Annual Report 2016/2017

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 1

UWCSEA Dover is registered by the Committee for Private Education (CPE), part of SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG)

CPE Registration No. 197000825H | CPE Registration Period 18 July 2017–17 July 2023 | Charity Registration No. 00142

UWCSEA East is registered by the Committee for Private Education (CPE), part of SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG)

CPE Registration No. 200801795N | CPE Registration Period 10 March 2017–9 March 2023 | Charity Registration No. 002104

Printed on recycled paper with environmentally friendly inks | MCI (P) 116/03/2017 | 066COM-1718

UWCSEA Dover 1207 Dover Road Singapore 139654

UWCSEA East 1 Tampines Street 73 Singapore 528704

www.uwcsea.edu.sg

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 3

Message from Anna Lord, Chair of Board of Governors .........................................................................................................4

Introduction from Chris Edwards, Head of College .................................................................................................................5

UWCSEA guiding statements and governance ........................................................................................................................6

UWCSEA learning programme ..............................................................................................................................................8

UWC movement.....................................................................................................................................................................12

UWCSEA governance.............................................................................................................................................................14

Student achievement...................................................................................................................................................................18

Academics................................................................................................................................................................................21

Activities.................................................................................................................................................................................. 35

Outdoor education................................................................................................................................................................40

Personal and social education ............................................................................................................................................43

Service......................................................................................................................................................................................46

Our community...........................................................................................................................................................................50

Scholars ................................................................................................................................................................................... 55

Community feedback.............................................................................................................................................................57

Business report............................................................................................................................................................................. 62

Human Resources..................................................................................................................................................................64

Admissions.............................................................................................................................................................................. 67

Finance..................................................................................................................................................................................... 70

Statement of financial position ...........................................................................................................................................71

Statement of profit and loss and other comprehensive income ..................................................................................72

College Advancement..................................................................................................................................................................74

Foundation...............................................................................................................................................................................76

Statement of financial position ...........................................................................................................................................78

Statement of profit and loss and other comprehensive income ..................................................................................79

Foundation financial report.................................................................................................................................................80

Alumni Relations.................................................................................................................................................................... 82

Donors 2016/2017.................................................................................................................................................................84

CONTENTS

4 | Annual Report 2016/2017

MESSAGE FROM ANNA LORD

CHAIR OF BOARD OF GOVERNORS

I am pleased to introduce

the UWCSEA Annual Report,

which provides information

on the UWCSEA learning

programme and operations for

the 2016/2017 school year.

The 2016/2017 school year

was an extremely successful

one for the College, as

we reported the highest

IB Diploma results in our

history and remained full

and in demand in a highly

competitive market. It was

also a significant year for the Board of Governors as Charles Ormiston retired

as Chair after six years of his leadership. It was a privilege to be elected as his

successor. As a member of the Board for the last five years, I have been honoured

to work with an exceptional group of volunteers, who give generously of their

time and talent to support the strategic direction and long-term sustainability of

the College.

UWCSEA is unique in being both a member of the UWC movement, a global

network of 17 schools and colleges with an idealistic mission, and the largest

international school in Singapore, with all the market-driven considerations

that implies.

As a member of the UWC movement, a delegation from UWCSEA attended the

UWC Congress in Trieste, Italy in October 2016, to discuss the long-term future

of the movement and how it remains relevant in a difficult and unknown future.

The Congress included the launch of the UWC Refugee Initiative, an ambitious

programme that is responding to the dramatic escalation in the number of

young displaced people fleeing conflict, persecution or environmental disaster,

by raising money to provide UWC scholarships for 100 refugee students every

year for the next five years. The UWCSEA community responded generously as

always and two students are now studying at UWC Mostar and UWC Dilijan as

a result of donations. Also thanks to the generosity of donors, UWCSEA was able

to fund a four-year movement-wide study of the impact of the UWC education

by researchers from Harvard Graduate School of Education, led by Professor

Howard Gardner. At the same time, 3.5% of school fees are given towards the

UWCSEA scholarship programme. All these contributions, as well as ongoing

work with our sister schools and colleges, moved UWCSEA closer to the heart of

the UWC movement during 2016/2017.

