Sarah Smith still recalls the day that changed her life. It was in the fall of 1987, and Sarah, a scholarship boarding school student at Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, was taking an ethics and justice class taught by a twenty-four-year-old rookie teacher named Julie Duff. They were reading the work of Jonathan Kozol, an author who spent decades chronicling the deep disparities in educational opportunities available to children in the United States.
“(Kozol) was basically challenging the reader,” Sarah said. “In our society, we say education is the great equalizer, the opportunity for social mobility through which anyone can get anywhere. But if offered such vastly different educational options and opportunities based on zip codes or birthrights, how does that work out? And what can we do to ensure that education can be that gamechanger for everyone?”
Sarah, just seventeen years old at the time, looked out the class window, viewing the ivy-coated brick walls of Exeter and pondered the profound and challenging words of Kozol—and the idea that education could be a powerful lever for change and a meaningful professional choice.
“I looked out on campus, and thought, ‘This is one of the most elite high schools in America,’” Sarah said. “Countless resources are being invested in me and my classmates here, and that is not the case for students in other communities. At that moment, I began to envision a career that was rooted in creating greater access to high-caliber, high-quality educational opportunities like this one.”
Flash forward to 2025, and Sarah is entering a significant new chapter in her educational journey as the tenth Head of School at The Bush School. Echoing the aspirations she held years ago at Exeter, she remains steadfast in her vision: to expand access to transformative educational experiences and to lead with a deep commitment to academic excellence and equity.
“I love the work we’ve done to be a more racially and ethnically diverse community, and I want to see us do even more work to merge that with socioeconomic diversity,” she said, highlighting efforts during her tenure as Bush’s Assistant Head of School for Academics. “I have a very clear goal of wanting to increase the percentage of students on financial aid and having Bush be a place where any qualified kid who wants to come learn here, grow here, and commit to the values of our community—that finances would not be a barrier to that.”
Born and raised in Virginia, Sarah, the youngest of three, grew up in a very service-oriented family. Her dad was an Episcopal clergyman, and both of her parents were deeply involved in the civil rights movement. From a young age, the ideals were instilled in her to be of service in the world, to care and be kind, to work hard for what you want, and to have a sense of community and responsibility to others.
“My parents were real role models for me around how important it was to constantly be working for a more just, compassionate and equal society,” she said.
Spending her childhood years in Leesburg, Virginia, academics and athletics became two of Sarah’s mainstays. Her earliest memories were chasing her sister and brother in the field by their home and honing the game of soccer at four-and-a-half years old. In the classroom, history became her favorite subject. She recalls the public schools of Loudoun County providing her with lessons on how to think as opposed to what to think.
“(Between) discussions in the classroom and at the dinner table at home, I really learned the ability to listen deeply, consider all perspectives, think about the ‘middle ground’, and the importance of knowing your own core beliefs and core values,” Sarah said.
At age sixteen, Sarah earned a full scholarship to Exeter, where she spent her last two years of high school. Exeter was where her professional educational dream took flight.
“It was there it finally dawned on me how impactful teachers were in this world,” Sarah said. “Almost every adult I was working with there, I really learned from. They also appeared to love what they were doing, and held a sense of purpose in their work. To play that kind of role in the lives of young people through education became an aspiration of mine from that time forward.”
Sarah attended the University of Virginia, where she studied American history and was on the crew team. In 1992 she headed out west with a friend and never looked back. Seattle is also where she met her partner, Katie Hester. They’ve been married for twenty-five years and have two children together: Benjamin Hester ’25, and Lucy S., a rising sophomore at Garfield High School.
“Our first date was a coffee-tea conversation at Pike Place Market over the holidays. We’ve got a nice balance,” Sarah said of her relationship with Katie. “She’s the cook; I’m the dishwasher. She’s the math and science tutor in the house; I’m the humanities tutor. She’s a little more introverted but very present and connected to people, and she definitely keeps me and our entire family grounded.”
Sarah explained that becoming a parent with Katie has expanded her world in a multitude of ways and allowed her a wider lens into the important partnerships with parents in her professional life.
“Having kids fundamentally changed how I approached working with parents of students, because I understood in a much deeper and different way what was happening to their heart,” Sarah said. “It developed in me a profound empathy for how scary it can be when our kids are struggling, for how concerned you become if something troubling is happening to your child. Whenever I’m in a tough situation navigating kids and families, I try to put myself in those parents’ shoes.”
Following a few years in nonprofit youth work, Sarah earned a masters in education from Stanford University in 1996 and spent a number of years in Seattle Public Schools teaching history, English, and coaching soccer before she had a unique opportunity to get in on the ground floor of the founding team of a startup educational endeavor called Rainier Scholars, an organization with a mission to cultivate the academic and leadership potential of underrepresented Students of Color. Serving in many roles there over two decades, her time as the executive director of Rainier Scholars especially harnessed Sarah’s leadership skills.
Sarah explained that after twenty years at Rainier Scholars, her first role at Bush as Assistant Head of School for Academics was another serendipitous moment. As a longtime partner with Bush through Rainier Scholars and also a parent of Bush students, she believed deeply in Bush’s mission, hands-on academic approach, and commitment to being a different kind of independent school.
“I came to Bush for three reasons: really respecting the academic excellence as well as the work and vision in the previous decade of diversifying the student body and becoming who Bush is today; the Methow Campus and the tremendous opportunity to develop a unique program there; and third, the opportunity to work alongside Percy.”
Self-described as intense but also someone who relaxes and can “chill with the best of them”, Sarah loves a good chocolate chip cookie, watching her kids compete on the track and the soccer field, pouring through a good book or podcast, waking up to a sunrise on a mountaintop pass and surfing the highs and lows that life brings.
“I love to laugh,” she said. “What you see is what you get; there’s not a lot of pretense. I’m authentically interested in the experience and perspective of others. And I believe that we need to support one another in order to thrive.”
A lifelong learner, Sarah’s love for the school and curiosity about what could still be possible at Bush drew her into the Head of School role, envisioning how she could become part of the growth of Bush in the next one hundred years and instilling her passion for education into others.
“I am excited to lead us into this next century with an emphasis on bolstering our science, math, and technology offerings while maintaining a deep commitment to the experiential-based excellence in programming we have been known for in the humanities,” Sarah said. “The role of artificial intelligence (AI) in education is crucial for us to address in our next strategic plan, as is a vision for how we can best commit to being a force for good in our larger community while inspiring a commitment to service in our students. At the heart of it all, I am excited about the opportunity to steward The Bush School as we continue to evolve and grow into the finest version of ourselves, which is what we want for every student, family, faculty and staff member who enters our doors.”
“She’s just a beautiful educator,” Dr. Abram said. “I know when people see her in the full version of her leadership, they are going to fall in love with her the way she’s fallen in love with The Bush School.”