Thank you, Christina. I want to talk now about the execution commitments we made for fiscal 2023 and how we’re doing against them at the end of Q1. You recall that we laid out eight commitments at the start of the year foreign research and foreign education. But before I go over these, I want to spend a few moments on a recent development in U.S. science research policy. Two weeks ago, the U.S. Office of Science and Technology Policy, which is a department within the White House issued guidance that calls for U.S. Federal agencies to ensure that all new federally funded research is open and freely available starting in 2026, if fully enacted the implication would be that all U.S. federally funded research published by Wiley and others from that day forward would need to reside outside of a subscription payoff. While we were surprised by the timing of this statement and are still evaluating its implications, we are not at all unprepared, simply stated the new guidance is fully aligned with our stated strategy and mission, and is supported by the strong momentum that we have in open Research Publishing. We’ve been working for years with the OSTP and other stakeholders around the world to support the transition, to open research. As some of you may know, we saw similar guidance in Europe, a while back and reacted affirmatively. And today we are greatly benefiting by executing against our shared objective of unlocking access to scientific research and improving the efficiency of peer review and publication. Wiley has led this global transition to OA through our robust OA publishing program and our groundbreaking transformational agreements. We expanded our OA leadership position with the acquisition of Hindawi in fiscal 2021 and are further expanding it with the acceleration of Research Solutions. In the past three years alone, we drove OA share of our Research Publishing revenue from less than 6% to approximately 33%. And this number continues to increase rapidly as our multi-year transformational agreements stake hold. For reference less than 10% of our published articles today are funded by U.S. Federal Department impacted by this policy ship. And a third of those articles are already OA. The OA share will continue to accelerate through 2026. All to say, while we’re still evaluating the recent OSTP guidance, we do not anticipate that it will have a material financial impact. Okay. Turning now to our fiscal 2023 commitments in research and how we performed on them in Q1. At the start of the year, we said, we would publish more to meet global demand, especially in open access. We would establish more transformational read and publishing agreements worldwide. We would scale our Research Solutions offerings, and we would streamline our publishing operations. On publishing more, as Christina mentioned, we grew article submissions by 7% and OA output by 25%. Overall publishing output was down year-on-year, but we continue to expect steady growth for the fiscal year. As you know, scientific and technical research is powered by global R&D spend, which is expected to grow 5% to nearly $2.5 trillion this year. We announced three major transformational agreements this quarter, including consortia in France, representing 130 institutions and Italy representing 68 institutions. And I’m proud to say that we announced our first Read and Publish agreement in Latin America, UNAM in Mexico, which is the largest university in the region. The pipeline remains strong for our multi-year transformational agreements. These deals are great for our large customers, and they’re great for us as they drive incremental publishing volume and thus revenue in an increasingly open access economy. As you know, in open access revenue is a direct function of the number of articles published and the price we charge for publishing in one of our journals. During the quarter, we continue to see strong momentum in Research Solutions, to refresh Research Solutions delivers the critical platforms and tech-enabled services that allow publishers, corporations, and other stakeholders to succeed in the open research economy. Our platforms make processing, publishing and consuming research content easier, quicker, and more efficient. And our knowledge network enables corporations to reach 10 million plus researchers and leverage 170 million plus monthly impressions. Increasingly we’re creating new revenue models for Wiley and our clients by leveraging these platforms and our network. For example, our career centers help major societies like the AAAS generate new revenue by connecting people with jobs and help pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer, fill critical talent gaps. Our new product offerings like Knowledge Hubs and virtual events allow R&D intensive companies like Eli Lilly and Perkin Elmer to reach and activate valuable audiences. During the quarter, we signed six new solutions partners, including the American Cancer Society, the National Park Service and Eli Lilly, and we expanded four other partnerships with additional services and we are continuing to drive organic growth through up sell and cross sell opportunities with our existing 450 society and corporate partners. To give you a sense of this opportunity. So far only 16% of our partners subscribe to more than one service and only 4% subscribe to more than two. Finally, we are streamlining operations in research, particularly the referral of rejected articles from one Wiley journal to another. We’ve been discussing this process for some time, we call it the cascade. As a reminder, Wiley does not publish 70% of the articles we’ve received. Mostly this is due to improper fit between a submitted manuscript and the first journal to which it is submitted. Our goal is to find these articles, another home within Wiley’s portfolio and we do this through an