Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Scholastic Corporation's Q1 Fiscal Year 2023 results. During the program today, all participants are in listen-only mode. As a reminder, today's program may be recorded. Now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Jeffrey Mathews, Executive Vice President, Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Hello, and welcome everyone to Scholastic's fiscal 2023 Q1 earnings call. I'm excited to be back at Scholastic, a company defined by its incredible people and mission. Over the coming months, I look forward to reconnecting with and getting to know again Scholastic's investment community as we work to reach a new level of understanding of our shareholders' perspectives and communicate our strategy, opportunity, and progress. Today on the call, I'm joined by Peter Warwick, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Ken Cleary, our Chief Financial Officer. As usual, we have posted the accompanying investor presentation on our IR website at investor.scholastic.com, which you may download now if you have not done so already. We would like to point out that certain statements made today will be forward-looking.
These forward-looking statements, by their nature, are subject to various risks and uncertainties, and actual results may differ materially from those currently anticipated. In addition, we will be discussing some non-GAAP financial measures as defined in Regulation G. The reconciliation of those measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures may be found in the company's earnings release and accompanying financial tables filed this afternoon on a Form 8-K. This earnings release has also been posted to our investor relations website. We encourage you to review the disclaimers in the release and investor presentation and to review the risk factors disclosed in the company's annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC. Should you have any questions after today's calls, please send them directly to me at our IR email address, investor_relations@scholastic.com. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Peter to begin this afternoon's presentation.
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you, Jeff. I'll start by welcoming you back to Scholastic in the new role of Executive Vice President, Corporate Development and Investor Relations. I'm confident that Jeff's the right person to assume this important new position, which marks a key milestone in our plan to strategically expand the expertise available in our already highly skilled management team. Jeff's previous tenure at Scholastic and deep knowledge of Scholastic, combined with his recent experience advising an expansive list of high-level corporate clients, will be invaluable to the company and our shareholders. He's already been instrumental to advancing our strategic growth investments, leading the recently announced Learning Ovations acquisition.
In advance of Ken's detailed walkthrough of our Q1 of fiscal year 2023, I'm pleased to share that results are in line with our plan for top and bottom line growth in 2023, with lower year-over-year operating income and earnings, as expected, primarily reflecting increased investment in growth initiatives in our education business and a return to more typical seasonal revenue patterns post-pandemic, as I'll discuss in a moment. Based on quarter one performance and the momentum we see today, we're affirming guidance to deliver an 8%-10% increase in revenue in fiscal year 2023 and adjusted EBITDA of $195 million-$205 million, up from $189 million in fiscal 2022. Back to school is significant to both our first and second fiscal quarters.
The circumstances this year contrast with those of last year. A year ago, concern about supply chain issues resulted in that year's back-to-school purchasing season beginning earlier than usual because teachers, librarians, and parents were aware of book supply issues. Purchasing this year has reverted to a more normal pattern, which means we anticipate proportionately higher revenues from back-to-school in quarter two than last year. We planned for and are prepared for this shift and are excited to be there for our young readers, their teachers, and their families. From our Trade Publishing group, we've seen sustained success publishing bestsellers. To date, in calendar year 2022, Scholastic titles have garnered nearly 100 starred reviews from influential outlets such as Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal.
Scholastic titles also have had a strong presence on The New York Times bestseller list this year, with graphic novels capturing a record 11 out of 15 spots in the category. This fall, we have a number of exciting releases, including the stunning picture book from civil rights icon Ruby Bridges, The Three Billy Goats Gruff from the renowned award-winning duo and picture book pioneers Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen, in addition to the latest Bad Guys number 16 by Aaron Blabey and the illustrated edition of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. Looking to the next calendar year, we'll also have Dav Pilkey's recently announced next Dog Man book, Colin Kaepernick's YA graphic novel memoir, a new Wings of Fire graphic novel by Tui Sutherland, and Brian Selznick's Big Tree. We continue to bring more and varied opportunities to our content through Scholastic Entertainment.
We recently announced a deal to co-develop and co-produce the middle-grade memoir Signs of Survival, a memoir of the Holocaust by Renee Hartman and Joshua M. Greene. The project is in partnership with Amblin Television and Oscar-winning actress Marlee Matlin's Solo One Productions. This joins an ever-expanding pipeline of media projects, the majority with creators like Amar'e Stoudemire and Sterling K. Brown and distributors such as Paramount, Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, and Disney+. Turning to our school distribution channels, we're excited to see that fourth season Book Fairs and children bringing home the first monthly club order form in their backpacks, once again, have captured and amplified the energy we all feel from the time-honored tradition of back to school.
