Middle and Upper School students impress at the Maine Junior Classical League Spring Convention

Congratulations to the Middle School and Upper School Latin students who participated in the Maine Junior Classical League Spring Convention last week!

Students celebrated their love of Latin and made friends with other students from around the state while competing in chariot races, academic tests, spirit, certamen (Latin quiz bowl), “Olympic” track and field events, and more. This was Waynflete’s first year participating in this event. We were recognized with the Membership Award and earned fifth place in Academic Sweepstakes and sixth place in Advanced Certamen. Special shout-out to Anya, Lila, Caleb, Harper, Muhammad, and Mukhtar for winning first place in the state in Novice Certamen!

Waynflete team members:
Acadia Choi ʼ28
Anya Hankowski ʼ28
Porter MacElhiney ʼ28
Torben Chaney ʼ27
Lila Fremont ʼ27
Caleb Kramer ʼ27
Sam Kramer ʼ27
Wake Lain ʼ27
Harper Rowse-Garsoe ʼ27
Muhammad Ali ʼ26
Mukhtar Ali ʼ26
Mars Barnes ʼ26
Abdinasir Mire ʼ26
Hunter Winn ʼ26
Lincoln Clark ʼ25
Duncan Isherwood ʼ25

Tenth-grade community service day

Tenth-grade students recently participated in a community service morning at Fort Williams in Cape Elizabeth and Payson Park in Portland. Students continued the volunteer work started recently by their ninth-grade peers and contributed approximately 130 hours of invasive species removal across both locations. At Payson Park, bus driver Renée Russell joined the crew to help maintain her own neighborhood park!

Waynflete Science Olympiad at Nationals

On May 20, eleven Upper School students competed in the National Science Olympiad tournament at Wichita State University in Kansas. The team earned their spot at the tournament by winning the Maine State Science Olympiad tournament in April. Sixty teams with students from nearly every state were represented at the national tournament.

Waynflete students earned three top 20 finishes, including an impressive 6th place medal in an event called “Write It Do It” by Kira Chown ʼ25 and Mira Levine ʼ24, a 15th place finish in Forensics by Maren Cooper ʼ23 and Aelia Russell ʼ24, and a 17th place finish in the Flight event by Maren Cooper ʼ23 and Reed Robinson ʼ23. Other strong finishes included a 30th place finish by Fallon Culley ʼ25 and Kira Chown ʼ25 in Anatomy and Physiology, a 36th place finish in Detector Building by Alec Benton ʼ24 and Max Shurman ʼ24, and a 38th place finish in WiFi Lab by Nik Chaney ‘24 and Jack Vickery ʼ24. The team placed 42nd out of 60, ahead of all other New England schools except Massachusetts.

All students on the team represented Waynflete and the state of Maine with enthusiasm and pride. The team was coached by Carol Titterton and Wendy Curtis.

Team members:
Maren Cooper ʼ23
Reed Robinson ʼ23
Noah Abbott ʼ24
Alec Benton ʼ24
N.C. 
Mira Levine ʼ24
Aelia Russell ʼ24
Max Shurman ʼ24
Noah Abbott ʼ24
Jack Vickery ʼ24
Kira Chown ʼ25
Fallon Culley ʼ25

Waynflete juniors visit Bowdoin to to examine documents from the Reconstruction Era

Waynflete juniors recently spent the morning with Bowdoin librarian Barbara Levergood, who facilitated an activity for them to examine original documents from the Reconstruction Era. These primary sources were from the 1871–72 Congressional Hearings on the investigation into the Ku Klux Klan and its treatment of Black Americans and white sympathizers after the Civil War. Students were able to read and analyze testimonies from both perpetrators and victims.

Ninth-grade community service day

The entire ninth-grade class participated in community service yesterday as part of the school’s annual Community Engagement Challenge. Two groups boarded buses in the morning to head to Fort Williams and Payson Park to remove invasive species for our longtime partners Friends of Fort Williams Park and Portland Parks Conservancy. The class donated approximately 100 hours of labor in a continued effort to improve these two popular outdoor locations that are accessible to all. 

Waynflete announces 2023 Drake Award and Klingenstein Alumni Award recipients

Waynflete is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2023 Drake Award and the 2023 Klingenstein Alumni Award. We will be celebrating these exceptional members of our community during Reunion Weekend on May 19.


