Thursday morning check-in returns to the small cohort format over breakfast. The facilitator prompt invites participants to reflect on what has surprised them most during the institute so far about independent school teaching, about their cohort, or about themselves. This prompt is designed to surface the kind of honest, sometimes unexpected insight that two days of immersive professional learning tends to generate. Short share-outs help the full group arrive together before the final day of programming begins.
The final round of demo lessons brings the three-day arc of model instruction to a close. By Thursday, participants have developed a richer vocabulary for what they’re observing, and the debrief is structured accordingly, moving from description (“what happened”) to interpretation (“why it worked”) to application (“how I’ll adapt this”). Participants are invited to share at least one concrete strategy from the three days of demo teaching that they plan to try in their first week of school.
Family relationships are one of the most distinctive and sometimes most complex dimensions of independent school teaching. This session prepares new teachers for the family communication realities they will encounter: the first-week introduction email, the challenging parent conversation, and the expectation of responsiveness. Participants explore communication frameworks that are warm and professional, practice navigating a difficult scenario in pairs, and discuss how to build trust with families over time. Facilitators draw on real examples from independent school contexts to ground the conversation in what participants will actually face.
This brief but important session gives new teachers an honest look at the arc of early career experience in independent schools, including the research finding that perceived organizational support tends to decline the longer someone is in a role. Rather than leaving new teachers to discover this on their own, this conversation names the pattern directly and equips participants with language for advocating for themselves. Participants discuss what support looks like at years one, three, and five; how to ask for what they need; and who in their school community is positioned to help. The goal is to leave not with worry, but with agency.
The final round of demo lessons brings the three-day arc of model instruction to a close. By Thursday, participants have developed a richer vocabulary for what they’re observing, and the debrief is structured accordingly, moving from description (“what happened”) to interpretation (“why it worked”) to application (“how I’ll adapt this”). Participants are invited to share at least one concrete strategy from the three days of demo teaching that they plan to try in their first week of school.
Independent school careers don’t follow a single ladder; they unfold through relationships, opportunities, and intentional conversations that new teachers often don’t know how to initiate. This session demystifies the professional growth landscape: what career pathways look like in independent schools, how to have a productive conversation with a supervisor about goals and development, and what SAIS offers in terms of professional learning, networks, and resources. Participants learn about specific PD opportunities and how to stay connected to a professional community beyond their school. SAIS’s research found that investment in professional development is one of the most powerful retention drivers for early career educators. This session makes that investment visible and actionable.
The institute closes with a structured reflection and forward-looking commitment exercise. Each participant identifies one specific action they will take in their first week of school, one question they want to bring back to their school community, and then writes a brief letter to their future self to be opened at mid-year. This closing ritual honors the weight of what the cohort has shared and learned together, and grounds the experience in something concrete and personal. Facilitators close with a final affirmation of the cohort before participants leave.