Annual Report 2017/2018

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 110

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) 049/03/2018 | 066COM-1819

UWCSEA Dover 1207 Dover Road Singapore 139654

UWCSEA East 1 Tampines Street 73 Singapore 528704

www.uwcsea.edu.sg

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 1

CONTENTS

Message from Anna Lord, Chair of Board of Governors ......................................................................................................2

Introduction from Chris Edwards, Head of College ..............................................................................................................3

UWCSEA guiding statements and governance .................................................................................................................... 4

UWCSEA learning programme ...........................................................................................................................................6

Governance and leadership...............................................................................................................................................10

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

Strategic Plan 2018–2023.......................................................................................................................................................18

Student achievement............................................................................................................................................................... 24

Academics............................................................................................................................................................................28

Activities................................................................................................................................................................................41

Outdoor education.............................................................................................................................................................46

Personal and social education .........................................................................................................................................49

Service................................................................................................................................................................................... 52

Our community........................................................................................................................................................................56

Scholars..................................................................................................................................................................................61

Community feedback.........................................................................................................................................................63

Business report..........................................................................................................................................................................68

Human Resources............................................................................................................................................................... 70

Admissions........................................................................................................................................................................... 73

Finance.................................................................................................................................................................................. 76

Statement of financial position .......................................................................................................................................77

Statement of profit and loss and other comprehensive income .............................................................................. 78

College Advancement..............................................................................................................................................................80

Foundation...........................................................................................................................................................................82

Statement of financial position ......................................................................................................................................84

Statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income .................................................................................85

Foundation financial report..............................................................................................................................................86

Alumni relations..................................................................................................................................................................88

Donors 2017/2018..............................................................................................................................................................90

2 | Annual Report 2017/2018

MESSAGE FROM ANNA LORD

CHAIR OF BOARD OF GOVERNORS

Each year the UWCSEA annual

report tells a story of success

and achievement, and this one

is no different. I am delighted

to introduce another set of

information and statistics

about the College learning

programme and operations

for the 2017/2018 year, which

serve to provide a transparent account of our community’s work.

The primary role of the Board of Governors is to ensure the long-term

sustainability of the College, both reputationally and financially. We provide the

strategic oversight that ensures the school is well-run, giving a quality experience

to students, while at the same time we continually scan the horizon to prepare

for the future. The 2017/2018 year was one where we had our eye firmly fixed on

the future, and the main expression of this was the development of the UWCSEA

five-year strategy.

The process of developing the strategy included consultations with stakeholder

groups from across the community. With the UWCSEA mission as our compass,

Board and management considered the external opportunities and threats that

Singapore and the wider world of education present, as well as the internal

resources and capabilities that we must harness to respond to various potential

realities as they unfold. We generated much discussion as we tested our

assumptions, sought relevant data and synthesised perspectives.

The outcome was the UWCSEA Strategy 2018-2023, which was approved by

the Board of Governors in March 2018. But while the focus of the plan may be

on the next five years, it was built with the more long-term picture very much

at the forefront. In particular, we were focused on the financial sustainability of

the College and our ability to deliver a high quality, mission-driven education to

young people well into the future. I am confident that if we fulfill the promise

of our five-year strategy, we will be well-placed to bring the College to the next

stage of our development in the long-term.

Another major preoccupation during the year was compliance. Nowhere was

this made more apparent than in our Service programme, where changes to

Singapore regulations on fundraising led to a re-examination of our practice. We

are immensely proud of the pro-active and positive approach staff had to the

project: they took the opportunity to review and revise our internal processes

around fundraising at the College, while protecting the integrity of student

learning through the service programme, which is fundamental to who we are.

At the same time, they built a deeper understanding of our programme among

regulators, and took every chance to emphasise the strength of our Local Service

programme, which has a long history in Singapore and contributes so broadly to

our host country.

But if there was a theme to the 2017/2018 year, it was one of external outreach

and partnerships. As an example, in January 2018 the College entered into

an agreement with Sky School, which aims to provide education for young

refugees and displaced people whose education has been disrupted. UWCSEA

educators collaborated with people from across the world and are well on their

way to articulating a curriculum that is relevant to the circumstances of people

who have had to put their education on hold after they were forcibly displaced

as a result of conflict and persecution in their home countries. By harnessing

technology, the opportunities for impact are extremely exciting. We also began

work on the Impact Study, conducted in partnership with researchers at Harvard

Graduate School of Education Project Zero, to examine whether or not the UWC

movement has a positive impact on the lives of our students and alumni and on

society as a whole. Both these partnerships are fully aligned to our mission and

we look forward to building more local and international partnerships that will

help us to extend our reach.