In Singapore, our focus was on our responsibility to the long-term sustainability

of the College. Strong governance is critical in supporting this, and during

the 2016/2017 year the Governance Committee articulated and expanded

governance procedures and processes, including restructuring the Board

committees, revising the Governor selection and induction process, establishing

both Whistleblowing and Conflict of Interest policies and hiring a new Board

Secretary. The Board also worked closely with management to review the

financial structure of the College and decide on a model that will ensure future

students can benefit from the same quality education on offer today.

2016/2017 saw significant development in the area of child safeguarding, with

the establishment of a safeguarding policy and accompanying practices and

training that will ensure this critical area is an ongoing focus for the College.

Time was also spent establishing a risk register and debating the related issues

of diversity and inclusion. Together with colleagues from Singapore American

School, the Board received further training on corporate governance, and

Governors and members of the senior leadership teams began a process of

preparing for a new strategic plan for the College.

Governors are rarely involved in the day to day life of the school and it can

sometimes seem that the Board is removed from the reality of students, parents

and the College community. Discussions and decisions by the Board always have

the needs of current and future students at their heart, and we are continually

reminded of what a privilege it is to be accountable not solely to the bottom

line but to this remarkable community of students, staff and parents and to the

mission that unites us.

I’d like to thank the College leadership, staff, parents, students, alumni and

friends who together contribute so much to our success. Thank you for another

great year at UWCSEA.

Anna Lord

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 5

INTRODUCTION FROM CHRIS EDWARDS

HEAD OF COLLEGE

When I was a boy, my annual

school magazine contained

an article on the military

cadets (they were called the

Combined Cadet Force or CCF)

that always began the same

way: “This year, the CCF has

gone from strength to strength.”

The phrase has stuck with

me because, even as a school

boy, with each passing year

I believed it less. Could

everything really be getting

better and better? Surely

not. Cite the evidence. But of course there wasn’t any. The words were probably

written in haste by a well intentioned teacher who felt that things were chugging

along nicely. I doubt if anybody ever questioned whether or not the CCF was

really going from strength to strength; it was a comforting enough phrase that

served a purpose and kept morale high.

Forty years on, there are moments when, I confess, I’d quite like to hide behind

“UWCSEA is going from strength to strength” because on a macro level at least it

feels true enough for 2016/2017. Our governing body has worked tirelessly and

coherently (which is not a given in schools), and under the first year of our new

Chair, Anna Lord, UWCSEA has set a marker in the sand for all to see: we are one

of the largest K–12 international schools in the world with two full campuses,

outstanding public examination results and a programme whose breadth is possibly

unrivalled. In a year of extraordinary achievement, I thank Anna and the Board of

Governors for their wisdom as they help guide and guard this great college.

But for a non-profit of our size and significance the handy atmospherics need

to be replaced by meaningful specifics. And as we look at those specifics we

see that although the past year was indeed a gratifying success story, we must

also acknowledge that the educational environment in which we exist is more

complex and nuanced.

Ironically, it is to some extent an environment we created. Once upon a time,

the UWC movement was a lone voice, or at least a trailblazer in areas such as

service, outdoor education, and holistic education in general. It was an oasis

in a desert of national system ‘international’ schools with predominantly

homogeneous populations. Indeed, there was a perceived weirdness about UWC

schools in which, albeit secretly, they rather revelled.

Now it is very different. You could visit websites of most big international

schools, cut and paste their welcome pages, and in some cases persuade the

sitting Heads into thinking that nothing had been changed. What is more, these

like-sounding programmes read increasingly like the programmes of UWC: they

are holistic, with service, outdoor activities and an awareness of existing with,

and maybe even impacting upon, the immediate environment in which they

operate. Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but ask a Detroit auto

worker what else it can lead to if one doesn’t recognise the challenges and so

continually expand one’s own vision and subsequently improve the offer.

