Thank you, Peter, and good afternoon, everyone. Today, I will refer to our adjusted results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year, excluding one-time items, unless otherwise indicated. Please refer to our press release tables and SEC filings for a complete discussion of one-time items. As Peter noted, a more challenging market for our Education and Book Fair businesses caused Q4 performance to fall below our prior-year period and below our revised guidance. Widespread adoptions of ELA core curricula and the continued shift of science-based approaches for literacy instructions impacted spending on supplemental materials while increasing softness in customer spending impacted revenues per fair in Book Fairs. While steps were taken to preserve operating margins, we maintained spending on key initiatives including new structured literacy programs which we expect to launch in the 2025-2026 school years. In Book Fairs, we successfully added new fairs, but due to the strong operating leverage in this business, operating margins were negatively impacted by lower average revenue per fair. In response to these headwinds, we tightly managed inventory and cash, contributing to favorable free cash flow. Despite these challenges, trade channels in US and UK performed well due to a strong publishing pipeline and we resized our US Book Clubs business as we tested new offerings to profitably grow this channel in future periods. Internationally, our Canadian operations continue to benefit from restructuring activities in prior periods. Turning to our consolidated financial results, in the fourth quarter, relative to prior year, revenues decreased 10% to $474.9 million, reflecting the market headwinds I just described. Operating income of $66.8 million was down $25.2 million. Net income was $50.5 million compared to $75.7 million in the prior-year period, and earnings per diluted share were $1.73 compared to $2.26. This reflected in lower net income partially offset by the benefit of significant share repurchases, which lowered diluted share count to 29.2 million from 33.5 million a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA decreased to $91 million from $115 million in the prior year period. For the full year, revenues decreased 7% to $1.6 billion. Operating income decreased 58% to $44.7 million. Net income was $34.6 million, down from $86.3 million in a prior-year period. And adjusted EBITDA decreased to $136.9 million from $196.3 million in fiscal 2023. Full year earnings per diluted share were $1.14, down 54% from $2.49 in the prior-year period. Now, turning to our segment results. In Children's Book Publishing and Distribution, revenues for the fourth quarter decreased 9% to $266 million, driven by resizing of Book Clubs, lower revenue per fair in Book Fairs, and timing-related revenue in Scholastic Entertainment, partially offset by increased sales and trade. Revenues were down 8% to $955.2 million for the full fiscal year. Segment operating income was down $8.5 million from the prior-year period to $49.9 million, primarily reflecting the high operating leverage impact of lower revenue per fair. For the full fiscal year, operating income for the Children's Book segment decreased $21.5 million to $121.9 million. Book Fair revenues decreased 6% in the fourth quarter to $169.5 million and 2% for the full year to $541.6 million. Although fair count increased, revenue per fair was lower than prior year record levels, though well ahead of pre-pandemic levels on lower transaction volumes. Merchandising efforts resulted in higher transaction sizes, partially offsetting the spending headwinds that impacted participation, as discussed by Peter. Book Clubs' revenue in the fourth quarter of $14.4 million were down versus the prior-year period revenues of $26.2 million. Full year revenues of $62.7 million trailed the prior-year revenues of $117.8 million. As Book Clubs is resized to a smaller and more profitable business, efforts are underway to test various offerings to improve teacher engagement. Excluding Scholastic Entertainment revenues, which are also recorded in consolidated trade, channel trade revenue in the fourth quarter increased to $81.6 million compared to prior-year revenues of $79.3 million. Full year revenues were $349 million, in line with $348.1 million in the prior year. Despite a difficult retail market, the company's best-selling publishing continues to resonate with customers. Scholastic Entertainment revenues decreased due to the prior-year release of Eva the Owlet TV series. Beginning in fiscal 2025, Scholastic Entertainment will be combined with 9 Story Media Group in a new segment for the company. Excluding the impact from resizing Book Clubs and timing of Scholastic Entertainment release dates, the revenues in the segment decreased 3% in the fourth quarter and 1% for the full year. In Education, Q4 revenues were $135.7 million, down 17% from prior-year period, and for the full year, revenues were $351.2 million, down 9% when compared to 2023. As we discussed, the challenging market for supplemental literacy curriculum as well as increasing competition impacted sales for key product lines including classroom libraries and summer reading collections. This was partly offset by the growth in our sales to non-school state and community literacy partners, which we see as a strategic growth opportunity. Segment operating income decreased $19.4 million to $35.6 million in Q4 compared to the prior-year period. Full year segment operating income decreased to $21.9 million compared to $58.4 million in the prior-year period. Lower revenues coupled with continued investment in future product offerings resulted in lower operating margins. The International segment revenues of $70.8 million in the fourth quarter trailed prior-year period revenues of $73.9 million, partly reflecting $400,000 year-over-year impact of unfavorable foreign currency exchange. For the full year, International segment revenues