
The Education Speaker Series (ESS) returns for the 2022-2023 school year with an exciting mix of programs related to raising healthy children and young adults and promoting collaboration between parents and educators.
Rebecca Trobe
HOW, WHEN AND WHY TO TALK TO YOUR KIDS ABOUT MONEY AND GIVING
As a community with strong financial resources, it is often expected of us not only to care and provide for our families, but also our friends, neighbors, townspeople, fellow citizens, and the wider world. Those with means have the opportunity to impact the lives of others and share their resources. An important question for us to consider together: Why is it that decision-making around money, privilege, power, philanthropy and our values are not discussed regularly at the dinner table or other favorite contexts for important family discussions? How can we have meaningful conversations with our kids about what we have, what's important to us, and how that translates into our giving? Rebecca will go beyond the cursory look at charitable giving and delve into the heart of the matter around money, meaning and family, including mission, thesis and core values. Her training as a psychologist will help foster insight and the translation of insight into action.
Rebecca Trobe, Psy.D. has been a consultant, advisor and executive coach to c-suite, startup, family enterprise, and family foundation/family office leaders for 20+ years. Her coaching is tailored to each organization and leader’s unique circumstance and context and is designed to help clients meet and exceed their leadership and organizational goals. Rebecca’s work often focuses on vision, strategy formulation and implementation, performance improvement, communication, teamwork, and the development and management of others. At the heart of the matter is often an ongoing discussion and inquiry around money, power, leadership, mission and core values. Her training as a psychologist helps accelerate deep insight and the translation of insight into action.
NEW!!
Tuesday, April 25, VIA ZOOM 5:00 - 6:30PM
Katherine Reynolds Lewis
MOTIVATING CHILDREN TO THRIVE AND SUCCEED: INSIDE THE YOUTH SELF-REGULATION CRISIS
Join author Katherine Reynolds Lewis for a talk on parenting strategies that help children thrive and succeed, based on her book, The Good News About Bad Behavior. Katherine will share her book’s findings about the rising rates of youth behavioral and mood disorders—such as ADHD, anxiety and depression— and explain how successful discipline practices teach children the art of self-control. She spent five years investigating a crisis of self-regulation in modern children: observing families at the dinner table, meeting educators who are transforming the school experience for dysregulated children and studying the latest scientific research. She will share encouraging ideas for easing the biggest pain points parents experience, without resorting to punishments or rewards. By strengthening their connection, communication and capability, we can raise children who are self-disciplined, confident, mentally healthy and better equipped to handle the challenges they'll face in life.
Katherine Reynolds Lewis is an award-winning journalist, speaker and author of The Good News About Bad Behavior: Why Kids Are Less Disciplined Than Ever – And What to Do About It. Her work has appeared in the Atlantic, Fortune, Mother Jones, New York Times, Parents, Slate, USA Today, Washington Post and Working Mother. She’s been an O'Brien Public Service Journalism Fellow, MIT Knight Science Journalism Fellow, and EWA Education Reporting Fellow. Residencies include the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and Ragdale. A Harvard physics graduate, Katherine previously worked as a national correspondent for Newhouse and Bloomberg News, covering everything from financial and media policy to the White House. A biracial (White and Asian American) woman, she lives in the Washington D.C. area with her husband Brian and their three children.