In-person book fair confirmation rates are strong, well outpacing prior year, putting us on track to meet our projected target of 85% of pre-pandemic bookings in fiscal 2022, an increase from 72% last fiscal. Early fairs data also reveals strong attendance rates and revenue per fair. Additionally, during quarter one, Scholastic Dollars redemptions were strong, and we're readily meeting demand. In clubs, having resolved prior year systems issues, we're well prepared for this coming year with an excellent inventory position and strategic marketing that increases our interactions with customers. Even as it's too early in the business season to delve deeply into results, we're already seeing a positive response from our participating teachers. Now we'll look at our consolidated Education Solutions division.
We continue to make great progress addressing classroom and school districts' most pressing needs around literacy and reading, while strategically increasing investments to scale go-to-market capabilities and expand our differentiated offering of digital solutions. While results were somewhat lower, reflecting the fact that last year's revenue benefited from a significant number of orders that have been delayed from quarter four, 2021, Education Solutions nonetheless continued its underlying long-term growth trajectory in quarter one. Beginning the quarter, our teams were laser-focused on supporting summer reading through solutions such as take-home book packs. Thanks to their close partnerships with customers, we've seamlessly shifted to supporting in-school needs this year.
The demand for independent reading is still evident and tangible, and our innovative partnership with the State of Florida and the University of Florida Lastinger Center for Learning is gearing up for its second year with a strong base of participants already in the program. As the recent NAEP results revealed, the learning gap in the U.S. has widened significantly as a result of the profound disruption in our schools caused by the pandemic. Sadly, we saw the largest drop in reading skills in 30 years and the first ever drop in math scores since the nation's report card's inception. This is a priority issue to be addressed at both federal and state levels, with historic levels of funding going to schools today. Today is a pivotal moment and opportunity for Scholastic, too, as we work to significantly expand the number of schools, teachers, and students that we support.
We're confident in our ability to be a best choice as a partner, just as we've time and time again earned unparalleled trust from educators thanks to our passion for mission paired with high-quality content. It's from this position of experience and strength that we're working with schools and districts to design and implement solutions that deliver outcomes they need in accordance with the funding streams that they have available. At the same time, we're investing, both organically and inorganically, to drive long-term growth through strategic enhancements to our literacy platform, such as our recently announced acquisition of Learning Ovations. Learning Ovations is the creator of A2I, short for Assessment to Instruction, which is a science of reading-based literacy assessment instructional system.
A2i is backed by over 12 years of rigorous research and more than 2,000 hours of classroom observation, earning it the highest efficacy rate possible under the Every Student Succeeds Act. The system provides educators with easy-to-administer, data-driven guidance for instructional planning for both small group and individualized learning, all customized to match the reading needs of individual students. Given A2i's gold standard effectiveness and validation, and its ability to integrate hundreds of thousands of resources that address essential reading skills, soon to include Scholastic's unique instructional and curricular resources, the addition of A2i and the Learning Ovations team significantly advances the development of our literacy platform. Finally, strategy has also moved forward in our international division.
We continue to focus on growth areas, rationalizing our lines of business that no longer align with that strategy, including in Asia, where we completed the disposition of the direct sales business. Despite the lingering impact of COVID, which has continued to fluctuate globally, we see positive indicators, particularly in Australia and New Zealand, that our global fairs, clubs, and trade businesses are rebounding with strength. Now I'll ask Ken to provide greater detail on the quarter's results.
Thank you, Peter, and good afternoon. Today, I will refer to our adjusted results for the Q1, 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. The Q1 of the fiscal year is seasonally our quietest quarter, as schools are not in session in most of North America, as Peter just described. Our preparations for the upcoming fall and spring seasons are proceeding as planned, and our readiness for the rest of the year is stronger than it has ever been at this point in time. We have addressed the supply chain and operational issues we faced last fiscal year and have dedicated substantial resources to ensure we are prepared for the strong demand we are expecting from our customers.
We have ordered inventory well in advance of the season, given the long lead times in our supply chain. We have hired sufficient distribution staff to meet the strong expected demand. Initial indicators from our first few Book Fairs and Book Clubs offerings are positive and in line with our expectations. In addition, we completed the acquisition of Learning Ovations on September first, greatly accelerating the development of our Education Solutions literacy platform. In short, we are off to a strong start to our fiscal year, and we are therefore affirming our guidance of $1.8 billion of annual revenue and $195 million-$205 million of adjusted EBITDA for fiscal 2023 as we balance growth initiatives with current returns for our shareholders.
