Podcasts about proctor academy

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Best podcasts about proctor academy

Latest podcast episodes about proctor academy

PREP Athletics Basketball Podcast
Former Ivy League Assistant + Current Cushing Academy Head Basketball Coach, James Cormier

PREP Athletics Basketball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 59:36


In this episode of the PREP Athletics podcast, we welcome Cushing Academy's head boys basketball coach James Cormier. James spent two years at Proctor Academy before playing at Le Moyne College. After his college career he got into coaching and worked at Northfield Mount Hermon under legendary coach, John Carroll. From here he worked as an assistant at Dartmouth where his father was head coach at the time. James has been at Cushing for over six years and has had great success to include coaching current NBA player David Duke Jr of the Brooklyn Nets. In this conversation we talk about his experience at prep school, choosing a college, what he learned coaching under John Carroll and his father, the Ivy League, Cushing Academy and much more. I really enjoyed this conversation with James. Connect w/ James:Twitter | https://twitter.com/CoachJCorms Twitter | Team Account: https://twitter.com/CushingBBballInstagram | https://www.instagram.com/cushingbbball/ Website | https://www.cushing.org/athletics/winter-teams/basketball-boys-Connect with Cory: Website | https://www.prepathletics.com Twitter | https://twitter.com/PREP_Athletics Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/prep_athletics/ Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/PrepAthletics Email | coryheitz@gmail.com Phone | 859-317-1166 Subscribe to the PREP Athletics Podcast: iTunes | https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/prep-athletics-podcast/id1546265809?uo=4 Spotify | https://open.spotify.com/show/6CAKbXFiIOhoHinzsReYbJ Amazon | https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/3c37179d-3371-47f9-9d97-fd569e8802a7/prep-athletics-basketball-podcast #AmazonMusic Google Podcasts | https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy80M2YwZTZkMC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw About Me Cory Heitz is the Founder and President of PREP Athletics. He has been helping place players into the right fitting prep schools since 2008. Cory completed a post grad year himself before...

Tatooine Sons: A Star Wars Podcast
Brandon Proctor: Academy Award Nominated Sound Editor for Black Panther

Tatooine Sons: A Star Wars Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2023 30:19


Today's episode is a bit of a detour from the normal back and forth you're used to on the show. Today, BB-N8 is interviewing Brandon Proctor. You may not recognize Brandon's name, but you certainly will recognize his work. Brandon is best known for his amazing sound editing on films like Creed, Thor: Love and Thunder, A Quiet Place, and of course, Black Panther - for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Achievement in Sound Mixing. If you're a regular listener of the show, you know that Nate's dream is to follow in the footsteps of men and women like Brandon. They spoke a few weeks ago about Brandon's success and more.

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #114: New England Ski History Founder Jeremy Clark

