Thank you, Brian, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. What a difference a year makes. Today we look forward with renewed confidence and optimism as a leaner and stronger Wiley. We are executing with much greater discipline and rigor, we have met and exceeded our stated commitments, and we are seeing strong momentum in our businesses and value creation activities. I'll start by reviewing how we did against our objectives and provide an update on the emerging and exciting GenAI opportunities in front of us. I'll walk through our fourth quarter and full year performance and then review our momentum heading into fiscal '25. Christina will walk through our value creation plan progress, reinvestments, segment performance and fiscal '25 outlook. After summarizing, we'll open it up for questions. Jay Flynn will be joining us as well. Wiley is enabling the creation of new knowledge and its application in critical areas of the global knowledge economy in science, medicine, technology and engineering in business, economics and finance. As a knowledge company, Wiley has played a foundational role in everything from the Industrial Revolution to the Information Age. Now Wiley is beginning to play a critical role in the rise of artificial intelligence and machine learning. Our knowledge, content, tools, and services remain as relevant as ever. It's been a very eventful year for Wiley and I'm proud to say that we finished strong. Research is seeing strong underlying momentum heading into fiscal '25 after some unusual challenges to start the year. Demand to publish and output are well ahead of expectations. Learning continues to outperform, driven by solid execution and favorable market conditions. GenAI demand is accelerating. We've already executed two content rights projects for large tech companies. I'll talk more about this opportunity in a moment. We're piloting GenAI productivity tools across the organization. We're deploying it in our Research Publishing platform and using it to drive publishing efficiency and detect research integrity issues. Today's Wiley is about execution, blocking and tackling, and creating meaningful shareholder value. To that end, we have closed on the sale of two of our three divestitures and the third is in process. We further accelerated our $130 million cost saving program with 70% of it now actioned and in-year savings higher than anticipated. Finally, we increased share repurchases in the second half of fiscal '24 and rewarded shareholders with a dividend raise for the 30th consecutive year. We have more work to do, of course, to realize our full potential, and that work will never end. We are going to continue to deliver cost savings and efficiency gains above and beyond the $130 million program as we drive toward further margin expansion beyond fiscal '26. I am very pleased about our progress so far and very confident in our direction of travel. Let's talk about how we delivered on our stated commitments. When I stepped into the role right around mid-year, I said that we were going to be relentless in our execution and move with certainty on our value plans, operational improvements, reorg and culture. This is what we've done. We delivered revenue at the higher end of our guidance, as projected. Today's Wiley is more predictable and focused with greater visibility and consistency. All of us are proud to say that we exceeded our EBITDA and EPS guidance even after revising them upward in Q3. Today Wiley is leaner, more competitive and more efficient. We set out to accelerate our restructuring plans and operating improvements over the back half of the year and we've done exactly that. Last June, Christina projected to exit the year at or better than our fiscal 2023 adjusted EBITDA margin, which was 23.3%. We delivered a Q4 margin of 28.3%, or 25.6% excluding the AI deal. This is not a sustained exit rate heading into fiscal '25, as seasonality played a role. That said, we remain on track with our margin expansion targets in fiscal '25 and '26 and we fully expect to deliver on these while reinvesting for sustained long-term growth. As discussed, we have materially exceeded our in-year cost savings goals this year. We originally projected $30 million and ended with $60 million of savings. This is the result of relentless execution and the importance of hitting the ground running. Free cash flow is a consistent strength of ours and we delivered $114 million versus our projection of $100 million, mainly due to cash earnings outperformance. As a reminder, we're in a muted two-year period for cash flow due to restructuring and investment, but we expect to be back in the $200 million range in fiscal '26 and see continuous upside from there. Finally, the Wiley culture has been reinvigorated by the move to a much simpler and more efficient organization. Everyone is in sync and rowing in the same direction. It's just a lot easier to get things done here. Let's talk about the AI opportunity. Wiley has become one of the early beneficiaries of GenAI development. Our high-quality content in science, learning and innovation is foundational for training and finetuning large language models and applications. Large AI developers and R&D intensive corporates can use it to greatly improve the accuracy, safety and impact of their models and shorten their time to market. Demand is, therefore, accelerating. This quarter, as previously discussed, we executed a $23 million licensing project with a large tech company for our previously published learning content. We're following that up with a $21 million project with another tech company for a mix of learning and research content to be recognized in fiscal '25. Both of these projects are of limited duration with limited rights and use in this case for model training purposes. They are non-exclusive, subject to extension and do not constrain us from pursuing further opportunities. We see the new AI business opportunity in two stages. The first, as discussed, is content licensing or providing limited access to select content for the purposes of developing GenAI models. The opportunity is right here and now. In addition to the two executed deals, we're seeing significant interest from other LLM developers for increasingly specific and technical content. This is precisely what Wiley specializes in with over 200 years of history behind us. It's still too early to size these opportunities, but we are seeing a growing interest while remaining prudent on the scope of the rights granted. The second stage is developing new business models around content application that brings us ever closer to the customer. These include recurring licensing arrangements as these models evolve and as companies bring our content into their AI environments. For example, Wiley is a leading provider of scientific content. We can embed this content into GenAI applications for pharmaceutical companies, healthcare providers, chemical companies, government agencies and many others. Wiley is also a leading provider of business and economics content, which we can embed into applications of the financial services providers. These are just some examples of the opportunities ahead. In addition to content