of $273.6 million were down from the prior-year's revenue of $279.4 million. Year-over-year, the foreign exchange had a negative $1.1 million impact. The decrease in revenues was primarily due to lower sales in the Asia and Australia trade channels due to softness in the retail market. This was partially offset in the UK where the Company's popular global titles performed well. The segment operating income in the fourth quarter decreased to $1.8 million compared to $2.2 million in the prior period. For fiscal 2024, segment operating loss was $3.1 million compared to a loss of $3.6 million in the prior year. Unallocated overhead costs were $20.5 million in the fourth quarter, improving from $23.6 million in the prior period, reflecting lower employee-related costs. For the full year, unallocated overhead costs of $96 million were 4% higher when compared to the prior year of $91.9 million. The year-over-year increase was primarily related to inflationary impact on overhead costs. Now, turning to cash flow and the balance sheet. For the full year, net cash provided by operating activities was $154.6 million compared to $148.9 million in the prior year. Free cash flow increased to $73.4 million in fiscal 2024 compared to $60 million in the prior-year period. Improvements in cash flow were largely driven by lower inventory purchases, partially offset by lower customer remittance on decreased sales. At the end of the fiscal year, cash and cash equivalents, net of total debt, was $107.7 million, compared to $218.5 million at the end of the prior year. In fiscal 2024, the company continued executing its strategies to deploy capital, including returning excess cash to shareholders. Open market share repurchases combined with regular dividend returned over $181 million to shareholders in the fiscal year 2024, including nearly $20 million in the quarter. This represents a $21 million increase over fiscal 2023. In total, we repurchased over 3.9 million shares, which net of 500,000 shares issued related to stock compensation, represented 11% of company shares outstanding. Over the past two fiscal years, we repurchased 7.3 million shares, which net of 1.3 million shares issued for stock compensation, represented 18% of the company's shares outstanding. As we began fiscal 2025, the company borrowed approximately $200 million under its existing revolving credit facility to complete the 9 Story Media transaction and meet the seasonal summertime working capital needs of the organization. We are currently in the process of securing a more permanent debt facility to fund the acquisition. Based on budgeted growth investments and current forecast working capital needs, including inventory purchasing and lower expected earnings, our current outlook for free cash flow is $20 million to $30 million. We will 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. As discussed, beginning in fiscal 2025, we will be adding a new Entertainment segment, which will consolidate results from the company's existing Scholastic Entertainment division reported historically in the Children's Books segment with the newly added 9 Story Media Group. The current slide as well as tables in the earnings press release provide historic results for both Scholastic Entertainment and 9 Story. As Peter just discussed, both businesses' results benefited in fiscal 2022 and 2023 from high levels of spending on new productions by major streaming platforms. This retracted in 2024 with fewer productions being greenlit and is expected to remain under pressure for the next 12 to 18 months. While this has impacted all players in the industry, 9 Story has been able to outperform peers on the strength of its premium reputation, IP, and partnerships, much like Scholastic Entertainment has. In fiscal 2025, we expect solid growth in segment adjusted EBITDA as we execute on the Company-wide synergies and franchise plans which should benefit this segment and Children's Books results in fiscal 2026 and beyond. In fiscal 2025, our priority is to continue executing our strategic growth initiatives, including the integration of 9 Story, while navigating continued headwinds in our Education Solutions segment, resuming modest growth in Children's Books and tightly managing short-term spending. Based on this plan, we expect revenue growth from 4% to 6%, and targeting adjusted EBITDA of $140 million to $150 million. In the Children's Books segment, we have a very exciting publishing plan bidding on our global franchises. In Book Fairs, we expect modest growth on increased fair count and new merchandising and sales initiatives. We will continue to explore strategies in Book Clubs to increase teacher engagement. In our new integrated Entertainment segment, we expect to benefit from the addition of 9 Story in its strong franchises and partnerships as we execute on our strategic strategies, which we anticipate driving further growth in 2026 and beyond. We expect 9 Story to contribute over $80 million in revenue with solid EBITDA in fiscal 2025. In the Education Solutions segment, we expect sales to hold steady despite soft spending on supplemental offerings offset by forthcoming new product launches slated for the 2025-2026 school year. Our primary focus remains on expanding initiatives aimed at securing new funding sources to tackle the prevalent reading challenges nationwide. We expect unallocated overhead costs to remain approximately level next year as we continue to improve efficiencies and build capabilities to support long-term growth. As a reminder, Scholastic results are highly seasonal. We generally record an operating loss in our first and third quarters, coinciding with summer and winter school vacations, with profitable second and fourth quarters. We expect our seasonal loss in Q1 of fiscal 2025 to be in line with prior period. We are looking forward to an exciting and busy year ahead. Thank you for your time today, and now I will hand the call back to Peter for his final remarks.