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 105:14


This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Jan. 31. It dropped for free subscribers on Feb. 3. To receive future pods as soon as they're live and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription.WhoJeremy Clark, Founder of New England Ski History and contributor to New England Ski Industry NewsRecorded onDecember 6, 2022About New England Ski HistoryNew England Ski History has two main components:1) NewEnglandSkiHistory.comThis is HQ. Each New England state gets a landing page, which in turn links out to profiles of all its active ski areas, its major lost ski areas, and many planned-but-never built ski areas:* Connecticut* Maine* Massachusetts* New Hampshire* Rhode Island* VermontThere are also pages devoted to expansions (both realized and cancelled), lifts (sorted by type, brand, or year installed or removed), and trailmaps. One of my favorite features is the inventory of historic lift ticket and season pass prices (select the drop-downs at the top to change the state or season).The site, like its subject matter, is a little retro, but the information is, in general, very current. For New England podcast prep, this site is gold.2) NewEnglandSkiIndustry.comThis is a news site, focused always and only on New England. The subject matter is expansive and often esoteric: updates on chairlift construction or obscure ski area re-openings – topics few other outlets would cover, but of clear interest to the typical Storm reader. I never send out a news update without checking this site for tidbits that I would otherwise miss. Clark recently launched a Substack newsletter that pushes these headlines right to your email inbox - subscribe below:Why I interviewed himThere has been organized skiing in New England for at least 100 years. Rolling terrain, half-year-long winters, and population density made that inevitable. As soon as machines tiptoed their way into Earth's timeline, New Englanders began flinging them up hillsides. Some stuck. Most didn't. Today, New England skiing is a couple dozen monsters, a few dozen locals, and a scattering of surface-lift bumps where a lift ticket costs less than a pack of smokes.As rich as this history is, there are few reliable sources of historical information on New England skiing. New England Lost Ski Areas Project has documented more than 600 lost ski areas across the region – the site's founder, Jeremy Davis, was one of my first guests on The Storm Skiing Podcast back in 2019 (it's still one of my favorite episodes). The New England Ski Museum has put together timelines on the development of lifts, snowmaking, grooming, and more. But current information on still-operating ski areas is hard to find outside of the ski area sites themselves, and even those are often unhelpful for anything more in-depth than pulling up the current trailmap.New England Ski History hosts the best and most comprehensive library of information not just on the region's major lost ski areas, but on the 90-ish active ones. One thing that has frustrated me in the internet age is how difficult it can be to find what should be the most basic information. What year did Jay Peak open? What is the vertical drop of Veterans Memorial ski hill in New Hampshire? Why did Mt. Tom, Massachusetts, close despite its popularity?For the past 15 to 20 years, Jeremy Clark, who as a tech-brained 1990s teenager built Berkshire East's first website, has been organizing all of this information in one place. The site is free for all, but it has been invaluable to me as a reliable information source on all things New England skiing. I never knew who ran it – unlike The Storm, there is no name adjacent to the masthead - until late last year, when I fired off an email to the anonymous address posted on the site. Clark answered right away, and here we are.What we talked aboutNew England snowmaking superpowers; New England Ski History HQ; the rotation theory of skiing; unsung but interesting small ski areas; growing up at atmospheric and primitive Berkshire East; the power plant that changed weather in the entire valley; Roy Schaefer, savior of Berkshire East; building the ski area's first website for $180 in the ‘90s; the annual continent-wide hunt for used equipment; the evolution of Berkshire East from backwater to four-seasons resort that's a top-10 draw on the Indy Pass; the 100-year-old but little-known Eaglebrook ski area; Proctor Academy ski area; “I realized I'd be able to ski a lot more if I didn't work in the ski business”; how and why Jeremy created New England Ski History; building the site's tremendous ski area profiles; the value of showing up; the potential to scale the site up; assembling the jigsaw puzzle of a decades-long ski-area history; “the goal of the site is to get the history right”; sorting out Berkshire East's complicated history; the role of the interstates in building New England skiing; keeping the site updated; New England Ski Industry News and its corresponding Substack newsletter; why Clark shut down the New England Ski History Facebook page, even though it had approximately 10,000 followers; lost ski areas; the devastating loss of Mt. Tom and why it will likely never return; the value of small ski areas; Brodie; “intermediate terrain is great for business”; the rise and fall of Ski Blandford; Woodbury, Connecticut and whether it could ever come back; assessing Saddleback two years in; the attempted comebacks of Granite Gorge and Tenney; what it would take to make The Balsams happen; what it takes to bring a lost ski area back from the dead; the drama at Big Squaw and whether the upper mountain will ever re-open; whether Big Squaw's minimalist model would work to keep other lost ski areas alive; potential lost ski areas that could re-emerge from the dead; Mt. Prospect; the comeback potential of Plymouth Ski Area in Vermont; New England expansion plans; Ragged; the good and bad of multi-mountain passes; what skiing and smoking have in common; reaction to Pacific Group Resorts purchasing Jay Peak; Vail and New Hampshire – “I hope they've learned that New Hampshire is a lot different than Vermont”; and upgrades at Attitash.          Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewOne of The Storm's animating principles is the celebration of excellence. Who is doing things right in the ski world? Sometimes that's Jay Peak and Whitefish middle-fingering astronomical big-mountain walk-up lift ticket prices. Sometimes that's Alterra assembling the greatest ski area lineup in the history of multi-mountain passes. And sometimes it's someone who has quietly built a damn good website that enriches the world of lift-served skiing in a way that no one else has managed to do. That's why I've hosted the owners of Lift Blog, Real Skiers, and Seniors Skiing on the pod. And that's why I invited Clark onto the show.Industrialized skiing is evolving at an insane pace. It was just six years ago that Vail purchased its first New England ski area. At the time – 2017 – there was no Ikon Pass, no Alterra Mountain Company, no Indy Pass, no Covid, no eight-place chairlifts (in America). The more debris there is blowing around in the storm, the harder it can be to remember the world before it floated in. We all need centering mechanisms, places where we can draw context and anchor our understandings. For New England skiing – one of the most vibrant wintertime cultures on the planet – there is really no better or more comprehensive source than New England Ski History. As we all try to make sense of our ever-changing megapass-dominated ski world of 2023 together, I thought that it would be valuable to point out that the region's past, at least, was already capably organized.What I got wrong* I said that I couldn't think of any New England ski areas that remain under their original ownership, and Clark quickly pointed out that Pats Peak has been under the stewardship of the Patenaude family since it opened in 1962, which of course: I had just discussed that very point with Pats Peak GM Kris Blomback on the podcast a few months before.* I said offhand that Killington and Sugarbush's max 2022-23 lift tickets were in the $180 range, and that I would confirm those prices. Both are hitting closer to $200.Podcast NotesWe discussed quite a few active-but-lesser-known ski areas on the podcast – I've linked to their New England Ski History profile pages below:* Eaglebrook, a 440-vertical-footer in Massachusetts served by a double chair. This is the second-oldest ski area in the country, and serves the students at the private Eaglebrook School. I just love their trailmap:* Proctor is another private-academy bump, a 436-footer in Andover, New Hampshire. This one has occasionally opened to the public in the past, but I haven't been able to find any information on open ski days since the pandemic hit in 2020.We talked a lot about Berkshire East, which Clark worked at for more than a decade:* Clark referenced a cancelled but partially built expansion for the ski area in the 1970s – read the full history here.* Clark designed Berkshire East's first website. The earliest screenshot I could find was from April 18, 1998, and it's a beauty:We also discussed several lost ski areas, including:* Chickley Alps, Massachusetts rose 300 vertical feet and operated from 1937 to 1979.* Mt. Tom, Massachusetts, a fairly successful ski area whose sudden closing in 1998 is still a bit mystifying. This 680-vertical-foot ski area ran on four double chairs and a collection of surface lifts.* Brodie, which the owners of neighboring Jiminy Peak bought and shuttered around the beginning of the century.I asked Clark which lost ski areas had the best chance of a comeback:* Monteau in northern New Hampshire, which rose 650 vertical feet and was served by a double chair and some surface lifts, and has been closed since 1990.* Farr's Hill, Vermont. This 160-foot bump has been closed since the 1960s. A couple years back, however, a new owner purchased a used T-bar from Oak Mountain, New York, with the intention of re-opening the ski area. I haven't heard any updates in a while, and the ski area's Facebook page is now inactive.* Plymouth Notch/Roundtop/Bear Creek – this is the most recent lost chairlift-served ski area in Vermont. It operated as a private club as recently as 2018, and has a fairly extensive trail network. The problem? It's sandwiched between Killington and Okemo.Clark and I discussed the upcoming expansion plans at:* Waterville Valley – the resort hopes to finally link the village to the ski area with a gondola up the back side of Green Peak:* Sunday River, where the recently opened Jordan 8 chairlift will act as the gateway to the massive Western Reserve territory, which could double the size of the resort. Unfortunately, there are no renderings of the expansion to share yet.* Sugarloaf – West Mountain, which is scheduled to open in early 2024 (I did a full write-up on this one a few weeks back):We also discussed abandoned or suspended potential expansions at:* Ragged Mountain – Pinnacle Peak, where the ski area cut trails years ago; owner Pacific Group Resorts confirmed to me last year that they do not intend to proceed with the expansion.* Killington – the proposed but cancelled Parker's Gore project would have added 1,500 acres with a sustained 3,000 foot vertical drop, served by up to 10 lifts.* Cranmore – Black Cap, which would boost the ski area's vertical drop from 1,200 to 1,800 feet.* Bolton Valley, which was originally proposed as a far larger resort than the three-peak operation you can ski today. Clark said he found this masterplan, which shows chairlifts running all the way down to Interstate 89 – 1,800 feet below where the current Vista base area sits:We discussed the Hall double chair that once acted as a redundant lift to the Attitash Summit Triple, which Peak Resorts removed without explanation around 2018. This turned out to be the worst possible decision, as the triple then conked out for months at the end of the 2018-19 ski season. Vail Resorts will finally replace the triple with a high-speed quad this summer, making the decision to remove the double moot. It's the Top Notch Double on the map below:The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 7/100 in 2023, and number 393 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing all year round. Join us. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

