One Pod, One Purpose: Strengthening the Husky Community
By Mia Burton, Assistant Head of School for Community, Equity, and Student Success
February 10, 2026
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In February, a small group of Huskies took part in a unique experiment by attending the inaugural Pollyanna National Conference. While most events are designed for a single audience — such as a student leadership summit or a faculty workshop — Pollyanna required us to build a "pod." This model brought students, parents, teachers, and administrators together at the same table to collaborate on building a stronger, kinder school community.
For more than 10 years, Pollyanna, Inc. has served as a specialized resource for independent schools, focusing on racial literacy, institutional equity, and community health. Their mission is to help schools move past surface-level discussions and toward deep, structural belonging. They are best known for their innovative "pod" model, which operates on the belief that meaningful change only happens when every stakeholder — students, parents, faculty, administrators, and board members — has a seat at the same table.
Participating in this national conference allowed us to function as a microcosm of Flint Hill itself. Our goal was to leverage our collective perspectives to develop a tangible action plan. We weren't just there to listen to experts; we were there to build a blueprint for Flint Hill, ensuring that the insights we gained would have a lasting, positive impact across all divisions of our school.
When the opportunity was announced to the Upper School student body, there was so much interest that we had to move to an application process. Students were asked to articulate their motivations and their vision for impacting our culture. The group that emerged was a true cross-section of the Upper School, ready to dive into deep conversations and get the ball rolling on important work for the school.
Even a last-minute shift from a trip to Minneapolis to a virtual format couldn't dampen the energy of the week. While we weren’t physically in the same room as the other pods from across the country, the experience remained incredibly grounded. The digital space quickly filled with the kind of honest conversation and thoughtful listening that only happens when people are united by a shared purpose.
As we participated in learning sessions from nationally-recognized experts in community-building and inclusion, we also engaged in visioning and design activities to turn our ideas into action.
The conference concluded with a powerful set of closing remarks that bridged the gap between the virtual and in-person attendees. Casper Caldarola, the founder of Pollyanna, joined us on screen to share a vital reminder: our schools need kindness and strength now more than ever, and meaningful change is impossible without both.
We wrapped up our final pod meeting with a gratitude activity, reflecting on the visions we’d built and the new connections we’d forged across different roles in the school. It was a perfect bookend to the week — a moment to realize that while the conference was ending, our real work at Flint Hill was just beginning.
Kindness Quotes from the pod
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