And finally, this is the last Annual Report where my message as Chair will be

accompanied by another fine piece of prose on the opposite page from Chris

Edwards, our Head of College. At the end of last year, Chris announced that he

will be leaving us after five years in his role. Annual reports are not the place to

pay tribute to departing leaders, but it seems appropriate to acknowledge that

while Chris was our Head, the College moved closer to the heart of the UWC

movement, examined our commitment to our mission and prepared the way for

a sustainable future for UWCSEA in Singapore. Thank you, Chris.

Anna Lord

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 3

INTRODUCTION FROM CHRIS EDWARDS

HEAD OF COLLEGE

China is the first superpower

to come back. While some

city-states and countries were

more or less at the top of the

game for centuries (Rome) or

even millennia (Egypt), they

all eventually conceded the

crown to others, and none has

ever returned to reclaim the

prize. Until now. China’s awareness of self famously stretches back millennia but so

does its sense of destiny. “Opportunities multiply as they are seized” said Sun Tzu,

General and author of The Art of War, and now an extraordinary national patience

and stoicism is wedded, paradoxically, to a breathtaking yet pragmatic innovative

paradigm that has become, in scale at any rate, the greatest show on earth.

My drawing a parallel between what is easily the largest and fastest social and

economic change in human history and a school’s Annual Report may seem

final confirmation that Heads are peripheral, self-aggrandising pinheads. But as

George Gershwin memorably (though inaccurately) wrote: “They all laughed at

Christopher Columbus/When he said the world was round”. The fact is, I believe

that if the right people can look to the horizon rather than where they have come

from, the academic year 2017/2018 will be seen as the start of the second coming

of UWC the movement with a recalibrated UWCSEA at the heart of the uprising.

2017/2018 saw both the movement and the College turning over and watering the

good earth so that new flowers and, I hope, forests might be planted.

At first glance this metaphorical claim will appear so vague as to be meaningless

or just plain bogus. After all, much of what you read here looks like last year—

and that’s a good thing. The School is operating at full capacity (we remain

oversubscribed in changing times); the IB results are very strong (with East

and Dover achieving almost identical averages) and our university placements

are typically impressive and diverse; you’ll see an amazing number of trips,

activities and service projects (probably more than any other school in the

world); and sadly, as ever, we can reflect very little of what the Romans would

have called our ‘genius lociI’, our protective and defining spirit, because in the

end annual reports are not designed to capture that. So yes, a cursory glance will

tell you everything is hunky-dory and that if we had shareholders there would

be murmurs of quiet satisfaction. But good metaphors should not be vague:

they should amplify, not obfuscate truth, and so I go back to cultivation of the

existing land.

In 2017/2018, the new College Strategic Plan recognised four areas of focus which

support the education of our young in the tradition of Kurt Hahn: Education as

a Force; Peace and a Sustainable Future; A United Community; Our Strength and

Capacity. These areas are linked to the three pillars of the UWC movement’s new

2018 and Beyond strategy: Seek, Educate, Inspire. While keeping the students at

the centre of our thinking, the College plan moves to a much more sustainable

paradigm, and this includes significant restructuring of leadership, a new financial

model and a long term vision that takes into account land leases and a host of

possible future scenarios. It was imperative that we fortified the College so that

it would be here for future generations and so that it might also more fully and

intimately engage with Singapore.

But together with the long-term visioning we must acknowledge the quotidien

successes that marked last year, and I would like to focus on one area. Just as we

never hear on the news how many aeroplanes landed safely around the world in

any given day, so we don’t foreground the work of the support staff who provide

the thousands of meals, clean the multitude of rooms, answer the endless calls. The

impressive numbers and statistics in this publication reflect wonderfully well on

students and teachers, but they would not exist but for the support staff. UWCSEA

is a very large and complex school, and the fact that so many of our metaphorical

aeroplanes do indeed land safely is testament to the dedication of this community

within the College. They are too often the unsung heroes of such reports as this.