Sports State Of Mind
Episode 79 I Said Jerome's In The House! (Featuring Jerome Dyson)

Sports State Of Mind

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2022 90:53


Welcome back! Teboo and I sit down with professional basketball player Jerome Dyson. In this episode, we talked about everything Jerome encountered before and during his professional basketball career. We discussed the importance of his transfer to Proctor Academy, his four-year stint with the University of Connecticut men's basketball team, his time playing in the NCAA March Madness Tournament, his battle with injuries, his come back, and his first child. Lastly, we talk about what it was like getting a chance to play in an NBA game, why he decided to play overseas, how fun it was, and more. So make sure you sit back, relax, and enjoy. For more, follow Sports State Of Mind on iTunes, Spotify (Sports State Of Mind), Twitter (SSMPodcast), or leave a voicemail to talk your shit at 267-282-1038

This Week in America with Ric Bratton
Episode 2390: DONDOBEE: OR THE ADVENTURES OF A LEOLIAN ELF by Dale Parry

This Week in America with Ric Bratton

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 23:53


DONDOBEE: OR THE ADVENTURES OF A LEOLIAN ELF by Dale ParryThe Adventures of a Leolian Elf is a simple tale of a faithful elf who is imprisoned for his ugliness. In a time long ago a young urchin boy named Coal, creates a musical instrument that charms the creatures of the wood including 2 Leolian elves, Shreebee and Rodo. A pact is made between the boy and the elves. The elves will serve Coal until the end of his days if they are allowed to play the magical instrument. Coal agrees and the elves create a magnificent castle for all to live in. Dondobee is born soon after. He quickly learns to play the instrument. It is magical in his hands. He plays at every full moon. As he plays, tiny beings of light go about doing Williamsgate Castle chores. They clean and stock the castle with supplies to keep for a month or until the next full moon. Coal meets and marries Queen Maudrina. They all live happily ever after. One day Coal doesn't wake up. Shreebee and Rodo ceremonially send him up the chimney in a puff of smoke. With their pact with Coal finished, they too decide to go up the chimney. However, Dondobee chooses to stay behind to care for the aging Queen Maudrina. Then one day, the Queen asks Dondobee to grant her one final wish. The Queen has left the castle to her nephew Prince Paul and his princess Panella, of Bethgate Castle. Dondobee agrees to stay and maintain it for them, on the condition that they can solve a riddle. The royal couple is informed of their inheritance. They successfully solve the riddle with the help of the sensemaker and they take residence in Williamsgate Castle. They live long and happily in the magical castle until one bright full moon night, the sleep walking Panella sees an ugly creature roaming the castle. She convinces Prince Paul to capture it. The prince devises a clever trap, and Dondobee is captured and thrown into the dungeon. Soon the castle is no longer warm and full of bright light and happiness. No chores are being done. It grows cold and dark. The confused couple can't understand what is wrong. They go to bed and fall asleep for 14- and one-half years. They do live happily ever after. For how they manage to do that, you will have to read the story of DONDOBEE and go along with him on his adventures. Dale is a long time veteran of theater. He has stomped the boards from Boston to Hollywood and New York City and in between. He was a member of the Roundabout Theater Ensemble in New York City where he acted and directed. He has toured with theater groups and performed in summer stock, regional, and educational theater. He chaired the drama department of Proctor Academy prep school in New Hampshire and was assistant chair of the Vermont Junior College drama department. He has studied classical theater in London and Dublin and at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Theater Arts in New York City. He studied speech and drama at the University of New Hampshire where he graduated cum laude. While there, he won the Best Actor award. Mr.Parry also received an MA in theater arts from UNLV, graduating with honors. (Notice Cuts here.) He is a member of Sag-Aftra, Actor's Equity and The 1 Stagehand's Union. He has always enjoyed entertaining children and in fact toured with a theater group out of Boston that performed literary classics, like Edgar Allan Poe's works, for school kids. https://www.amazon.com/Dondobee-Dale-Parry-ebook/dp/B089N8DM2P/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=dondobee&qid=1637694056&qsid=137-6510654-1591924&s=books&sr=1-1&sres=1410745848https://www.mrdale.com/http://www.LitPrime.comhttp://www.bluefunkbroadcasting.com/root/twia/31622lp.mp3  

