In the late winter, Lily McDevitt ’11 reconnected
with Dean of Middle School (and her former 6th grade teacher) Kiri
Harris at a Diversity Workshop. Based on the discussions they began that day,
the two created an independent study for Lily at Greene Street Friends School
focusing on the intentional diversity of the School. With approximately 50% of
the student body identifying as students of color since the mid-1950s, GSFS was
a wonderful place for Lily to delve deeper into what diversity means and how it
can be incorporated and celebrated in a school setting. “It seemed like a
really good fit and I thought it would be a lot of fun to come back,” Lily
recalled.
The biggest surprise of all: “A lot more
goes into diversity than I thought,” said Lily. “When I was a student here, it
was definitely a diverse place, but it wasn’t really talked about.”
She compared what has stayed the same – the all-school feel, connections with
teachers, traditions like the 3rd and 4th grade beach
party – with elements like discussions about diversity that have evolved over
the four years since she graduated. Lily was impressed by how faculty and staff
responded to recent events in Ferguson and Staten Island, using these incidents
to trigger discussions with their students and each other. She found that her
project lined up well with the curriculum that teachers are using and that
students were eager to work through issues around equality and justice.
Diversity has always been an important
factor to Lily. She noted that in choosing Friends Select for high school and more
recently Earlham College, where she will begin as a freshman in the fall,
diversity was very important to her. “At a few schools I visited for college, I
felt something was wrong. When I looked at the numbers, it’s because there
wasn’t diversity.”
Looking back on her own Greene Street
Friends experience, Lily says that the one element that stands out the most to
her is the relationships that she formed with teachers and fellow students. She
still keeps in touch with many members of the Class of 2011, organizing a
college send-off for them on campus last Friday afternoon. Last summer, Lily
and fellow GSFS alumni Emily Augenbraun ’12 and Zach Hersh ’12 returned to
Costa Rica with Spanish teacher Sandra Rodriguez for a month of community
service and Spanish immersion.
Lily credits traveling to Costa Rica
with Sandra – both times! – for inspiring a love of languages and travel. She
continues to study Spanish, as well as adding Arabic to her class roster. “I
want to study more languages,” Lily adds. “I want to travel the world. I know
it’s important to learn the language before going so I can really interact with
people and learn about the culture.”
Wherever Lily goes, she knows that she
will remain connected to Greene Street Friends. “It’s part of my family,” she
says, noting that it connects her to her siblings Henry ’14 and Maggie ’18 as
well as her mother, Anne Bayless who is the Clerk of the School Committee,
Greene Street Friends School’s governing board. “We’ve been a Greene Street
family for so long; it’s impossible to imagine not being so attached to the
School.”