Thank you, Peter, and good afternoon, everyone. Today, I will refer to our adjusted results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year, excluding onetime items in the prior year period, unless otherwise indicated. There were no onetime items in fiscal 2023. Please refer to our press release tables and SEC filings for a complete discussion of last year's onetime items. As Peter noted, we finished fiscal 2023 strongly generating record operating income in the fourth quarter. On a full year basis, revenues and profits rose despite headwinds in the retail book selling market, longer selling cycles for instructional materials and higher cost and supply chain pressures. We also increased spending on go-to-market capabilities to support long-term growth in education solutions. Our positive results, in spite of these factors, highlight the company's operating leverage and improved efficiencies achieved since the pandemic, which I'd like to discuss before turning to financial results. Over the last 36 months, triggered by the pandemics impact on our business and customers, we have worked and invested to transform key components of Scholastic supply chain, operations, logistics and go-to-market capabilities. As a result, these functions are vastly more resilient, more agile and more efficient today. As Peter just described, we also have additional opportunities that we are pursuing in fiscal 2024. Greater efficiencies in areas we control have partially offset higher costs in other areas, especially paper, manufacturing, shipping and freight. They have also helped preserve the strong variable margins and operating leverage inherent in our businesses as we saw in Book Fairs and in education solutions. Like Peter, I am proud of our team for the hard work and look forward to continuing our progress in the upcoming fiscal year and beyond. Turning to our consolidated financial results. The fourth quarter revenues rose 3% to $528.3 million. Operating income of $92 million was up $25.9 million from the prior year period. Net income was $75.7 million compared to $61.2 million in the prior year period, and adjusted EBITDA increased to $115 million from $88.5 million in the prior year period. Earnings per diluted share was $2.26 compared to $1.72 last year. For the full year, revenues increased 4% to $1.7 billion. Operating income was up 9% to $106.3 million. Net income was $86.3 million, up from $85.1 million in the prior year period, and adjusted EBITDA increased to $196.3 million from $188.9 million in fiscal 2022. Full year earnings per diluted share were $2.49, up 5% from $2.38 in the prior year period. Now turning to our segment results. In Children's Book Publishing and Distribution, revenues for the fourth quarter rose 5% to $291 million, and were up 10% to over $1 billion in the full fiscal year. Q4 segment operating income was up $11.6 million from the prior year period to $58.4 million. For fiscal 2023, operating income for the Children's Book Publishing segment increased $28.1 million to $143.4 million from fiscal 2022. Strong segment performance in the fourth quarter and fiscal year was primarily driven by school book fairs, which continued to achieve impressive growth and profitability in fiscal 2023, driven by a focus on our customers, strong execution and more efficient operations. Book fairs revenues rose 12% in Q4 to $180.5 million and 29% for the full year to $553.1 million, an all-time high. Participation at our in-person book fairs remains strong and fair count reached approximately 85% pre-pandemic levels, up from 72% in fiscal 2022. Book Club's revenues in the fourth quarter of $26.2 million were down versus the prior year period revenues of $27.2 million. Full year revenues of $117.8 million trailed the prior year revenues of $126.4 million. While Book Clubs revenues continue to trend lower, mainly due to lower revenue per order and lower participation by hard prestiges, clubs remains a vital component of the company's outreach to teachers and students and of our integrated school reading event strategy. Trade revenues in the fourth quarter were $84.3 million, trailing prior year period revenues of $88.5 million. Full year revenues in trade were $367.1 million versus $390.4 million a year ago. The current quarter benefited from the release of the 11 title and Dav Pilkey's Dog Man series as well as strong sales of Hunger Games and Harry Potter titles. Trade sales, however, continued to be impacted by headwinds in the retail book selling market, as Peter discussed. Education Solutions finished the year with a strong fourth quarter. Segment revenues were up 4% to $163.4 million, largely due to strength in scholastic summer reading programs and state-sponsored programs. These results partly offset earlier quarters, reflecting both slower selling cycles this year and shifting seasonality in the business. Full year segment revenues of $386.6 million were down only 2% from the prior year period. In the fourth quarter, operating leverage on higher sales and lower marketing costs, primarily related to sponsored programs, which seasonally incur higher marketing during the early months of the program, benefited segment results. Operating income rose 20% to $55 million in Q4 compared to the prior year period. Full year segment operating income of $58.4 million, however, trailed $81.8 million in the prior period, reflecting higher organic investments and go-to-market capabilities to support our long-term growth strategy in this business. As discussed on previous calls, we also recorded approximately $3 million in expenses related to the acquisition and integration and learning innovations, which was not anticipated in our original plan. International segment revenues of $73.9 million in the fourth quarter trailed the prior year period revenues of $80.4 million, reflecting a $4.7 million year-over-year impact of unfavorable foreign currency exchange and lower revenues of $4.4 million due to the successful Q1 disposition and direct sales business in Asia. Excluding these factors, International revenues rose 3% or $2.6 million, reflecting higher revenues from book fairs in the