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast
TPM Episode 206: Caite Zeliff, Pro Skier

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 71:45


Caite Zeliff grew up in a ski town but she wasn’t a skier. She was an only child to a single mom; she didn’t have the easy life of most of my guests.  She found skiing through a school program, found her way into ski racing, and then worked her ass off.  She earned scholarships to elite high schools, came close to the US Ski Team,  raced in college briefly, got hurt, and gave up on racing forever.  With that identity in the past, she’s carved out a path in Jackson Hole that has her filming with TGR and Warren Miller.  It's a great story. Caite Zeliff Show Notes: 3:30:  The virus and being a pro skier, New Hampshire, and what she did before skiing 8:00:  Growing up with a single mom, getting into skiing through a program, and racing 12:00:  Getting attention through doing well, Proctor Academy scholarship, and not making the US Team 21:30:  Stanley:  Get 30% off site wide with the code drinkfast 10 Barrel Brewery:  Buy their beers, they support action sports more than anyone Elan Skis:  75 Years of Good Times 24:00:  Racing in college, getting hurt, and coming to grips with losing her identity 28:30:  Road trip out west, moving to Jackson, partying, and Rahlves Bonsai Tour 34:00:  Avalanches, traveling the world to ski, and being an instructor  41:00:  COAL Headwear  Use the code powell15 for 15% off Peter Glenn Ski and Sports 43:00:  How expensive is Jackson, the ratio, how long can you do it, and the King ad Queen of Jackson Hole 55:00:  Still having to work, getting into Warren Miller, and the differences between WM and TGR 62:00:  Inappropriate Questions with Taylor Fry

The Thriving Farmer Podcast
68. Jeremiah Vernon on Diversification through Value Adding

