Skip to content

Where Innovation Meets Education

Seattle Girls School empowers girls to change the world

By Nat Rubio-Licht October 16, 2023

The curriculum emphasizes individual expression and identity development in all activities.
The curriculum emphasizes individual expression and identity development in all activities.
Photo courtesy of Seattle Girls School

This article originally appeared in the September/October 2023 issue of Seattle magazine.

An innovative experiment at a small school in Seattle’s Central District may hold the key to the future of education.

The Seattle Girls School serves students that identify as female or gender nonconforming. Rather than abiding by a traditional grading system for every assignment, students at the private middle school get letter grades only at the end of a unit or term. The rest of the time, students receive “formative feedback” on their work, such as teacher comments and conversations that help them understand their strengths and weaknesses. 

Brenda Leaks, Seattle Girls School head of school
Photo courtesy of Seattle Girls School

In some cases, students are required to deliver presentations to professionals in their field, such as doctors for health science classes, court justices for mock trials, or business professionals for a Shark Tank pitching competition. In others, the school brings in elementary-aged kids and requires students to teach concepts that they learned throughout the year. The school calls these intensive presentations “culminations.”

“Our demonstrations of knowledge look a lot different than a lot of our peers,” says Brenda Leaks, a career educator who has served as head of school for the past seven years. “We call these ‘stand and deliver’ moments for our kids. This is the time in kids’ lives where it’s all about identity development.”  

With a population of roughly 140 fifth through eighth graders and a student-to-faculty ratio of 9-1, the school focuses on “leadership development” through learning experiences. The campus is filled with open “collaboration space” for students to spread out and work together. One wall of each classroom lifts up, creating a “free flow” between the two spaces. 

“One of the realities of educational spaces is that they can sometimes center on the needs of adults more than the needs of kids,” Leaks says, adding that the goal is to make learning a “joyful” experience. That doesn’t mean it’s a comfortable one. “We help students feel that sense of pride that comes from doing something big.”

For Hannah Saraf, a 2019 Seattle Girls School alumna who graduated from The Bush School in 2023, the experience was both enriching and challenging. She recalls doing mock board exams in front of real doctors, and acting as a trial lawyer before Washington State Supreme Court Justice Mary Yu.

“Those are really special events that were so challenging and so stressful,” said Saraf. “I remember being so anxious, but in the end, they were just so meaningful. I’m always going to remember them.” 

As much as anything, Saraf says she “learned how to learn” by becoming comfortable with being uncomfortable. This gave her the courage to advocate for herself, speak up in male-dominated spaces, and to take her first data science class in high school. Saraf is now attending Yale University and studying data science. 

“When you take a class like data science when you’re the only person who doesn’t know how to code, long-term discomfort is a really important skill to develop,” she adds.  

The idea for Seattle Girls School came from a group of parents of young girls about to enter their teen years, says Rosetta Lee, the school’s outreach specialist. At the time, no Seattle school, either public or private, was teaching empowerment, body image, and confidence to young girls. The school was launched with a $500,000 grant from the late Bill Gates Sr. in 2000. Lee was one of the first teachers hired at the school to teach its initial class of 32 students. 

“(The Seattle Girls School) was doing what I thought schools were capable of,” Lee says. “It honored the capability of middle school kids, the needs and possibilities, and the importance of keeping doors open for middle school girls in particular.”  

Though tuition runs around $35,000, the school commits 21% of its annual tuition revenue toward financial aid, double the 10% to 12% average that other local independent schools offer. On average, students get need-based grants of around $22,000. 

The school represents students from 30 different zip codes across Seattle, and has a population of 41% students of color. Around half of the students at Seattle Girls School come from public elementary schools, and go on to public high schools. 

“Our kids go to the large public schools, they go to smaller ones, they go to independent schools,” Leaks says. “They’re going all over the place and they’re finding success, both from an academic perspective and a leadership perspective. That, in and of itself, we see as a measure of success.”  

Photos courtesy of Seattle Girls School

More than two decades after its founding, the school’s focus remains unusual when measured against both public and private institutions. Public schools are products of their neighborhoods and often vary in quality according to the demographics of the surrounding community. Many parents opt for private schools because of the smaller class sizes and individualized instruction, but the (schools) can often be cost-prohibitive if socioeconomic equity isn’t prioritized, Lee says, leading to a “certain level of homogeneity.”

One benefit, however, is that they’re “not bound to the same sort of testing requirements or mandated curriculum,” she adds. “We can (create) a unique learning environment that’s a good match for the child.”

Despite its success, Seattle Girls School finds itself grappling with a disturbing national narrative: an impending shortage of teachers. According to analysis from the Calder Center, the teacher turnover rate in Washington state reached a near-record high in 2022 at nearly 20% for public schools. Leaks notes that hiring qualified people has become more competitive. As a smaller institution, Seattle Girls School can’t offer high bonuses, extra perks, or the ability to work from home the same way many private schools can.

“We don’t have enough people who want to be teachers,” she says. “That’s one of the things that keeps me up at night. Who’s going to stand in front of our kids and really care about them? That’s the biggest challenge the world of education is facing across the board.” 

She adds, however, that the school’s ethos of flexibility gives it a distinct advantage over more traditional approaches: “We’re going to adjust.”

Follow Us

Five Ways to Make the Most of a Seattle Summer

Five Ways to Make the Most of a Seattle Summer

Rooftop cocktails, rose gardens, waterfront walks, farmers markets, and one very big Seattle Center party.

I have lived in the Pacific Northwest long enough to expect it, and still, late spring catches me by surprise. The mountain returns for the season, suddenly part of the almost-daily view again. The grass isn’t (so) soggy anymore. Dinner can happen outside, and the city gets a little easier to love. Here are five…

Cities Only Work if We Show Up

Cities Only Work if We Show Up

The case for small business, creative density, and why culture is a team effort.

I have always been in love with cities. I joke with friends that I have crushes on cities the way they have crushes on good-looking strangers. Sometimes—as with Paris and London—my unrequited crush meant finding an excuse to move there. With Seattle, however, that initial attraction grew into a long-term relationship. I arrived here as…

Up In Smoke: The Little-Known Story of Seattle’s First Marijuana Initiative

Up In Smoke: The Little-Known Story of Seattle’s First Marijuana Initiative

A 1974 ballot campaign came up short, but helped set the stage for legal weed in Washington.

Like many American cities in the early 1970s, Seattle was once a hotbed of political and civil unrest. This era of discontent officially kicked off on May 5, 1970—one day after the Ohio National Guard shot students at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine. In response, thousands of Seattle-area student protestors shut down…

Trupanion CEO Margi Tooth Leads the Pack

Trupanion CEO Margi Tooth Leads the Pack

As the CEO of the largest pet insurer in the United States understands the importance of collaboration—and building a trusted team.

Growing up on a farm in the United Kingdom, Margi Tooth dreamed of channeling her love for animals into a career as a veterinarian. Although she took a different path—working in market research and business development before moving into the insurance sector—she still ended up with a job that helps animals. Tooth is the CEO…