Character Building School Assembly in New Hampshire | BMX Freestylers Dream Team

Character Building School Assembly in New Hampshire

character building school assembly New Hampshire BMX Freestylers Dream Team delivers character building school assemblies in New Hampshire for K-8 students. Six Pillars of Character framework. Aligned to New Hampshire NH DOE SEL competencies. Phone (657) 345-4603.

EST. MCMXCI · The New Hampshire Edition · A Character Building School Assembly · ★★★★★ 287 Reviews
New Hampshire · K-8 Assembly · Est. 1991

character building school assembly New Hampshire On Building good & true things.

New Hampshire schools have, for generations, asked the same question of every guest brought before their students: what will the children carry home? Our character building school assembly answers in forty minutes — six pillars, one ramp, and a story the Granite State's K-8 students do not forget by Monday.

Character building school assembly performer with New Hampshire K-8 students
The Dream Team, on tour — New Hampshire, 2026.
Chapter One

The Six Pillars of Character.

A framework of six virtues, illustrated through stunts and stories, Our character building school assembly new hampshire services ensure taught to every K-8 student who attends a New Hampshire assembly.

I
T

Trustworthiness

Promises kept, words honoured, ramps that hold. Students see what it means to be counted on — by teachers, by friends, by oneself.

II
R

Respect

The riders model it on stage, with each other and with the audience. The students take it home — to classmates, parents, and the school's quietest corners.

III
R

Responsibility

The story of practice, falls, getting up. Owning the outcome — in the classroom, on the field, in the kitchen — becomes more than just a lesson.

IV
F

Fairness

The judging panel, the rules of the line, the moment of inviting a quieter classmate forward. Fair play — illustrated and named, plainly.

V
C

Caring

The pause to check on the kid in the corner. The handshake after the show. Caring — in deed, before word, before sentiment.

VI
C

Citizenship

The student as part of a school, a town, a New Hampshire. Citizenship — the quiet duty of being a good neighbour to the school down the road.

Chapter Two · The Curriculum

Why forty minutes changes a school year.

— A note from the founder, on three and a half decades of New Hampshire assemblies.

The New Hampshire schoolhouse is among the oldest institutions in the Republic. Manchester Latin, founded in 1635. Nashua's classical academies. The Dover schools that read aloud from Emerson. There is a weight to these halls — a weight one feels the moment one rolls a ramp into a cafeteria and the principal welcomes you in.

That weight is the reason every character building school assembly in New Hampshire must be more than entertainment. The Granite State expects substance. Its administrators read carefully, its parents read more carefully still, and its students — for all the noise — are listening.

The forty-minute assembly is not a substitute for a year of character education; it is a hinge. A single hour, in which the language of trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring, and citizenship is given a face, a story, and a ramp. The classroom returns to those words the next morning, and the words mean something.

The riders are professionals — background-checked, insured, and trained to read a K-8 audience. The ramps are X Games-grade. The sound system is concert-quality. But the unseen craft is the curriculum: the moment the show pauses, the rider looks at five hundred children, and asks them to think about the friend they have not yet thanked.

For three and a half decades, we have toured New Hampshire. Manchester to White Mountains, Cape to North Shore, Concord to Newburyport. We are honoured to return each year, and most of all, to be invited to the same gymnasiums and blacktops by the same principals — the surest sign that the work travels with the students into the classroom, and from there, into the home.


Chapter Two and a Half · The Leadership

The two men behind the show.

Dennis Langlais, founder of BMX Freestylers Dream Team
Dennis Langlais
Founder · Customer Care · 1991

Loaded the first quarterpipe into a van and drove to a Southern California elementary school. Has not stopped touring since.

Dustin McCarty, team manager of BMX Freestylers Dream Team
Dustin McCarty
Team Manager · Lead Performer

Coordinates the riders, the ramps, and the calendar. The first call every New Hampshire principal makes.

Chapter Three · The Tour

Touring the Granite State.

— Every New Hampshire county, year-round.

Manchester Nashua Concord Dover Rochester Keene Merrimack Derry Salem Hudson Portsmouth Londonderry

"The most thoughtful character assembly we have hosted in fifteen years. The students were still quoting the six pillars in advisory the following Monday."

Principal · K-8 Elementary Greater Manchester, New Hampshire · Booked three years running
Chapter Four · Inquiries

The Most-Asked Questions.

i.

What character traits does the assembly cover?

The six pillars: trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring, and citizenship. Each is illustrated with a stunt, a story, and a moment of pause where the students reflect on its meaning in their own classrooms and homes.

ii.

Does the assembly align with New Hampshire SEL standards?

Yes. Built around the New Hampshire DOE Social and Emotional Learning standards and the CharacterCounts framework adopted in many NH districts. We can provide documentation for your school's records.

iii.

How long does the program run?

Forty minutes of show, fifteen minutes of setup, and fifteen of breakdown — about seventy minutes on site, total.

iv.

What audience size do you accommodate?

Up to six hundred students per show. Larger New Hampshire schools split grades into back-to-back assemblies, so every student is given a seat at the front.

v.

What about New Hampshire weather?

The New Hampshire's weather is familiar to us. A gym or cafeteria is a fine indoor backup. Rescheduling within the same district is, by tradition, on us — no fee, no fuss.

vi.

Do you accept New Hampshire school purchase orders?

We do. Our office works seamlessly with NH school business offices on purchase orders, invoices, and contracts. A name and a phone number, and we handle the rest.

Chapter Four and a Half · Particulars

Show pricing & the answers.

Professional BMX school assemblies since 1891 in spirit, 1991 in fact — clear pricing, honest answers, zero surprises.

30+
Years
5,000+
Schools
80%
Re-book
100%
Insured
Chapter Five · The Reservation

Reserve A date.

The New Hampshire calendar is open year-round. Bookings may be held without commitment until the date is confirmed by your school business office.