Chris Player Awarded Inaugural Bondoc Family Fellowship
At an all-school assembly on January 30, Science Faculty, STEM Coordinator, and Innovation Lab Coordinator Chris Player was awarded the newly established Bondoc Family Fellowship in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. The three-year fellowship, established by alumnae Victoria Bondoc โ77 and Josefina Bondoc DeBaere โ75, was created to recognize and support the compensation for a Winsor faculty member who has served the school for between 5 and 20 years. The recipient, as Head of School Meredith Legg Pโ32 said at the assembly, is โa faculty member who embodies what it means to be a Winsor teacher: someone who leads with integrity, inspires students to see possibility in themselves and the world, and sparks excitement for learning, especially in STEM.โ To Mr. Player’s colleagues and the administrators on the selection committee, he represented โthe ideal inaugural recipientโ of the fellowship.
A stalwart of Winsorโs science faculty since 2012, Mr. Player has played a crucial role in shaping the school’s STEM initiatives, โcollaborating with faculty across disciplines to infuse innovation throughout the curriculum,โ said Ms. Legg. โHis leadership and vision have helped define what STEM education at Winsor can be, and his work continues to inspire generations of young women to see themselves as capable, curious thinkers.โ
Head of Upper School Kimberly Ramos describes Mr. Player as โsomeone who is a tinkerer, who probes, who asks questions, who’s constantly recreating curriculum, redesigning projects, working with students and trying to make sure that heโs speaking to their interestsโsomeone who wants students to have a purpose for their work.โ
This sense of purpose infuses Mr. Player’s approach to teaching subjects such as engineering and design. โSome people love science gadgets just because they love science gadgets,โ explains Ms. Ramos, โand he does, but he really loves science gadgets that improve lives.โ She described a year in Mr. Playerโs Engineering class during which the class worked primarily on adaptive technologies, and on helping people using technology. With Mr. Playerโs STEM education mindset, she says, โItโs not just, โCan I make this thing happen?โ Itโs, โHow can I improve the world with this thing?โโ
Denise Labieniec, one of Mr. Playerโs colleagues on Winsorโs science faculty, describes being constantly impressed by his ability to create โexploratory, open-ended learningโ experiences for his students, while imparting valuable ways of thinking along the way. โFor Chris, itโs his principle of operation in the classroom,โ she says. โItโs really amazing, the freedom that kids have in his classrooms to learn through explorationโ while still guiding the experience towards โwork the kids are proud of at the end,โ Ms. Labieniec says. โI think [that environment] is built into the STEM program overall.โ
Ms. Labieniec describes Mr. Playerโs classroom ethos as both richly abstract and interdisciplinaryโa key asset for a faculty member tasked with helping to infuse STEM concepts throughout the Winsor curriculum. In teaching design, Mr. Playerโs approach is to ask, โHow do we take principles of design, physical conceptualizations of form, need, empathy, ethics, and creativity, and address a problem thatโs by its very definition multidisciplinary?โ she says. โWhen he teaches chemistry, itโs the same thing: How do we talk about quantum physics in a way that captures the mechanisms of thinking and the social zeitgeist and everything that was going on at that time?โ
โHe brings this incredible abstractionโ that draws students in and invites them to ask their own questions about the subject.
Both Ms. Ramos and Ms. Labieniec underscore Mr. Playerโs transformational role in guiding Winsor’s STEM curriculum. โIt’s a signature program now because of his innovative thinking and his concept,โ says Ms. Labieniec. Underpinning that curriculum, says Ms. Ramos, is the goal of developing โhabits of thinking.โ She explains, โAn enduring pattern in all of his teaching is that itโs all about helping students to be empowered, and to have the tools to really reason and think through the process.โ Itโs a concept that Mr. Player has worked to infuse throughout Winsorโs STEM offerings.
She points to an early change Mr. Player made to an engineering class he was slated to teachโeven before the STEM curriculum was designedโas an example of this mindset: โHe immediately changed the course title to Engineering Design,โ Ms. Ramos says. Mr. Player wasnโt primarily invested in developing engineers, she explained. However, he felt that โeveryone should be able to understand the design process and how to think like an engineer,โ she says. โHe wants people to pursue the world with that type of thinking.โ
Mr. Player, who is also a musician, has spoken publicly about the connections between jazz improvisation and his own habits of thinking. In a TEDx Talk titled “Free Jazz, Disability, and Wires,” he tells the story of sneaking into a jazz club when he was young and being told by an older musician to always carry his saxophone with himโto always be ready to step on stage and improvise. Ms. Labieniec extends the metaphor: โI think he gives all the kids horns, teaches them how to play them, and expects them to always have them with them, no matter what they’re doing.โ
โLetโs step forward with disregard for what happens, because the risk is worth it,โ Mr. Player says to the audience in his talk, โbecause itโs an adventure, because something special might come about.โ
Congratulations to Mr. Player on receiving the inaugural Bondoc Family Fellowship in recognition of the many special things that have emerged from his endless innovations, his improvisational spirit, and his deep dedication to Winsorโs students.