The Thriving Farmer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 65:04


How do you carve out a solid market for pasture raised chicken in a crowded marketplace? Jeremiah Vernon of Vernon Family Farm in Newfields, New Hampshire joins us today to share how he is proving the value of good old fashioned unmodified food to his community. Vernon Family Farm has gone from moving 1200 chickens to 20000 in just six years, while maintaining optimal operations.  Jeremiah shares about his background, how they have scaled their on-farm store and now event space, and how they have diversified with the chicken to grow their sales and customer base. Join us for this episode to hear all about what Jeremiah does, how he does it, and the heart he does it with!   You’ll hear: How Vernon Family Farm ended up focusing on chickens 1:15 If Jeremiah recommends working as a farmhand before starting your own farm 2:49 What Jeremiah was looking for when buying land 4:12 What Jeremiah focused on first when building his farm 5:33 What a typical day on Vernon Family Farm looks like 8:00 About the logistics of hauling the birds 10:40 What systems Jeremiah put into place to ensure optimal operation 12:07 How climate impacts the farm 14:58 About the hardest thing Jeremiah has done as a farmer  17:21 How Jeremiah improves work/life balance 18:19 Who Jeremiah’s mentors were during his farming journey 20:06 What became of Vernon Family Farm’s mushroom and pork operations 25:33 What systems he’d implement sooner if Jeremiah were to start over 28:21 How Jeremiah delegates roles on the farm 30:56 How Jeremiah establishes positive relationships with workers 32:38 How Jeremiah found his employees 35:32 What Vernon Family Farm does for marketing 38:06 What percentage of the business is wholesale to distributor 39:49 What specific product varieties Vernon Family Farm focuses on 42:29 How Jeremiah got started with rotisserie chicken 44:26 How Jeremiah charges for having other farmers use his facilities 50:08 When Jeremiah realized that his business model was working 51:07 How Jeremiah started with value added products 53:54 The biggest mistake Jeremiah sees newer farmers making 56:20 About Jeremiah’s favorite farming tool 57:58 Jeremiah’s thoughts on whether or not now is a good time to start a farm 1.00.35 Where you can find more about Jeremiah and Vernon Family Farm 1.03:15   About the Guest:Jeremiah Vernon is a 10th generation New Hampshire native. He grew up in New London, NH on his family farm on Pingree Rd. and has always had a love for animals and the outdoors. He graduated from Proctor Academy and received his Bachelor of Science from Bates College, earning a degree in Biology. Post-college, Jeremiah worked on Nezinscot Farm in Turner ME, where he fell in love with farming and his wife, Nicole Vernon. He has farmed land on the Seacoast of NH for over 10 years. He is passionate about the land his family owns now on the Seacoast, which happens to be in the same school district where his wife teaches and children are schooled. Resources: Website -  https://www.vernonfamilyfarm.com/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/vernonfamilyfarm Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/vernonfamilyfarm/

Piste OFF - The Ski Racer's Podcast
Season 4 Episode 10

Piste OFF - The Ski Racer's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 69:05


Joe Dunn joins Taco to close out the season. Recap past discussions and sort through any ideas left on the table.

School Growth Mastery
9. We get hired as Marketing Directors for an imaginary school with Scott Allenby

School Growth Mastery

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2019 46:15


Our guest today is Scott Allenby. He is the Director of Communications and Strategic Initiatives at Proctor Academy. Scott is passionate about developing and implementing strategies to help build the school because he cares deeply about the community that his work serves. He launched an inbound marketing initiative that boosted applications to Proctor Academy by more than 40% during the first year. Scott helped to lead a web redesign and strategic planning process for admissions, communications, and advancement teams. He has written hundreds of blog posts for Proctor Academy as a part of his effort to get the word out about the great things that are happening there. In this episode, Scott shares an imaginary marketing start-up plan for a school that is beginning from ground zero and wants to increase enrollment. He shares simple, specific, “doable” steps to take when considering how to start building an effective marketing strategy that can be expanded as the school accomplishes goals and grows toward success. Listen and take note of how a school can identify their value proposition, engage their internal and external audiences, and decide which tools and data will best help them to begin the adventure of sharing the “product” of which they are so proud - the school itself! Quotes:5:00 “Schools can’t just wait for the phone to ring.”24:00 “Families want to get past the admin office and see what teachers are doing and who students are talking to.”27:19 “From day 1, focus on building a network of parent ambassadors.”35:20 “Parent-to-parent conversations are so good; you couldn’t script it any better.”37:10 “If tuition continues to climb faster than household income climbs, we’re sabotaging our own industry.” 44:40 “I try to remember that the most important piece of my day is building relationships with families.”Here are some resources mentioned in our discussion:Seth Godin, This Is Marketing - https://seths.blog/tim/Where to learn more about Scott Allenby:Proctor Academy - https://www.proctoracademy.org/pageEmail - AllenbySc@proctoracademy.orgTwitter - https://twitter.com/ScottEAllenbyScott on Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott-allenby-89261b13/Where to learn more about Enrollhand:Website: www.enrollhand.comOur webinar: https://webinar-replay.enrollhand.comOur free Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/schoolgrowth/