The annual report suggests that UWCSEA’s determination to use Kurt Hahn’s

educational philosophy not as a bolt-on to, but the quintessence of that offer will

ensure that authenticity, quality and passion will prevail and differentiate. If only

these statistics could capture the enthusiasm, drive and levels of engagement that

give life to many of the numbers. For example, the number of students engaged

in service is, frankly, a spurious measure if we are not talking about meaningful

partnerships and two-way relationships. Similarly, while we are delighted to

see the IB average up where it is, that same average would be shameful if we

discovered that our students were uniformly operating below their optimum levels

and that we were not adding value. (I’m delighted to say the opposite is true.)

So we must be careful. But it would be doing the UWCSEA community a

great disservice if we did not rejoice in the astonishing sweep of learning and

participation that is revealed here, from parents, students, staff and friends

of the College: the selflessness, the gifts of time, the helping hands, and

the realisation that self optimisation, while important, only becomes truly

meaningful when it leads not to accumulation and status, but to impact.

A huge amount of work has gone into this report, and I am deeply grateful for it.

It is an honest, crucial account. However, there are profound truths that will be

forever out of reach in any reckoning such as this. And around that deep core is

an effervescence that also transcends charts, graphs and tables, but helps define

us, and beats in the hearts of our community.

Chris Edwards

6 | Annual Report 2016/2017

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 7

UWCSEA GUIDING STATEMENTS

AND GOVERNANCE

8 | Annual Report 2016/2017

UWC MISSION

The UWC movement makes education a force to unite people, nations and

cultures for peace and a sustainable future.

UWCSEA EDUCATIONAL GOAL

The UWCSEA goal is to educate individuals to embrace challenge and take

responsibility for shaping a better world.

UWCSEA AMBITION

UWCSEA will be a leader in international education. We will have a

worldwide reputation for providing a challenging, holistic, values-based

education with an emphasis upon academic achievement, service to others,

environmental stewardship, teamwork and leadership.

UWCSEA LEARNING PROGRAMME

This diagram explains how the elements of the UWCSEA Learning Programme

fit together, with the mission as both the starting point and the goal.

To make education

a force to unite people,

nations and cultures

for peace and a

sustainable future

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UWCSEA

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Annual Report 2016/2017 | 9

LEARNING PRINCIPLES

Learning is a life-long process in which the learner engages with and reflects

upon information and experiences to construct new or modify existing

understanding as well as develop and apply qualities and skills.

We know learning is effective when:

• learners construct new understanding by activating prior knowledge

and experiences

Therefore, it is important that new learning is connected to what the learner

has previously experienced or understood.

• learners use timely and goal directed feedback

Therefore, ongoing assessment should be regular and structured in a

manner that allows for specific feedback to guide the learner in constructing

meaning.

• learners collaborate

Therefore, learners must have opportunities to interact with others in a

variety of situations and groupings.

• learners are challenged

Therefore, learners need to be challenged in developmentally appropriate

ways.

• learners feel secure and supported

Therefore, learners need a safe and respectful learning environment.

• learners construct meaning by seeing patterns and making connections

Therefore, learning needs to be organised around core concepts.

• learners actively process and reflect

Therefore, time is required for learners to practise, reflect and consolidate

learning.

• learners apply metacognitive skills

Therefore, learners should develop an awareness of their own thinking

processes to develop intellectual habits.

• learners understand the purpose of the learning

Therefore, learning should occur in context with clear connections to real

world.

• learners have ownership of their learning

Therefore, opportunities for self-directed learning are needed to sustain and

motivate learning.

10 | Annual Report 2016/2017

UWCSEA PROFILE

Our goal is to educate individuals to embrace challenge and take responsibility for shaping a better world. Our community achieves this goal by developing

knowledge and understanding, qualities and skills through the five elements of the UWCSEA learning programme: academics, activities, outdoor education,

personal and social education and service.

