Tang Institute
180 Main St
Andover, MA 01810
978.749.4246
email@tanginstitute.edu
Currie Family Director of the Tang Institute; Instructor and Chair in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
Andy Housiaux
Currie Family Director of the Tang Institute; Instructor and Chair in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
Andy Housiaux is the Currie Family Director of the Tang Institute, as well as an instructor and chair in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies. He holds a master’s degree from Harvard Divinity School and a bachelor’s degree from Columbia University. Since joining the faculty in 2007, Housiaux has authored several articles and case studies on pedagogy, assessment, and inclusion.
Before assuming the role of Currie Family Director, Housiaux served as a Tang Fellow on his project, Mindful Community. His aspirations for the Institute are guided by a set of questions: “How might we create ongoing and trusting communities of inquiry? How might we learn from each other and the wisdom of fellow educators, wherever they may be? What, in current educational thinking, will best support our diverse student body and enable us to more fully live up to the promises of non sibi and youth from every quarter?”
Precourt Director of Partnerships
Eric Roland
Precourt Director of Partnerships
Eric Roland serves as the Director of Partnerships for the Tang Institute of Phillips Academy. In addition to his work with the Institute and external engagement work on behalf of the Academy, Roland leads the school’s Career Development Program and helps design and develop global and experiential education programming. Prior to joining the Institute, he served as associate director of the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders community and participated in the Forum’s Global Leadership Fellows program. Previously, he worked with the Inter-American Development Bank as a social sector research fellow.
Roland served as a teacher of religion at Notre Dame Catholic High School (Fairfield, Conn.), evaluated a Central American civic education program with the Academy for Educational Development, and worked on innovative federal government projects as a consultant with Accenture. He was a Fulbright Scholar in Montevideo, Uruguay, where he carried out research on regional economic integration and education policy in South America. Roland earned a bachelor’s degree in international studies from Fairfield University and a master’s degree in international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
Instructor in the Department of English; Senior Fellow in Engaged Pedagogy
Corrie Martin
Instructor in the Department of English; Senior Fellow in Engaged Pedagogy
Corrie Martin began teaching English at Phillips Academy in 2017 and, in 2019, she joined the Tang Institute as the Senior Fellow in Engaged Pedagogy. In addition, she serves as the CAMD Scholars Program Coordinator. As a literature and writing instructor, she is motivated by Rebecca Solnit's words: “The revolt against brutality begins with a revolt against the language that hides brutality.”
Tatelbaum Visiting Scholar in Ethics and Creating
Ryan Ravanpak
Tatelbaum Visiting Scholar in Ethics and Creating
Ryan Ravanpak is currently the Tatelbaum Scholar in Ethics and Creating at the Tang Institute and a research affiliate at MIT in the Department of Philosophy. He received his PhD at MIT in normative and applied ethics. Previously, he has held positions in the MIT Teaching + Learning Lab, the MIT Department of New Engineering Transformation, and the MIT Department of Experiential Learning. During the past year, he has also been involved with projects at Duke University and Northeastern University.
Senior Writer & Editor
Kristin Bair O’Keeffe
Senior Writer & Editor
Administrative Assistant
Dianne Fields
Administrative Assistant
Project Manager
Ryan Clinesmith
Project Manager
Ryan Clinesmith joined Phillips Academy in 2023 as a project coordinator at the Tang Institute. Before joining the Institute, Clinesmith was the assistant head of school, co-director of the Lower School, and poet and writer in residence at an independent school in New York City where he founded the Global Poetry Consortium. In 2024, Clinesmith will complete his Ed.M. in education leadership from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
At HGSE, Ryan worked for the HarvardEd Portal leading undergraduates in after school lessons at the Gardner Pilot Academy. At Making Caring Common, also at HGSE, he drove analytics, marketing, and partnerships for the non-profit’s School Based Initiatives. Ryan was also the administrative editor in chief at the Harvard Graduate School of Education’s student run publication The Appian Way. His education-related publication credits include the “CultureRX Field Guide” and HundrED’s “Implement at Scale: An Agenda for Education Innovation Implementation Research.”
As a poet, Ryan’s manuscript Epilogue to Paradise was a finalist for the Letras Latinas-ILS/ND- Andres Montoya Poetry Prize and long-listed for the C&R Press 2022 Award. His poems can be found online and in print. Ryan has eleven years of English teaching experience, using his artistic practice and teacher training to lead interdisciplinary and multimodal initiatives throughout New York and Massachusetts. Within schools, Ryan is an advocate for student’s self-direction as a matter of meaning, purpose, and wellbeing.
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