Elizabeth Barrett P’14, ’17
2023 Drake Award Recipient

Waynflete is pleased to announce that Elizabeth Barrett P’14, ’17 is the recipient of the 2023 Drake Award.

In 1976, Emerson and Ping Drake, parents of four former Waynflete students, received a special honor for their service to Waynflete. Emerson had served on the board of trustees for 16 years, the last several as president. Ping was active within the Waynflete community, volunteering in many areas of the school. They were recognized by the board with the award that now bears their name. Ping was also made an honorary Waynflete alumna. We honor their example and their memory by presenting the Drake Award each year.

Elizabeth and her family, including children Louis Frumer ’14 and Kelley Frumer ’17, have been part of the Waynflete community since 2007. Elizabeth epitomizes the selfless and generous volunteer who keeps independent schools strong and thriving. During her time as a parent, Elizabeth was involved in every level of the Parents Association (PA). She served as vice president, president, and member-at-large, was a class parent several times, and chaired the Friends of the Library and the Welcome Committee. She and her husband, John, created the PA Diversity Committee and also served on the Senior Gift Campaign Committee during their children’s respective senior years. The two are also members of the Ruth Cook Hyde 1910 Circle, the planned giving society at Waynflete.

Elizabeth volunteered at numerous admission events, accompanying many a division director on their “Discover Waynflete” tours and offering insights to prospective parents. She was always willing to help. More than one facilities staff member commented that she was a “worker,” setting up chairs and tables and never leaving until the event breakdown was complete. Elizabeth has remained a loyal volunteer and staunch supporter of Waynflete in the years since her children graduated. She is a founding member of Waynflete’s Parent Admission Network and continues to serve on that group, one of a handful of parents who have stayed on to provide an invaluable perspective on their children’s education.

The entire Waynflete community expresses its deep appreciation to Elizabeth Barrett for everything she has given to our school.


Susana Hancock ’03
2023 Klingenstein Alumni Award Recipient

Waynflete is pleased to announce that Dr. Susana Hancock ’03 is the recipient of the 2023 Klingenstein Alumni Award.

Waynflete’s board of trustees established the Klingenstein Award in 2019. The award is rooted in our mission, which calls for responsible and caring participation in the world. Through the Klingenstein Award, we seek to recognize one Waynflete alumnus/alumna per year whose responsible and caring participation in the world—at the local, national, or international level—has had broad and positive ramifications. The award is named for its first recipient, Patricia Davis Klingenstein ’47, in recognition of her work as an education advocate, devoted community leader, volunteer, and philanthropist.

Susana Hancock is an internationally recognized polar climate scientist and linguist, working at the nexus of science and global risk within the climate crisis to effect change at the global level. She is a delegate to the United Nations’ Conference of the Parties and other climate conferences, an expert reviewer with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and co-chaired an Arctic working group for the UN International Oceanographic Commission to launch the Decade of Ocean Science. She now heads up a global team that is researching the socio-geopolitical impacts of the climate crisis in the polar regions. In her day job, Susana leads a worldwide science team that takes action on the polar climate crisis, especially as it relates to global risk, to international events and negotiations. She has been invited to speak at international TED events, UN conferences, and other global forums.

As a researcher, Susana contributes policy papers, articles, and book chapters on a variety of subjects related to Arctic climate science and global policy on the urgency of climate action. She serves as president of the International Association for Polar Early Career Scientists, which provides mentorship, publication, and research opportunities in polar and environmental disciplines. In 2022, Susana was the recipient of Connecticut College’s Harriet Buescher Lawrence ’34 Prize, which recognizes alumni who are leaders in improving society or inspiring others for good.

Susana is a former internationally competitive rower, has played cello with chamber ensembles and orchestras in New England and Scandinavia, and is fluent in five languages. She lives part time in Maine, where she is the incoming vice president of Democracy Maine, writes an environment column in the Maine Sunday Telegram, and sits on the RSU5 school board. From coaching Waynflete’s rowing team to moderating alumni lunch-and-learn programs to authoring articles in our annual magazine, Susana also continues to be a dedicated and essential member of the Waynflete community.

The Outliers place third at the FIRST Championship

Congratulations to The Outliers robotics team for an impressive third place finish in their division at the FIRST Championship, an international robotics competition with more than 650 teams participating from 26 countries! The team also won the Innovation in Control Award for their unique differential swerve drives—they are the only team in the world that has successfully figured out how to implement them!

