Kelly Yiadom

Kelly Yiadom

Kelly Yiadom is Westtown’s Lower School Equity & Inclusion Coordinator. She is an educator and a community leader who believes in being solution oriented for impact. For 15 years, she successfully taught middle and upper elementary school and ensured that social-emotional growth was at the forefront of her students’ learning experience. This is what led Kelly to found Family Alliance for Respect and Equity (F.A.R.E.); a parent diversity group within a Delaware County, Pennsylvania School District that focuses on creating diversity awareness and cultural proficiency amongst students, teachers and administrators. She chronicled her experiences, about creating a new normal in educational settings, by delivering a TEDx Talk on Using Parental Superpowers to Drive Diversity in Education. Because of her focus on action for change, she also founded Circle of Giving 2020, which was a direct response to ensuring equity and access to families who have been impacted by the pandemic. Kelly graduated from Swarthmore College, where she received her Bachelor of Arts in English Literature, with a special major in education. She currently serves as the Family Equity and Inclusion Coordinator for Westtown School, has her own education and diversity consulting business, and she is married to her college sweetheart, of 14 years, with whom she has 3 children.

Recent posts by Kelly Yiadom

2 min read

“If You Build It, They Will Come” Creating Spaces Especially For You

By Kelly Yiadom on Apr 8, 2021 3:03:00 PM

“If you build it, they will come,” a popular Field of Dreams movie reference, was a central theme in my upbringing and has remained so in my adulthood. Although this famous quote arose out of a desire for the film’s main character to take a leap of faith in order to revive a bygone era, its essence can certainly apply in a multitude of situations. Never have I understood the importance of “building” something “so they will come” more than I did when I moved to Delaware County, PA. Here, where belonging is insurmountable, a swift realization of my pungent new reality hung above me like a dark cloud. As a Black woman and native New Yorker who was always taught to be bold, bright, and outspoken, I noticed that I was not quite welcome. It was an unspoken “you are not welcome,” but nonetheless an unrelenting truth. Not having a place that is especially for you might be manageable for some. However, my core thrives on connecting with others and community building and is, therefore, a central part of my make-up. 

Topics: ABAR