Revenue for the Q1 grew 1% to $262.9 million versus $259.8 million in the prior year period. Operating loss in the quarter was $58.1 million versus $36.2 million last year. Net loss was $45.5 million compared to $27.3 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $35.6 million compared to a loss of $13 million in the Q1 last year. Loss per diluted share was $1.33 compared to a loss of $0.79 last year. Net cash used in operating activities was $60.3 million compared to a net cash provided by operating activities of $63.6 million in the Q1 of last year.
Free cash use for the quarter was $76.5 million compared to free cash flow of $49.1 million last year, returning to a seasonal Q1 cash use. Last year, we were able to utilize leftover inventory from fiscal 2021, when inventory utilization was negatively impacted by the pandemic. This year, given the long lead times required for procurement of product, we used our strong balance sheet to acquire inventory earlier, and our Q1 domestic inventory purchases increased to $152.2 million from $76.5 million in fiscal 2022. Our procurement push has provided us sufficient inventory to meet our expected demand and has helped to mitigate ongoing or threatened supply chain issues.
Additionally, last year's Q1 cash flow benefited from a $63.1 million federal tax refund and a $6.6 million insurance recovery. At the end of the quarter, cash and cash equivalents exceeded total debt by $233.4 million compared to $219.1 million at the end of the first fiscal quarter a year ago, demonstrating substantial liquidity. Our strong balance sheet has allowed us to proactively manage working capital through the supply chain crisis by strengthening vendor relationships and negotiating volume rebates and early pay discounts while also allowing us to invest in content with key best-selling authors. Capital expenditures and capitalized pre-publication costs in the Q1 were $16.2 million compared to $14.5 million last year.
We expect CapEx and pre-pub spend to exceed last year as we invest in our Education Solutions business and distribution operations, but we will still be well short of our spending levels from the years preceding the pandemic. In the quarter, we continued to return capital through our share buyback program. Through today, we have reacquired 122,000 shares for $5.7 million in the current fiscal year. We expect to continue our share buyback program for the foreseeable future. As previously announced, we have increased our regular quarterly dividend to 20 cents per share, which we paid on September 15th of this year. Given our strong cash flow and expected earnings, the board of directors has approved a 20-cent per share regular quarterly dividend to be paid in December. We anticipate that the quarterly dividend will remain at this level respectively.
Now turning to our segment results. In Children's Book Publishing and Distribution, our trade division posted strong results while our school channels prepared for the fall back-to-school season. Trade revenue of $90.1 million modestly trailed the prior period revenue of $93 million and was consistent with our expectations. As Peter mentioned, we have a number of strong new releases supporting our trade division in the current fiscal year. Additionally, our backlist continues to provide a steady source of reliable revenue each quarter, driven by our investments in series titles and innovative formats such as graphics. Further supporting this strategy, our entertainment media business, which continues to market and monetize our intellectual property, has begun to recognize revenue for the delivery of Eva the Owlet animated series to Apple TV+.
Book Fairs revenue of $28.3 million exceeded the prior period revenue of $16 million as Scholastic Dollars redemptions were strong. Scholastic Dollars are a reward program earned by schools that conduct Book Fairs, which, as they are redeemed for Scholastic product, we recognize revenue associated with the redemptions. Strong Scholastic Dollars redemptions are indicative of higher customer engagement. As mentioned in July and confirmed here, we expect our in-person fair count to be approximately 85% of our pre-pandemic in-person fair count level for fiscal 2023. Our Book Fairs division is operationally prepared for the upcoming fall season, and early indications are consistent with our high expectations. In Book Clubs, we have rectified system and distribution shortfalls we experienced last fall, and we expect operations will run at our usual efficiency levels.
We are utilizing our proprietary data sources and longstanding relationships with schools and teachers to both reengage with our existing teacher sponsors and to attract new sponsors. Q1 Book Clubs revenue of $6.3 million was flat to the prior year's comparable period reported revenue of $6.8 million, but is not significant as schools were not in session. Total Children's Book Publishing and Distribution revenues for the current quarter of $124.7 million exceeded the prior year's revenues of $115.8 million. Higher costs to support increased fair count expectations and rising freight charges resulted in operating loss of $30.1 million as compared to $21.7 million in the prior year period.