This will be my final introduction to an Annual Report. With the new five year

strategy and financial plan in place, and the attendant restructuring set for

completion in 2018/2019, it is time to hand this extraordinary College over to

new leadership. Going forward it should become still stronger and more resilient,

in tandem with a movement that is regenerating purpose and momentum. For

the sake of neatness I should really finish with a Chinese proverb about future

good fortune, but I hope you’ll forgive me if I turn to a fellow countryman, G.K

Chesterton, to help me express what I feel about the privilege of being a part of

UWCSEA. He said: “I would maintain that thanks are the highest form of thought,

and that gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder.”

That just about sums it up.

Chris Edwards

4 | Annual Report 2017/2018

4 | Annual Report 2017/2018

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 5

UWCSEA GUIDING STATEMENTS

AND GOVERNANCE

6 | Annual Report 2017/2018

To make education

a force to unite people,

nations and cultures

for peace and a

sustainable future

To make education

a force to unite people,

nations and cultures

for peace and a

sustainable future

i

To educate

individuals to embrace

challenge and take

responsibility for

shaping a

better world

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HOLISTIC

EDUCATION

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Because

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UWCSEA

PROFILE

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LEARNING

PRINCIPLES

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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.

UWCSEA LEARNING PROGRAMME

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 7

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.

8 | Annual Report 2017/2018

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 2017/2018 | 9

10 | Annual Report 2017/2018

GOVERNANCE AND LEADERSHIP

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.

UWC CHANGSHU CHINA

Changshu, Jiangsu Province, China

2015

Opened in

Student population

443

Age group

15–18

UWC ATLANTIC COLLEGE

Vale of Glamorgan, United Kingdom

1962

Opened in

Student population

350

Age group

15–19

UWC COSTA RICA

San José, Costa Rica

2006

Opened in

Student population

175

Age group

16–19

UWC ISAK JAPAN

Karuizawa, Japan

2014

Opened in

Student population

175

Age group

15–19

LI PO CHUN UWC

New Territories, Hong Kong SAR, China

1992

Opened in

Student population

256

Age group

16–18

UWC DILIJAN

Dilijan, Armenia

2014

Opened in

Student population

219

Age group

16–18

UWC ADRIATIC

Duino, Italy

1982

Opened in

Student population

182

Age group

16–19

East Campus, Singapore

2008

Opened in

Student population

2,557

Age group

4–18

UWC SOUTH EAST ASIA

Dover Campus, Singapore

1971

Opened in

Student population

3,000

Age group

4–18

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 11

UWC RED CROSS NORDIC

Flekke, Norway

1995

Opened in

Student population

205

Age group

16–20

UWC ROBERT BOSCH COLLEGE

Freiburg, Germany

2014

Opened in

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

PEARSON COLLEGE UWC

Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

1974

Opened in

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

UWC-USA

Montezuma, New Mexico, USA

1982

Opened in

Student population

235

Age group

17–19

WATERFORD KAMHLABA UWC

Mbabane, Eswatini

1963

Opened in

Student population

600

Age group

11–20

UWC THAILAND

Phuket, Thailand

2008

Opened in

Student population

460

Age group

2–18

UWC MAHINDRA

Pune, Maharashtra, India

1997

Opened in

Student population

240

Age group

16–18

UWC IN MOSTAR

Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina

2006

Opened in

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

UWC MAASTRICHT

Maastricht, Netherlands

2009

Opened in

Student population

915

Age group

4–18

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 15

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.

12 | Annual Report 2017/2018

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 13

STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENTS DURING 2017/2018

In October 2017, stakeholders from across the UWC movement—Heads and Chairs from the schools and colleges, National Committee members, UWC

Council and the International Board—came together to give final input to the UWC Strategy 2018 and Beyond before it was officially approved by the UWC

International Board.

The overarching aim is to increase the impact of the UWC Movement’s mission to make education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a

sustainable future. It extends UWC’s ambition from providing transformative educational experiences for students to becoming a global voice for how values- and

diversity-based education can build peace and sustainability.

Jens Waltermann, Executive Director of UWC International wrote: “Values and deep encounters with diversity which encourage students to reach across national

and social divides are crucial if eduation is to impart a bias for good, for understanding and reconciliation and if it is to inspire selfless leadership. That was Kurt

Hahn’s goal—and the new UWC Strategy translates his vision into our programme for the next decade.”