licensing and application, another very real GenAI opportunity for us is in product and publishing innovation. Through various AI-based tools, we are transforming how we publish by shortening authoring time and effort, increasing editorial productivity, and streamlining content workflow. We have already deployed AI into our research platform using it to safeguard research integrity at the point of article submission. In fact, we've introduced a new service that incorporates six distinct tools to identify potentially compromised content, including papermill similarity detection, problematic phrase recognition, researcher identity verification, and GenAI content detection, among others. We're already piloting this service with key society and publishing partners as the industry tackles this issue head on. Through our past experience, we've become a thought leader in this area and we're sharing our insights with others. Finally, we're already deploying AI to materially improve office productivity and customer service as we begin to transform how we work. In customer service, for example, we're already seeing cost savings and reductions in handle time through the latest AI augmentation and automated processes. To summarize, Wiley is highly valued and well positioned in the evolution of AI. We are closing deals, developing additional opportunities and seeing both quality and efficiency gains today. As I've said before, we are confident that the advancement of these technologies will be a contributor to customer value, productivity and growth in the years to come. Let me briefly touch on our performance for the quarter. Christina will provide more detail. As a reminder, we will be excluding our held for sale or sold assets in our commentary, unless otherwise noted. We finished strong due to our accelerated value creation plan savings and the $23 million GenAI contents rights project in Learning. Adjusted revenue was up 4% to $441 million, driven by growth in Learning, including the GenAI content rights project. Academic continued to outperform as it has all year. This was partially offset by timing and lower ancillary print and licensing revenue in Research. Adjusted EBITDA rose 7% to $125 million from the combination of revenue growth and restructuring savings. As I mentioned, adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 28.3%. Adjusted EPS rose 2% to $1.21, with strong revenue performance partially offset by tech write-offs as part of legacy decommissioning. Our Q4 GAAP results continued to be impacted by the divestitures and related activity as well as restructuring. Onto our full-year performance. As a reminder, fiscal '24 was a transitional year as we made the necessary moves to become a higher performing and more profitable Wiley. These structural changes and transition year dynamics were evident in our GAAP results shown here. I'll be focusing on our adjusted results. Full-year adjusted revenue declined modestly to $1.617 billion. Outperformance in Learning was offset by a decline in Research due to the COVID research lag and the effects of the Hindawi disruption. Also note, we had some currency favorability on revenue this year of about $11 million. Adjusted EBITDA was down 3% to $369 million, largely due to revenue performance. Our adjusted EBITDA margin for the year was 22.8%. Adjusted EPS was down 19% due to a combination of lower operating income and higher interest and tax expense. And as noted, free cash flow of $114 million compared to $173 million in the prior year due to a combination of transition year factors, including lower cash earnings and restructuring plus higher interest. As a reminder, we don't report an adjusted free cash flow metric, so this number includes the held-for-sale assets. Let's talk about our momentum heading into fiscal '25. I'll start with Research. Submissions growth, a critical leading demand indicator, has risen to 15% on a trailing 12-month basis. This is considerably higher than we expected and speaks to the global researcher demand to publish, be recognized and further one's career. Wiley enables all of this as a leading peer review publisher. Output growth has rapidly accelerated. After a slow start, we saw marked improvement throughout the year with output growing by mid-single digits in Q4. We're seeing solid growth patterns return in the US, EMEA and Japan. And we're seeing strong demand in the high-growth markets like China and India. In fiscal '25, we expect to see continued mid-single-digit output growth, and that's reflected in our revenue projections. Third, our institutional models are strong with steady growth expected. As a reminder, these models which include both subscriptions for research libraries and institutional open access agreements with consortia or single institutions are recurring in nature. Fourth, Gold Open Access is expected to continue to deliver about 20% growth. To refresh, Gold Open Access is our author-funded OA model. As always, journal quality and impact are paramount, and we remain very well positioned as a best-in-class publisher with leading portfolios in chemistry, material science, energy, oncology, food science and many others. Finally, the development of our Research Publishing platform is accelerating. We recently successfully completed our first large-scale journal migration, and we're now expecting to have the platform fully deployed in fiscal '25 earlier than we originally projected. This platform will allow us to deliver incremental growth by standing up new content offerings and improving article referring transfer. It should lead to a material reduction in turnaround times and cost per article and allow us to detect research integrity issues through the use of AI. After some outliers this year, we're now seeing the obvious upside of a simpler Wiley focused intently on its research core. Let's now turn to our momentum in Learning. It was a consistently good year above and beyond the GenAI deal. Market conditions turned favorable, particularly in academic digital content and courseware. Undergrad enrollment increased for the first time since the pandemic. Institutions gravitated towards inclusive access models, where the cost of digital course content is added to the student's tuition and fees. And our STEM courseware product continued to see strong growth in adoption and usage. We expect this positive momentum to continue. I want to take a moment and commend the team this year for not only delivering better-than-expected revenue growth, but significant margin acceleration as well. In professional, we're seeing very good momentum in signing up new authors and titles, a result of simply focusing on this profitable business more than we have in the past. Given the long lead time to publish, we'll see the benefit of these signings beginning in fiscal '25. Our assessments business grew modestly in fiscal '24, but we expect better growth from the recent expansion of our sales partner network. Finally, as noted, we're going to continue to respond to and actively pursue opportunities for our learning content in GenAI models. In summary, we're pleased with our overall momentum heading into fiscal '25. I'll turn it over to Christina.