K–1 students team up with Upper Schoolers on fractals project

K–1 students recently helped the Linear Algebra and Advanced Topics class complete an activity on fractals. The specific fractal pictured here is called a Sierpinski Carpet and is a repeating, decreasing pattern of empty central squares. The Linear Algebra students learned how to use matrices to generate and express the fractal analytically, and the K–1 students helped generate the visual, geometric representation. The K–1 students were fantastic, and their amazing coloring skills were on full display as they helped Maya, Lydia, and Avery finish the job!

Waynflete’s Middle and Upper School teams win at the Maine Science Olympiad tournament

Congratulations to our Upper and Middle School teams on their impressive wins at the Maine Science Olympiad tournament this past weekend! Waynflete’s two Upper School teams, captained by seniors Maren Cooper ’23 and Reed Robinson ’23, earned top three finishes in 19 of the 23 events run throughout the day at the University of Maine in Orono. The Green Team won the tournament overall, and the White Team came in fourth place. The Middle School team secured a victory as well, finishing in first place after competing in 23 different events! Special thanks to teachers Wendy, Stephanie, and Carol for their support and coaching.

Notable highlights 

  • Alec Benton ’24 and Will Barmsby ’24 meticulously constructed a bridge that weighed only 15 grams but held the maximum load of 15 kilograms, earning them a first-place finish.

Gold medals earned

  • Anatomy and Physiology (Kira Chown ’25 and Lydia Birknes ’25)
  • Chemistry Lab (Maren Cooper ’23 and Mira Levine ’24)
  • Detector Building (Max Shurman ’23 and Alec Benton ’24)
  • Environmental Chemistry (Aelia Russell ’24 and Reed Robinson ’23)
  • Forestry (Reed Robinson ’23 and Maren Cooper ’23)
  • Fermi Questions (Alec Benton ’24 and Max Shurman ’23)
  • Green Generation (Aelia Russell ’24 and Will Barmsby ’24)
  • Forensics (Maren Cooper ’23 and Aelia Russell ’24)
  • WiFi Lab (Lucy Sarno ’23 and Basil DiBenedetto ’24)

Silver and bronze medals earned

  • Cell Biology (Maren Cooper ’23 and Noah Abbott ’24)
  • Codebusters (Maya Flores ’23, Will, and Mira Levine ’24)
  • Flight (Maren Cooper ’23 and Reed Robinson ’23)
  • Anatomy and Physiology (Ben Duda ’25 and Fallon Culley ’25)
  • Astronomy (Tilsley Kelly ’24 and Lucia Infantine ’25)
  • Chemistry Lab (Fallon Culley ’25 and Nico Herrera ’25)
  • Environmental Chemistry (Lucia Infantine ’25 and Lucinda Hirschkorn ’25)
  • Experimental Design (Nico Herrera ’25, Elliott Werner ’25, and Abie Waisman ’25)
  • Green Generation (Tilsley Kelly ’24 and Abie Waisman ’25)
  • Remote Sensing (Lucinda Hirschkorn ’25 and Max Shurman ’23)
  • Scrambler (Mira Levine ’24 and Max Shurman ’23)
  • Write It Do It (Kira Chown ’25 and Lydia Birknes ’25)

Students who participated on the team but who were unable to attend the tournament include Orion Keierleber ’23, Nik Chaney ’24, and Dudley Holdridge ’23.

Jasper Curtis ’23 and Leah Kramer ’25 are named the Waynflete Flyers Winter Athletes of the Year

Congratulations to Jasper Curtis ’23 and Leah Kramer ’25 for being named the Waynflete Flyers Winter Athletes of the Year by the Portland Press Herald!

Jasper, a senior on the Waynflete/South Portland/Freeport co-op hockey team, ended the season with an impressive record of 384 saves. Coach Joe Robinson said, “Jasper was the backbone of our team. He started all but three games in the last three years for us. In my opinion when he’s on, he’s the best goalie in the league. Jasper always comes to the rink ready to compete. He’s super competitive, and we are going to miss having him between the pipes.”

Leah, a junior on Waynflete’s Nordic ski team, had a great season, quickly becoming a top racer and placing fourth in the classic. Coach Stephanie Dolan commented, “Leah had an awesome season. She was super-committed from the start, even before the snow flew. She is disciplined, motivated, and committed to be the best skier possible. She brings that same determination to the classroom as well. We are thrilled that Leah will be a great leader for the team next season.”