Education Solutions revenues of $73.2 million trailed the prior year revenues of $80.1 million. Quarterly operating loss was $4.3 million compared to prior year operating income of $7.3 million. In the Q1 of the prior fiscal year, we shipped substantial product, much of it summer reading programs in June and July, for orders we received in May of fiscal 2021. This past Q4, our procurement and distribution teams were able to procure, pick, pack, and ship orders more timely, resulting in most of the orders going out in the Q4 last year. Accordingly, the Q1 this year was substantially quieter than the Q1 of last year.
This year-over-year decline was partially offset by revenues from our distribution contract with the state of Florida, which commenced shipments in the Q3 of fiscal 2022. While we are trending modestly lower than expected in this division, the ultimate annual results are dependent upon the H2 of the FY at a time when school funding is more readily available because of ESSER and other sources of funding. Importantly, in the Education Solutions segment, we executed the acquisition of Learning Ovations and its proprietary assessment technology, A2i. This is a key accelerator in our development of a comprehensive education solution to enable teachers to better meet students' literacy needs. The entire organization has embraced this acquisition and the talented employees we have added as a result, and integration is well underway.
As this acquisition is a component of our growth strategy, it is not expected to be immediately accretive and is likely to be modestly dilutive for the current fiscal year. We expect incremental expense this year to be approximately $1 million-$2 million. International segment revenues of $65 million exceed the prior period revenues of $63.9 million. Operating loss of $3.5 million was unfavorable to the prior period loss of $1.3 million. Prior year fiscal quarter operating results included $1.2 million of COVID-related government subsidies. Canada and U.K. operations continued to recover from the pandemic, and like the U.S., are preparing for the upcoming school year. Australia and New Zealand saw widespread lockdowns in the prior year's Q1, but have recovered and are now exceeding our expectations for the current fiscal period.
China continued to struggle with COVID restrictions and government regulations around touring and foreign content. Overall, Asia operations are recovering from the pandemic. Unallocated overhead costs of $20.2 million in this year's current fiscal quarter were flat to prior year's fiscal quarter unallocated costs of $20.5 million as we continue to tightly control discretionary spending. As a result of our strong preparation work this summer and increasing visibility around demand, we are affirming our revenue guidance of $1.8 billion and our adjusted EBITDA estimate of $195 million-$205 million. We have achieved our Q1 financial and operational objectives. Early on, we are seeing some patterns emerge. Notably, cost of product is trending modestly higher than our initial expectations as a result of higher freight costs.
These cost increases are offset by lower than planned general and administrative expenses as we continue to control discretionary spending. More importantly, we have gained confidence in our expectations within the Book Fairs and Book Clubs channels as the fall back-to-school season commences. Our preparation work has been successful. We are well-positioned for the upcoming season. We are encouraged by our strong customer engagement and demand for our products, content and solution. External economic risks, including a decrease in disposable income due to inflation and potential changes in government funding, remain, but our businesses have proven to be resilient through economic downturns in the past, and we expect that to be the same going forward. Thank you for your time today. I will now hand the call back to Peter.
Thank you, Ken. This past quarter has built a solid foundation for the rest of the fiscal year, and the positive trends we saw in the previous fiscal year have continued to benefit our performance. In concluding, I'd like to call out four critical factors. First, funding to close the widening reading achievement gap accelerated by the pandemic should continue. It's something that the federal government, all state governments, and all shades of opinion want to address. We're uniquely positioned to help with this vital and noble cause because of our IP and because of our unrivaled distribution capabilities and relationships with literacy specialists, teachers, and educational administrators. Second, we're taking advantage of our strong cash position and improved business results to invest in targeted growth for the future, especially in digital and media solutions, our developing literacy platform, and groundbreaking and engaging IP.
Third, a strong financial position has also enabled us to manage our supply chain so that we have the books and the resources we need right now to meet demand. Finally, our business that was most affected by the disruption to schools during the pandemic, Book Fairs, is already ahead of its performance at this time last year and is very well set to meet its targets this fiscal year and improve further on what was an excellent performance last financial year. In closing, I want to thank every educator, family, and partner that's helping raise up the students in their community. We see you working tirelessly, and we promise to do the same, mapping out your needs with our solutions and bringing books to children's homes through Book Fairs, Book Clubs, retail, and partnerships. Thank you all again for joining us on our call today.
Jeff will conclude this afternoon's presentation for us.
Thank you, Peter. As a reminder, we invite questions to be directed to our IR mailbox, investor_relations@scholastic.com. We appreciate your time and continuing support.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.