Kildonan teachers now at Kent’s Marvelwood School

KENT — The former Kildonan School has joined the Marvelwood School in Kent, creating a campus that will offer high-level support for high school students with learning challenges. 

The new partnership of the two schools was announced on Monday, Sept. 14. 

Kildonan, formerly in Amenia, had struggled to stay afloat in recent years, especially after the death of founder Diana King in 2018. According to a history of the school on its website, King “began her nearly 70-year career in the field of dyslexia at Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C., where Anna Gillingham visited regularly to supervise teachers. Prior to that, she had spent time in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) on her uncle’s farm, Kildonan; both her uncle and his daughters had what she later realized was dyslexia.” 

Gillingham was a creator of the Orton-Gillingham method for helping dyslexic students with reading and writing.

King’s first educational program was Camp Dunnabeck, which she opened in 1955 in Pennsylvania. She was the camp’s director for 35 summers. 

“In 1969, with the help of Kurt Goldman, she established The Kildonan School, first in Bucks County, Pa., then in Amenia.”

After King’s death in 2018, Kildonan community members struggled to find ways to keep the school financially afloat, but eventually closed it in 2019. 

The link between Kildonan and Marvelwood is a natural one. Marvelwood was founded as a high school for boys in 1956, and was  originally located in the center of Cornwall Village. 

The campus moved to the top of Skiff Mountain in Kent in 1995, settling into what had been the girls campus for the nearby Kent School.

Marvelwood is now a co-ed boarding school with a high percentage of foreign students, many of whom are learning English as a second language. 

According to the press release sent out Monday morning, “The Marvelwood School’s Learning Support program has long served students with language-based learning differences. 

“In recent years, the school has seen an increasing number of students with diagnoses of dyslexia and other language-based learning challenges.”

The new partnership with Kildonan helps Marvelwood better serve those students. And it brings back to life the beloved Amenia school, which served students in grades two to 12.

In 2019, Marvelwood hosted the annual Camp Dunnabeck and Kildonan Teacher Training Institute (KTTI) on the Kent campus. That went well, and a decision was made to incorporate the Kildonan Teacher Training Institute into Marvelwood’s Learning Support center. 

In the press release, Kathleen Stewart, the head of KTTI, said, “Kildonan has been seeking a partner since we closed our campus. 

“Marvelwood has a proven history of helping the kinds of students who have enrolled at Kildonan over the years find academic success and confidence. Our families have been looking for a place to land, and I’m confident that Marvelwood is that place.” 

To learn more, go to www.marvelwood.org/learningsupport. 

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