SKILLS

Critical thinker

Reason in an informed and fair-minded manner.

Related concepts: inquiry, questioning,

connection, analysis, synthesis, evaluation,

problem solving

Creative

Imagine and generate new possibilities or

alternatives.

Related concepts: originality, imagination,

curiosity, adaptability, connection, innovation,

improvisation, risk-taking

Collaborative

Participate collaboratively in diverse settings.

Related concepts: cooperation, participation,

leadership, flexibility, adaptability, responsibility,

trust

Communicator

Communicate effectively according to audience

and purpose.

Related concepts: communication,

interpretation, perspective, intent

Self-manager

Take responsibility for directing one’s learning.

Related concepts: metacognition,

independence, diligence, organisation,

responsibility

QUALITIES

Commitment to care

Initiate actions and make a commitment to

shaping a better world.

Related concepts: stewardship, caring, empathy,

compassion, open-minded, service, sustainability

Principled

Act with integrity and respect for self and the

dignity of others.

Related concepts: integrity, honesty,

responsibility, respect, fairness

Resilient

Anticipate, persevere and confront challenge.

Related concepts: optimism, confidence,

courage, diligence, perseverance

Self-aware

Develop intellectual, physical, spiritual and

emotional well-being.

Related concepts: self-discipline, self-

esteem, self-confidence, reflection, balance,

contentment

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 11

12 | Annual Report 2016/2017

UWC MOVEMENT

UWC South East Asia is a member of the UWC movement, which was founded in 1962 by Kurt Hahn, the German educationalist. UWC South East Asia was the second

member of the UWC movement, opened by Lee Kuan Yew as Singapore International School in 1971. Since then, UWCSEA has expanded to become a K-12 school of

more than 5,500 students, making it the largest UWC in the movement, and one of only four that take students before the IB Diploma in Grade 11.

There are now 17 schools and colleges in the movement. The schools and colleges are supported by a network of National Committees, made up of volunteers in 156

countries worldwide, who help to find and select many of the Grade 11 and 12 scholars in the colleges around the world.

Below is some information on the schools and colleges in the UWC movement.

UWC ATLANTIC COLLEGE

Vale of Glamorgan, United Kingdom

1962

Opened in

Student population

350

Age group

16–19

LI PO CHUN UWC

New Territories, Hong Kong SAR, China

1992

Opened in

Student population

256

Age group

16–19

UWC CHANGSHU CHINA

Changshu, Jiangsu Province, China

2015

Opened in

Student population

443

Age group

16–19

UWC ADRIATIC

Duino, Italy

1982

Opened in

Student population

182

Age group

16–19

UWC ISAK JAPAN

Karuizawa, Japan

2014

Opened in

Student population

175

Age group

16–19

UWC COSTA RICA

San José, Costa Rica

2006

Opened in

Student population

175

Age group

16–19

UWC DILIJAN

Dilijan, Armenia

2014

Opened in

Student population

194

Age group

16–18

East Campus, Singapore

2008

Opened in

Student population

2,514

Age group

4–19

UWC SOUTH EAST ASIA

Dover Campus, Singapore

1971

Opened in

Student population

3,011

Age group

4–19

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 13

STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENTS UWC MOVEMENT

During the 2016/2017 school year the UWC movement, led by the International Office, held the UWC Congress in Trieste, Italy, with a theme of ‘Connect-Challenge-

Celebrate’. The congress brought together nearly 1,000 students, alumni, school leaders, National Committee members and friends of the movement to discuss important

topics for the movement, including the development of the UWC Strategy for 2018 and beyond. The movement also launched the UWC Refugee Initiative, which aims

to raise the funds for an additional 100 scholarships every year for refugee students to attend UWCs around the world. During 2016/2017, thanks to the generosity of the

UWCSEA community, two scholarships were awarded to refugees from Palestine and South Sudan, who now attend UWC Mostar and UWC Dilijan, respectively.

