary session Creating a professional feel to the day
Student Teams • Over 60 girls involved in teams for • Planning • Workshops • Conference materials • Hospitality • Catering • Administration Decisions led by students
Speeches and Panel Session Mitra Janes Rachel Elnaugh Sarah Hendry Heather Katsonga-Woodward Speakers from all walks of life
Public Speaking Roles • Conference Chair • Introductions • Leading workshops • Vote of thanks A chance to shine
Networking Seize the moment...
Speaker-led Workshops • Intimate interactive sessions with small groups of students • Manifesting prosperity • Preparing for the world of work • Leading and influencing • Women and leadership: Gender differences Thought-provoking discussion
Student-led workshops • Discussion sessions devised and run by students • Eradicating gender inequality, • Coping with failure • Independent travel • Cooking on a student budget • Mental and physical well-being Students take command
Plenary Session: Reflecting on the day Opportunity to reflect
Outcomes • Impact on individuals – students and staff • Enhanced relationships with local schools • Increased uptake for languages • Work experience opportunities • Press interest • National charity award Whole school “buzz”
Impact on Individuals • “I wanted to thank you for the conference and particularly for letting me run a workshop. I found it really enjoyable and I've noticed that as a result of it I've become much more confident when speaking to people, so thank you for giving me those opportunities.” Students transformed
Outcomes • Impact on individuals – students and staff • Enhanced relationships with local schools • Increased uptake for languages • Work experience opportunities • Press interest • National charity award Whole school “buzz”
What did Delegates Enjoy? • “The atmosphere of the whole day and speaking to such inspirational women” • “The incredible workshops that have given me so much confidence for the future” • “Leading my workshop and being given the opportunity to lead others” • “Everyone being part of the making of the conference” Positive feedback
And what did they learn? • “Don’t make set plans, dream big and go where life takes you” • “Failure is sometimes a blessing in disguise” • “There are lots of different types of success and perseverance is the key” • “When I left I was buzzing with energy and possibilities for the future. I felt I could achieve anything and I hope that feeling never goes away” Important messages
Where Next? • October 2013 conference is in the planning! Huge enthusiasm for this year. • Yr 12 Model United Nations Conference March 2014 • Development of Whole-school Student Leadership programme Try it yourself!
Thank you • Katharine Adams • kadams@cchs.essex.sch.uk • Richard Wilkes • rwilkes@cchs.essex.sch.uk
Feedback from our Guests • “...They have come back to school full of enthusiasm and have been incredibly motivated by the experience...” • “My colleague and I spent the whole day smiling because it was just a joy to behold all of the young women conducting themselves so impeccably. “
Feedback from a School Governor • “The Inaugural conference was a great success… The girls found it exciting and thought-provoking, and it has given them the appetite to grow the skills and mindset needed for their future success, after they leave the shelter of CCHS……” • “I have seen many changes over my long association with our school……the Leadership Conference was, in my opinion, the best thing yet.”
Who Is Marymount? • 9-12th grade • All-girls • Catholic, Independent • 72 zip codes across Los Angeles • 18 religions • 25% receive financial assistance • Our goal
The Birth of “BSBW” • What do we do well as a school? • Current students: Marymount empowers us to be confident woman leaders who care about making a difference in the world. • We want to inspire and empower middle school girls in the same way Marymount has done for us • If we did a conference, what would it look like?
The Vision and Purpose • Leadership opportunity for our Marymount students • Empowering and inspiring leadership and confidence in middle school girls • Admission outreach and showcasing the best of Marymount to a larger audience. • Alumnae engagement • Teaching girls the value of giving back
Our Marymount Girls • Approx. 55 current students and alumnae • Executive Team made up of six student chairs and three faculty chairs
Student Involvement • Executive Team • Small Group Leaders • Speakers • Service Project Leaders • Photographers • Assistants • Mentors
Our Guests • 2012: 70 rising 6-8th grade girls from 25 different schools • 2013: 97 rising 6-9th grade girls from 39 different schools • $10 fee, includes breakfast, lunch, snacks, and a BSBW memento
The Schedule – “Better Self” • “Kindness & Girls Supporting Girls” • “Friendships” • “Girls Have a Voice” • “Confidence” • “Trying New Things” • “Ethics and Values”
The Schedule – “Better World” • “Leadership” • “Women Serving Others Around the World” • “Making a Difference” • “Life-changing Community Service” • “How to Help One’s Community”
Service Projects • Packed lunches for the homeless • WAPIs • Beauty bags for women’s shelter • Cards for Meals on Wheels • Placemats for Children’s Hospital • Blankets for a local animal shelter
Why You Should Do It • Opportunity for faculty/staff to work with students in a more personal way and on a different level • Approx. 3 months of planning – 1 week of intense training for small group leaders and speakers • Budget = $3900 – we spent around $3200 and brought in $1,020 in income • A conference that makes a big impact, but is small-scale