intelligent transfer and referral process. Notably 65% of rejected authors are now offered another Wiley option to publish up from 53% at year end. It will take time to fully capitalize on this opportunity across our 1,900 journal portfolio, but we’re very encouraged by the progress so far. So as you can see, Q1 was a very solid quarter of delivery against our stated commitments in Research. Let’s turn now to our progress in executing on our fiscal 2023 commitments in career-connected education. Here, we’re working to expand our corporate and university client base to drive growth in our differentiated course we’re offerings and to gain operating efficiency. On the client development front, Wiley signed another three large global clients this quarter to Corporate Talent Development agreements. This group includes our first two multinationals in the insurance sector and another one in financial services. Our success in growing the client base resulted in employee placement growth of a 97% year-on-year with notable expansion in Europe. Looking ahead, the new client pipeline is very strong and it spans multiple industry verticals. We’re also having conversations with existing corporate clients to add reskilling services to our new employee training services. Critically, we’re seeing strong demand for talent development services, even in the face of economic uncertainty. This speaks to the growing need for tech talent development worldwide and the success of our unique and effective models. On the client development front and University Services, we renewed three long-term partnerships determines ranging from five years to nine years. Our partner count declined this quarter by two to 66. Although, we continue to see a healthy pipeline of potential new partners. We also signed 47 new degree programs within the existing partner base. This is well ahead of plan and speaks to the importance of Wiley services to its university partners especially in these difficult times. We remain focused on delivering differentiated courseware that moves the needle for learners and workers, where we have focus to date we are seeing exceptional growth. zyBooks revenue for example, was up 27% in the quarter. And the team signed 18 new institutions in the spring semester, bringing us to a total of 827 zyBooks institutions. We are replicating this success across the publishing program and for example, our expanding zyBooks into other high demand, courseware disciplines. Most recently engineering. In science, Knewton Alta courseware was named the best science instructional solution as part of the prestigious Software & Information Industry Association awards. On the efficiency front, our work is preceding a pace. We are driving talent development toward meaningful profit contribution as we scale through redesign and automated processes, and we are improving efficiency in education publishing through platform upgrades and process improvement. So overall we are executing well on our fiscal 2023 commitments in education, despite the cyclical enrollment challenges. So, let me summarize some key takeaways for today. First, we’re delivering solid organic revenue growth through our clearly identified growth strategies. Our investment and Research Publishing, Research Solutions and Corporate Talent Development are paying off. Our growth strategies are working and our markets remain essential, vibrant, and recession tolerance. The consistent execution of our research strategy over the past few years, rejuvenated the business, materially improving our growth profile while driving continued strong margins in cash generation. We expect this positive trajectory to continue. The execution of our high potential career connected education strategy most notably in Corporate Talent Development is also working as revenue continues to grow by strong double-digits. This has increased the size of Wiley’s Blue Ocean growth opportunity and our profit potential. Of course, not everything is perfect as is evident in the effect that cyclical declines in higher ed enrollment are having on revenue growth in our university focused offerings. We do expect that to correct over time as typical countercyclical patterns resume following this unusual enrollment cycle. As we always say, the world is demanding and continues to demand more and better post-secondary education as a core engine of economic advancement. As a blue chip provider of essential academic services and courseware in some of the most in demand subjects and career areas, we continue to see good market opportunity and cash flow potential in the long-term, despite current growth challenges. As Christina emphasized, we believe that a simpler Wiley is a better Wiley. Thus, we continue to streamline operations this year and are delivering meaningful efficiency gains, and we made good underlying progress in Q1. Our goal is clear to increase profitability and cash flow beyond fiscal 2023, while still powering our proven growth strategies. To that end, we will continue to sharply focus investments on profitable growth initiatives in Research Publishing, Research Solutions and Corporate Talent Development. Our consistently strong balance sheet and cash flow will enable us to reinvest in this core and strategically acquire while also rewarding long-term shareholders. As always our strategic planning cycle begins in the fall. It continues through the winter as we finalize long range plans. And so we look forward to sharing these plans and our outlook with you at an April Investor Day. My gratitude goes out to our Wiley colleagues for their continued achievements this quarter. I want to thank them for their hard work and enthusiasm in advancing our mission and their continued support of many humanitarian causes in their communities and around the world. And I will now open the call up to any questions