In 2016/2017, the International Office also developed a draft centralised selection process for all students entering Grade 11. Thanks to the support of UWCSEA, funding

was secured to support a movement-wide impact study in partnership with Harvard University Graduate School of Education. Once again, the UWCSEA Head of College

was a member of the International Board.

UWC IN MOSTAR

Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina

2006

Opened in

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

WATERFORD KAMHLABA UWC

Mbabane, Swaziland

1962

Opened in

Student population

600

Age group

11–20

UWC ROBERT BOSCH COLLEGE

Freiburg, Germany

2014

Opened in

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

UWC RED CROSS NORDIC

Flekke, Norway

1995

Opened in

Student population

205

Age group

16–19

UWC MAHINDRA

Pune, Maharashtra, India

1997

Opened in

Student population

240

Age group

16–19

UWC-USA

Montezuma, New Mexico, USA

1982

Opened in

Student population

235

Age group

16–19

PEARSON COLLEGE UWC

Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

1974

Opened in

Student population

160

Age group

16–19

UWC MAASTRICHT

Maastricht, Netherlands

2009

Opened in

Student population

915

Age group

2–18

UWC THAILAND

Phuket, Thailand

2009

Opened in

Student population

380

Age group

2–18

14 | Annual Report 2016/2017

UWCSEA GOVERNANCE

INTRODUCTION

UWCSEA is committed to the highest standards of corporate governance. The UWCSEA Board of Governors recognises good governance as critical in supporting the

school in achieving its mission and educational goal. Good governance begins with the Board of Governors and requires that they set the tone for the organisation.

The Board of Governors is one of the principal bodies with the fiduciary obligation to ensure that the College acts to further its stated objectives, and that the

College has appropriate systems in place to properly account for and safeguard the funds and assets of the College. The Board of Governors works closely with the

management and stakeholders of the College to shape the vision, chart the major directions, and develop programmes and initiatives to produce a strong and enduring

impact for the College in Singapore and beyond.

UWCSEA BOARD OF GOVERNORS

During 2016/2017 the UWCSEA Board of Governors comprised 19 members. The maximum number of Governors is 21. The Board includes respected business/industry

leaders, academics, educators, entrepreneurs, and professionals.

Governors do not receive compensation for their Board service. Those Governors that are staff members do not receive additional compensation for their Board service.

COMMITTEES, MEETINGS AND REVIEWS

The Board has six committees:

• Education and Talent, which sets and oversees education and talent

management strategies

• Finance and Infrastructure, which oversees the College’s finances and its

physical and digital infrastructure

• Governance, which is responsible for nominations and governance matters

• Audit and Risk, which oversees audit and risk matters

• Engagement, which is responsible for improving the engagement and

outreach of the College locally and globally, including the UWCSEA

Foundation

• Committee of Chairs, which functions as a coordinating and management

committee for the Board and its committee Chairs, as well as a

compensation committee

Governors periodically re-evaluate the committee structure to ensure it is effective, strategic and forward-looking. The Board carries out formal Board effectiveness

reviews, both externally every five years and internally every two years.

The Board meets four times each year. Each Governor is usually a member of one committee, which also meets four times per year.

COMPOSITION

The Board consists of three groups of Governors:

• Ad Personam Governors – The majority of Governors are appointed by

the Board itself through a rigorous selection process. Many Ad Personam

Governors are parents of current students of the College. To ensure the

Board benefits from independent thinking, there are also several non-parent

Governors.

• Ex-Officio Governor – The Head of College (Chris Edwards)

• Interested Party Governors – These are elected directly by their

constituencies and include two parent-elects and two common room-elects,

one each from the Dover and East campuses.