The seventh annual New England Youth Identity Summit was a huge success!

Another incredible year for the New England Youth Identity Summit! About 300 participants from almost 50 schools/organizations (in seven states!) came together on Saturday for a full-day program that featured inspiring speakers, student-led workshops, dialogue sessions, and performances. Thank you to all the presenters, performers, and attendees who helped us “rewrite normal”!

K–1 space study

Engineering teacher Jon Amory discussed the components of rockets and Artemis, NASA’s current mission to the moon, with K–1 students as part of their space study today. They are gearing up to create their own rockets and robots to explore the moon, using parts that were 3-D printed by Jon in Waynflete’s engineering lab.

Waynflete announces 2023 Athletic Hall of Fame class

Waynflete is pleased to announce our Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2023. The Hall of Fame selection committee has chosen three individuals and a team to receive this special honor: Drew Dubuque, Ed Flowerdew ’94, Lisa Lightbody ’98, and the 1993 boys varsity soccer team.

Waynflete’s Athletic Hall of Fame was established in 2022 to recognize those athletes, coaches, administrators, supporters, and teams who excelled in their respective sports or coaching/support roles and who brought honor and excellence to the school.

1993 Boys Varsity Soccer Team
The 1993 boys varsity soccer team is the first team inducted into the Athletic Hall of Fame. The team was undefeated in the regular season (12–0) and went on to win Waynflete’s first ever MPA Class D soccer state championship. The team comprised coaches Brandon Salway and Ted Shipley, and players Justin Amoroso ’94, Greg Bokinsky ’96, Luke Brannigan ’95, Matt Famolare ’95, Ed Flowerdew ’94, Nate Gray ’97, Justin Huston ’94, Saer Huston ’97, Gabe Johnson ’95, David Joyce ’96, Brian Langis ’97, Joel Mahoney ’95, Shafaat Qazi ’95, Clay Rockefeller ’97, Tom Sanborn ’96, Matt Shardlow ’95, Leigh Smith ’96, Colin Sullivan-Stevens ’95, Ben Twitchell ’95, Tim Wannemacher ’95, David Whelan ’96, and Aaron Willis ’95.

Drew Dubuque
Drew served as both faculty member and athletic director during his time at Waynflete. He led the girls varsity soccer team to five regional championships and four state Class D championships and was named United Soccer Coaches 2002 New England Coach of the Year. Under Drew’s leadership, the girls soccer program had a 50–1 winning streak from 1995–98. Drew coached approximately 100 Middle and Upper School basketball, soccer, and lacrosse teams over the course of his 34-year coaching career, including more than 1,000 players. As varsity soccer coach, he amassed 151 wins over 13 seasons. Drew invites former players and their families to reach out to him here

Ed Flowerdew ’94
Ed Flowerdew ’94 was captain of the state championship-winning soccer team in his senior year and was selected for the all-state soccer team. He was captain of the 1994 regional championship-winning baseball team and was selected for all-state baseball in 1993 and 1994. He served as captain of the ski team and was an MPA state runner-up for golf. Ed went on to have an impressive Division 1 golf career at the University of Maryland.

Lisa Lightbody ’98
Lisa Lightbody ’98 played varsity soccer, basketball, and lacrosse for all four years in Upper School. She was a member of Waynflete’s first-ever girls state soccer championship-winning team in 1995, which won additional championships in 1996 and 1997 (she served as team captain in 1997). She was captain of the 1998 basketball team, was selected for all-conference in the same year, and was the first Waynflete girl to score more than 1,000 points. Lisa was a member of the 1997 and 1998 championship-winning lacrosse team and was team captain in 1998. She was Maine Sunday Telegram’s Lacrosse Player of the Year in 1998. In her senior year, Lisa won Waynflete’s Sportsmanship and Most Valuable Player Awards.

Upper School students finish second in the Maine Science Bowl

Ten Upper School students recently competed in the Maine Science Bowl—a quiz game-type competition sponsored by the Department of Energy. Question categories include physics, math, chemistry, biology, energy, and Earth and space science.
Waynflete’s two teams performed well during the morning’s three preliminary rounds. One of our teams, led by Maren Cooper ’23 and supported by Nik Chaney ’24, Max Shurman ’24 , Mira Levine ’24, and Lydia Birknes ’25, competed in the afternoon’s elimination rounds on their way to the final round, in which they were edged out by Cape Elizabeth. Congratulations for a strong second-place finish and a good showing all around! We were even named “the friendliest team” by one of the officials. The teams were coached by science teachers Carol Titterton and Wendy Curtis.

