Each year, new students and faculty sign the Honor Code and pledge their dedication to academic and personal integrity.
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Living with Honor: How Hutchison’s Honor Code Builds Community
At Hutchison, honor isn’t about being perfect; it’s about choosing integrity, growing through challenges, and striving to be your best self.
Honor Council leaders, Kennon Humphreys ’26 and Scottie Arnold ’26, aim to live by the standards of the Honor Code each day. At Hutchison, the Honor Code is the foundation of a culture built on trust, respect, and safety. Humphreys, who serves as Honor Council president this school year, said having an Honor Code and watching girls live it out daily offers a mindset of feeling safe and a positive sense of self.
“The Honor Code unites us as a strong community built on trust and honesty, which makes it easier for the teachers and administrators. They know that all of us are upholding a high standard, but also that the standard isn’t perfection,” Kennon said.
Each year, new students and faculty sign the Honor Code and pledge their dedication to academic and personal integrity. “Since everybody trusts each other, I can leave my backpack in the atrium. I do this all the time. It is kind of like an oasis here. I can trust that nobody’s going to take it,” Honor Council vice president Scottie Arnold said. “Everyone trusts each other to do the right thing and makes everybody a better person for their next community, like college or their career.”
“Everybody makes mistakes, but I think the important thing is to learn from them and then move on and apply that skill later in life.”
Carly Gubin ’12 played tennis at Hutchison and learned the importance of being part of a team. As a dentist, she relies on a team when caring for patients.
When our girls come together to serve, amazing things happen. During their service retreat, our 10th graders built strong bonds while making a positive impact across Memphis.
For her myExperience capstone project, Maya Pentecost ’26 adapted Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death” into a one-act dark comedy. She wrote the script, designed the production, and collaborated with a cast and crew of Hutchison students and faculty in our arts program and the Institute for Responsible Citizenship to bring it to life.
Hutchison Now highlights recent graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Morgan Murdock, a senior project manager at W&A Engineering in Atlanta.
Through hands-on experiments and collaborations with the Design Lab and Dobbs Farm, teacher Christine Groves is helping our girls in junior kindergarten through fourth grade grow their curiosity, critical thinking, and resiliency.
Through the performing arts, Hutchison inspires girls to become strong communicators, creative thinkers, and compassionate leaders in every part of their lives.
Four rising seniors participated in high-intensity summer programs in subjects including international studies, technological innovation and business, education, and visual arts.
Hutchison Now highlights recent graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Dorothy Oehmler, who works for Mischief Comedy in London.
Rising juniors who are part of four myExperience cohorts in Hutchison’s Institute for Responsible Citizenship – global civic engagement, entrepreneurship, STEM, and art and design – explored their respective fields of study on a trip to Miami.