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 15

GOVERNOR SELECTION AND INDUCTION

The Board recruits Ad Personam Governors through a robust process that responds to clearly defined skill requirements for the Board. Candidates are first co-opted as

Advisers to Board committees. New Ad Personam Governors are only selected from that pool of Advisers who have served on a Committee. Appointments are based on

an assessment of the following factors:

• professional skills and fit with Board requirements

• role models for UWC values and culture

• demonstrated ability to contribute to a Board

• past contributions to UWC/service institutions

• impact on Board diversity

• leadership potential

• positive impact on Government relations

There is a comprehensive induction programme for all Advisers and Governors that includes information about the College and the Board, an induction session

with the Board Secretary, and meetings with the Chair of the Board and other Governors.

TERM LIMITS, REVIEWS, RECRUITMENT AND INDUCTION

Governors serve a maximum of two three-year terms. Only the Chair may serve an additional term of three years. The College and the Board holds its Governors

and Advisers to a high standard and regularly evaluates each against the following criteria:

The Governor:

• is prepared for meetings

• listens to and challenges others, when appropriate, while maintaining an

atmosphere of respect

• contributes and participates in a manner consistent with UWCSEA values

• has made meaningful contributions to key decisions

• attends most meetings and is highly attentive when present

• contributes overall

WHISTLEBLOWING

The College has a Whistleblowing policy through which members of the

UWCSEA community may, in confidence, raise concerns about possible wrong-

doing or improprieties in financial or other matters within the organisation. The

Board thoroughly and appropriately investigates matters brought to its attention

through the policy and takes appropriate follow-up action.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The College has a Conflict of Interest policy, which requires Board and staff

members to disclose conflict of interests in the performance of their duties.

In the case of the Board, the policy requires Governors and Advisers to report

potential conflicts to the Governance Committee, which may impose remedies

specific to the situation.

OTHER POLICIES ON CORPORATE AND INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOUR

The Board is also subject to, or will adhere to, the College’s policies on

corporate and individual behaviour, including the Board of Governors

Guidelines, Confidentiality Policy, Harassment Policy, Staff Safeguarding Code

of Conduct, and the Equal Opportunities, Access and Disabilities Policy.

CHECKLIST

In addition to the application of good governance practices as a corporate

entity, the Board of Governors has adopted best practices in key areas of

governance that are closely aligned to the principles enunciated in the

Code of Governance for Charities and Institutions of a Public Character (the

‘Code’). In line with the disclosure requirement by the Charity Council that all

charities are required to disclose the extent of their compliance with the Code,

UWCSEA’s Governance Evaluation Checklist can be found at the Charity Portal

website (www.charities.gov.sg).

16 | Annual Report 2016/2017

UWCSEA BOARD OF GOVERNORS: MEMBERS AUGUST 2016 TO JULY 2017

Charles Ormiston

Chair (until January 2017)

Ad Personam Governor

Will Kennedy-Cooke

Ad Personam Governor

Anna Lord

Chair (from January 2017)

Ad Personam Governor

Alexander Krefft

Chair of Governance

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Thierry Brezac

Ad Personam Governor

(retired January 2017)

Nicholas Chan

Ad Personam Governor

Subodh Chanrai

Ad Personam Governor

Margarita Encarnacion

Interested Party Governor –

Parent Representative

Surinder Kathpalia

Chair of Audit and Risk

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Michelle Sassoon

Ad Personam Governor

Priti Devi

Chair of Engagement

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Kenneth Stirrat

Interested Party Governor –

Common Room

Christopher Edwards

Ex-Officio Governor

Head of College

Andrew McCarthy

Interested Party Governor –

Common Room

Benjamin Hill Detenber

Ad Personam Governor

Julianne Martin

Interested Party Governor –

Parent Representative

Doris Sohmen-Pao

Ad Personam Governor

Davy Lau

Ad Personam Governor

David Maxwell

Chair of Education and

Talent Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Alexandra De Mello

Interested Party Governor –

Parent Representative

(retired March 2017)