The Enrollment Spectrum Podcast
GOAL! Enrollment Marketing that Works

The Enrollment Spectrum Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2019 49:30


How can schools align marketing and communications with enrollment goals and develop a strategy that translates brand into enrollment value? With so many school options available to families, it's essential that marketing is aware of - and focused on - these tasks. Peter and Hans find out how Scott Allenby, director of marketing and strategic initiatives for Proctor Academy, creates and refines the school's enrollment marketing strategy to hit yearly enrollment goals and build Proctor's brand.

Piste OFF - The Ski Racer's Podcast

David Salathe, Program Director of Proctor Academy, discusses how he and his wife Morgan took a private school with a high school level ski team and turned it into a sought after ski academy!

Welcome to the Teachers' Lounge

Jon’s guest this week is John “JB” Bouton, an English teacher at Proctor Academy—and Jon’s former colleague, mentor, and department chair at The Pennington School. John and JB discuss JB’s rich and dynamic journey through his adolescence and through his career as an educator, as well as JB’s belief in the inherent complexity of his student’s lives and how he tries to be mindful of that as he interacts with them in the classroom. Jon and JB also unpack the idea that educators should bring who they are to the classroom and allow that to inform their teaching. Host & Producer: Jon Lemay | Associate Producer: Emily Moler | Artwork: Katie Cooper | Music: "You Need a Visa" by Really From Check us out on Facebook! Email us with and feedback or guest recommendations!

english visa jb proctor academy
SMC: School Marketing and Communications
74: keep up-to-date with Google

SMC: School Marketing and Communications

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2016 24:33


Brad and Scully discuss news that many Australian students lack hope for the future. In addition, they examine how single-sex non-government schools are outperforming their co-educational counterparts; and how Google's Accelerated Mobile Pages update will affect marketers. This episode's commonly asked school marketing question looks at the top ten reasons to write listicles. This week's school marketing example: Proctor Academy's excellent website. The rants and raves segment looks at content marketing predictions for 2017. Episode links: Many Australian students lack hope for the future http://www.gallup.com/opinion/gallup/194525/australian-students-lack-hope-future.aspx?utm_source=alert&utm_medium=email&utm_content=morelink&utm_campaign=syndication Single-sex schools outperforming co-ed – study http://www.educatoronline.com.au/news/singlesex-schools-outperforming-coed--study-221074.aspx How Google's big AMP update will affect marketers and publishers https://contently.com/strategist/2016/08/04/google-amp-will-affect-marketers-publishers/ Top 10 reasons to write listicles http://www.wyliecomm.com/2016/08/top-10-reasons-to-write-listicles/ Proctor Academy http://www.proctoracademy.org/page 5 content marketing predictions for 2017 http://www.convinceandconvert.com/content-marketing/content-marketing-predictions-for-2017/ The biggest content marketing trends in 2017 http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2016/08/content-marketing-trends/

Every Classroom Matters With Cool Cat Teacher
Merging Classrooms: How I Shared My Students with a Class in Egypt

Every Classroom Matters With Cool Cat Teacher

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2016 12:15


Imagine merging your class with a teacher and students on the other side of the globe. That's exactly what our guest did. Find out how the collaboration impacted his students. Follow: @coolcatteacher @adamjonesed @bamradionetwork #edtechchat #edchat #edtech Adam Jones is the founder and primary story collector behind the Adam Jones Education Podcast. Additionally, he is a Global Studies classroom teacher, EdTech Director and Community Service Learning Program Director at Proctor Academy - a private independent boarding school in central NH. He is also a former AmeriCorps member and returned Peace Corps Volunteer.