U.K. and Canada and modest recovery of results in Asia. Segment operating income increased 16% to $2.2 million as the segment benefited from the recovery in Asia, as well as the exit from direct sales business, which generated losses in the prior year period. For the full year, International segment revenues of $279.4 million were down from the prior year's revenues of $302.8 million, reflecting a $23 million negative impact of foreign exchange and the exit of the direct sales business. Excluding these factors, segment revenues rose approximately 5% in fiscal 2023. For the full year, the International segment reported an operating loss of $3.6 million versus operating income of $5 million in the prior year, primarily reflecting costs and operating pressures in Canada. Unallocated overhead costs of $23.6 million in the fourth quarter declined from $28.4 million in the prior period. For full year unallocated overhead costs of $91.9 million were also lower than the prior year's $104.6 million. I'm pleased to report that we have signed several new tenants at our own headquarters building in SoHo, including Capital One this spring and now have rented all of our first floor retail space. The lease terms with our tenants typically range from 10 to 15 years. We're currently marketing floors two through four, which are available for lease. As we now disclosed in our filings with the SEC, we recognized rental income of $7.1 million in fiscal 2023. On the approximately 26,600 square feet leased as of today, we expect annualized straight-line rental income to total approximately $10.6 million. Now turning to cash flow and the balance sheet. For the full year, net cash provided by operating activities was $148.9 million compared to $226 million in the prior period, largely reflecting higher inventory purchases this year. As the company replenished inventory levels post pandemic to meet demand and mitigate shipping delays and by lower net refunds from income taxes of $51.3 million relative to the prior year. These factors were partially offset by higher customer remittances on receivable balances in fiscal 2023 of approximately $62.6 million, reflecting the current year's strong sales. We have seen dramatic reductions in overseas lead times for inventory purchases and along with the return to pre-pandemic inbound freight costs. Accordingly, we expect to manage inventory purchases substantially closer to our demand cycle in fiscal 2024. Free cash flow of $60 million in fiscal 2023 compared to $182.8 million in the prior year period reflects lower cash from operations, as well as $88.9 million in CapEx and prepublication spending on new products and growth initiatives compared to $59.2 million in fiscal 2022. At the end of the fiscal year, cash and cash equivalents, net of total debt was $218.5 million compared to $310.1 million at the end of the prior year period. In addition to increasing growth investments, we accelerated capital returns to shareholders in fiscal 2023 through a tender offer and open market share repurchases. Together with our regular dividend, we returned over $160 million in fiscal year 2023, including $63 million in this past quarter. In total, we repurchased 3.3 million shares last year, which, net of 800,000 shares issued related to stock compensation represents 7% of the company's outstanding shares. As we look ahead, we'll continue to pursue opportunities to leverage our balance sheet and deploy capital by: First, investing in growth opportunities; second, maintaining a strong and efficient balance sheet; and third, returning excess cash to shareholders to enhance their returns. Our priority in fiscal 2024 is protecting margins and sustaining growth as we execute on long-term growth and shareholder value creation strategy that Peter has described. In fiscal 2024, we expect revenue growth of 3% to 5% and are targeting adjusted EBITDA of $190 million to $200 million. This excludes the impact of onetime charges related to restructuring and cost saving activities of approximately $7 million to $10 million, as Peter has already discussed, which we expect in the first and second quarters. In Children's Books, we expect growth in book fairs with fair counts increasing to approximately 90% of pre-pandemic levels. As a reminder, we do not see a return to 100% of in-person book fairs held before the pandemic as many of these fares were not profitable. We also expect revenue per fair to continue to modestly grow on continued strong participation in customer-centric strategies. In trade, front and backlist sales should continue to be solid, as Peter described. These positive factors are expected to be partially offset by lower revenues in book clubs as we shrink the business to a profitable core and in Scholastic Entertainment, which is recorded in consolidated trade due to the timing of production revenues. Operating income and margin should rise modestly for the year. In Education Solutions, revenues are expected to be up modestly, driven in part by continued growth in state-sponsored programs in the latter half of the year. We will continue to invest in new products and capabilities to grow our blended literacy solutions as demonstrated by our recent launch of Ready for Reading. We expect the International segment will benefit from continued recovery in major markets and in Asia as well as the reorganization in Canada, generating modest top line growth and a lower operating loss. We remain committed to returning our international business to profitability in the coming years. We expect unallocated overhead costs to increase modestly next year as we continue to invest in improving efficiencies and building capabilities to support long-term growth. As a reminder, Scholastic's results are highly seasonal. We generally record an operating loss in our first and third quarters, coinciding with summer and winter school vacations were profitable second and fourth quarters. Year-over-year, we expect our first quarter seasonal loss to grow. We are looking forward to an exciting and busy year ahead. Thank you for your time today. I will now hand the call back to Peter for his final remarks.