Vivek Kalra

Chair of Finance and

Infrastructure Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 17

ADVISERS

Heather Carmichael

Subodh Chanrai

(until appointment as Governor 2 June 2017)

Shelly Maneth

COMMITTEES (as of January 2018)

AUDIT AND RISK COMMITTEE

Surinder Kathpalia, Chair

Heather Carmichael (Adviser)

Chris Edwards

Shelly Manneth (Adviser)

Kenneth Stirrat

EDUCATION AND TALENT COMMITTEE

David Maxwell, Chair

Heather Carmichael (Adviser)

Chris Edwards

Margarita Encarnacion

Benjamin Hill Detenber

ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE

Priti Devi, Chair

Subodh Chanrai

Chris Edwards

Julianne Martin

Michelle Sassoon

Doris Sohmen-Pao

FINANCE AND INFRASTRUCTURE COMMITTEE

Vivek Kalra, Chair

Chris Edwards

Robert Harayda (Adviser)

Will Kennedy-Cooke

Andrew McCarthy

David Maxwell

GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

Alexander Krefft, Chair

Nicholas Chan

Chris Edwards

Surinder Kathpalia

Davy Lau

COMMITTEE OF CHAIRS

Anna Lord, Chair

Priti Devi

Vivek Kalra

Surinder Kathpalia

Alexander Krefft

David Maxwell

18 | Annual Report 2016/2017

Annual Report 2016/2017 | 19

STUDENT

ACHIEVEMENT

20 | Annual Report 2016/2017

STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT

The learning programme at UWCSEA consists of five interlinking elements: academics, activities, outdoor

education, personal and social education and service. These elements combine to provide our students with a

values-based education that develops them as individuals and as members of a global society.

Our goal is to educate individuals to embrace challenge and take responsibility for shaping a better world.

Through the learning programme, students develop the disciplinary knowledge, skills and understandings

alongside the skills and qualities of the UWCSEA Learner Profile.

All five elements of the programme complement each other to create a whole that is greater than the sum

of the parts. This is a carefully planned and purposeful process, where students develop understanding in

disciplinary and interdisciplinary ways. For example, students gain deep disciplinary understanding in our

academic programme, which may be applied in outdoor education or service when students encounter and

grapple with real world situations. The skills and qualities identified in the UWCSEA profile are embedded in all

five elements of the programme.

K1-GRADE 12

Standard: Writing expresses selfhood, creativity and intellect in a medium shaped by audience and purpose.

GRADE 1

Essential Understanding: We create real or

imagined experiences when writing stories by

using characters and setting.

Benchmark: Develop the story through character,

focusing on specific actions.

GRADE 7

Essential Understanding: All parts of a text work

together to shape meaning.

Benchmark: Write narratives, using time and plot

deliberately in order to influence mood and focus

attention on the important moments in a story.

GRADE 11 AND 12 (IBDP)

Essential Understanding: Writers manipulate

structure to convey meaning effectively.

Benchmark: Sequence and sustain structure to

strengthen and develop the logic and persuasive

impact of a claim.

This section of the Annual report is an overview of the main highlights of the 2016/2017 year in each of the five elements.

THE UWCSEA CURRICULUM

The UWCSEA curriculum is concept-based. This means that students develop significant understandings which can be transferred across time, place and situation,

whilst acquiring knowledge and skill. This allows our students to apply critical and creative thinking to any context. Each discipline (or area) has standards, which are

statements that express the ‘big ideas’ and ways of thinking of the discipline. These standards run from K1 to Grade 12.

Each standard has grade level conceptual understandings, which are developmentally appropriate, that describe what a student should understand at each stage of

their development within that discipline. They build naturally in complexity from K1 to Grade 12.

Benchmarks start with a verb and express what the conceptual understanding might look like in terms of knowledge, skill and performance. These benchmarks and the

conceptual understandings they are based upon are what our teachers assess.

Below is an example of a standard in English, and the conceptual understandings for that standard in Grades 1 and 7 and IB Diploma.