Lower School art students visit the Portland Museum of Art

Art students in grades 4–5 recently went on a field trip to the Portland Museum of Art. Docents expertly guided our students in the “Seeing Through Sketching” tour. Our students received several compliments from museum staff on how well-mannered and engaged they were. One docent said that she had never seen so many students focused on drawing at the same time!

Waynflete’s first-ever Community Celebration Night was a huge success!

The Waynflete community is enriched by cultural, religious, and spiritual diversity, as well as cross-age connections. To celebrate this, we held our first-ever Waynflete Community Celebration Night, an all-ages evening of offerings by local performers and food surrounding our different and shared traditions!

The evening was an incredible success. Students, parents and guardians, grandparents, alumni, faculty, and staff representing all divisions of the school were in attendance. Many students and adults remarked on how much they enjoyed the opportunity to connect and experience our community in this light. 

Special thanks are due to our performers—Antonio Rocha, Clarisse Karasira and Mesa Schubeck, and Lauren Rioux and Isa Burke—for the engaging performances. The audience was captivated by the storytelling, music, and singing. We appreciate the efforts of the planning committee and many volunteers who brought this event to life. Thank you to Niyat Catering and to our community for all of the delicious food contributions.

We can’t wait to do it again next year!

 

Clarisse Karasira
Rwandan singer, songwriter, cultural dancer, and poet.

 

 

Lauren Rioux
Maine-born fiddler, violinist, educator, and Waynflete parent.

 

 

Antonio Rocha
Brazilian storyteller and performer, incorporates mime and spoken word.

The Outliers Robotics team wins at the NE District Granite State Event

Congratulations to the Outliers Robotics team for their recent victory at the NE District Granite State Event. They partnered with teams from Windham, NH and Lewiston, ME, and went undefeated in the playoffs—finishing only five points away from the world high score! The Outliers also won the Autonomous award for their consistent, reliable, high-performance robot operation during the autonomously managed actions. Their next event will be in the Greater Boston area from March 24–26. 

Upper School students compete in the Science Olympiad Tournament

Fifteen Upper School science students traveled to Brown University recently for an invitational Science Olympiad Tournament. Students competed with schools from across the country in 23 different science and engineering events, which ranged from building items like an electronic sensor to determine the mass of an object or a clock that can measure a specific time interval to tests of knowledge in fields such as astronomy, infectious diseases, and forensic science, to field tests such as tree and rock identification. The Waynflete team placed 12th out of 48 teams and earned five top ten finishes. Notable successes were a 6th-place finish in Detector Building by Orion Keierleber ’23 and Alec Benton ’24, a 7th-place finish in Write It Do It by Lydia Birkness ’25 and Kira Chown ’25, a 7th-place finish in It’s About Time by Maya Flores ’23 and Oscar Twining ’23, an 8th-place finish in Fermi Questions by Max Shurman ’24 and Alec Benton ’24, and a 10th-place finish in Flight by Maren Cooper ’23 and Reed Robinson ’23. Congratulations to all involved!

Portland Stage Company performs Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar for Middle School students

Portland Stage Company gave an abridged performance of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar for the entire Middle School last week! Michael Dix Thomas ’02 directed the play, and Elliot Nye ’15 played Brutus. Theater 8 students participated in a director’s lab workshop after the show, where they explored tactics for persuasive speaking.

Marpheen Chann is the keynote speaker for this year’s New England Youth Identity Summit

The keynote speaker for the New England Youth Identity Summit on April 1 is Marpheen Chann—an author, writer, thinker, advocate, and speaker on social justice, equity, and inclusion.

As a gay, first-generation Asian American born in California to a Cambodian refugee family and later adopted by an evangelical, white working-class family in Maine, Marpheen uses a mix of humor and storytelling to help people view topics such as racism, xenophobia, and homophobia through an intersectional lens.

Marpheen lives in Portland, Maine. He works in the nonprofit and advocacy sector and holds a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the University of Southern Maine and a law degree from the University of Maine School of Law.

Learn more about Marpheen and register for the Summit at waynflete.org/summit!

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