New teachers are welcomed as they check in and collect their materials for the institute. Rather than a standard registration table, this arrival moment is intentionally designed as a first act of care. Facilitators greet participants by name, and the space is set to signal warmth from the first step through the door. Participants are encouraged to connect with a table partner before the formal program begins.
This opening session establishes the tone and purpose of the entire institute. Participants are invited to reflect on why they chose this work and what they hope it will mean for themselves and for their students. Facilitators share SAIS’s commitment to early career educators and walk through what the three days will hold. The session builds connections between participants from different schools and creates the psychological safety needed for genuine learning. Rooted in SAIS’s “The First Years Matter” research, this kick-off is intentionally designed to communicate: we see you, we’re glad you’re here, and we’re investing in you.
Starting a new role in a new school can feel like learning the rules of a game no one has fully explained. This session gives new teachers a candid framework for understanding what their role actually includes and, just as importantly, what it doesn’t. Participants explore what a healthy classroom culture looks and feels like in independent schools, examine common sources of workload ambiguity, and practice language for setting appropriate boundaries. Facilitators model how to have early, honest conversations with supervisors about expectations, extra duties, and professional norms. The goal is to leave this session with both clarity and confidence in establishing your own classroom culture.
Connection doesn’t happen by accident. It has to be designed. This structured social experience goes beyond a casual pizza gathering to create real relational bonds among the cohort. Participants move through facilitated peer introductions organized around meaningful questions: what drew them to independent education, where they are in their careers, and what they most want to learn from the people in the room. Light food and informal conversation follow.