“Seek, educate, inspire!”—these words frame UWC’s three focus areas. The first area ‘Seek’ focuses on UWC’s unique National Committee system, which enables

UWC to select students in over 155 countries and territories worldwide. While the majority of UWCSEA’s students come in through a direct entry system, similar

criteria to that used by National Committees are used to select our older students, involving them in immersion days and working with our current students to help

identify those individuals who will best benefit from, and contribute to, the UWCSEA community. This area of the strategy is aimed at strengthening the selection

system so that we identify students of promise and potential who would not otherwise have found UWC.

The second area ‘Educate’ focuses on the learning experiences students have while they are at a UWC, most particularly how the community commitment to

the mission can be incorporated into their learning programme. For the UWC movement, this is focused on delivering excellence through our staff and teaching

practice and ensuring an environment where students are trusted but also supported. This area also focuses on developing short courses so that more people can

access a UWC education, even if they do not attend one of the schools and colleges.

The third area ‘Inspire’ expands on the idea that UWC is more than an education, but rather is about fostering active and engaged communities that have positive

impacts on the world around them. The Movement is also seeking to build strategic partnerships with mission-aligned individuals and organisations so that UWC

becomes one of the most respected voices in intercultural and diversity education, while advancing the mission and values.

14 | Annual Report 2017/2018

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

The UWCSEA Board of Governors comprises 19 members. The Board includes respected business/industry leaders, academics, educators, entrepreneurs,

and professionals.

SIZE, COMMITTEES, MEETINGS AND REVIEWS

The maximum number of Governors is 21. 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 among the Chairs of the Board and Committees

Governors periodically re-evaluate the committee structure to ensure it is effective, strategic and forward-looking. The Board meets four times each year. Each

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

The Board carries out formal Board effectiveness reviews, both externally every five years and internally every two years.

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 teacher-elects, one

each from the Dover and East campuses.

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 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 usually 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

WHISTLE BLOWING

The College has a Whistle Blowing 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 IPCs 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 2017/2018

Michelle Sassoon

Ad Personam Governor

Engagement Committee

Kenneth Stirrat

Interested Party Governor –

Common Room

Audit and Risk Committee

Andrew McCarthy

Interested Party Governor –

Common Room

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Doris Sohmen-Pao

Ad Personam Governor

Engagement Committee

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION BOARD MEMBERS (as at August 2018)

Anna Lord

Chair

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Alexander Krefft

Chair of Governance

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Nicholas Chan

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

Subodh Chanrai

Ad Personam Governor

Engagement Committee

Surinder Kathpalia

Chair of Audit and Risk

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Priti Devi

Chair of Engagement

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Julianne Martin

Interested Party Governor –

Parent Representative

Engagement Committee

Davy Lau

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

David Maxwell

Chair of Education and

Talent Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Will Kennedy-Cooke

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Margarita Encarnacion

Interested Party Governor –

Parent Representative

Education and Talent

Committee

Christopher Edwards

Ex-Officio Governor

Head of College

Benjamin Hill Detenber

Ad Personam Governor

Education and Talent

Committee

Vivek Kalra

Chair of Finance and

Infrastructure Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Annual Report 2017/2018 | 17

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION BOARD MEMBERS (as at August 2018)

Anna Lord, Chair

Alexander Krefft

Andrew McCarthy

Benjamin Detenber

Chris Edwards

David Maxwell

Davy Lau

Doris Sohmen-Pao*

Julianne Martin

Kim Teo

Margarita Encarnacion

Nicholas Chan

Priti Devi

Subodh Chanrai

Surinder Kathpalia

Vivek Kalra

Heinrich Jessen

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

*not member of Foundation Board

INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS: THE UWCSEA FOUNDATION LIMITED (as at August 2018)

Andrew Budden

Derek Lau

UWCSEA BOARD ADVISERS (as at August 2018)

Philip Motteram

Steve Okun

Sajjad Akhtar

Sumitra Pasupathy

Robert Harayda

WT Cheah

COMMITTEES (as at August 2018)

AUDIT AND RISK COMMITTEE

Surinder Kathpalia, Chair

Chris Edwards

Heather Carmichael

Sajjad Akhtar (Adviser)

WT Cheah (Adviser)

EDUCATION AND TALENT COMMITTEE

David Maxwell, Chair

Chris Edwards

Benjamin Detenber

Margarita Encarnacion

Heather Carmichael

Sumitra Pasupathy (Adviser)

ENGAGEMENT COMMITTEE

Priti Devi, Chair

Chris Edwards

Doris Sohmen-Pao

Julianne Martin

Subodh Chanrai

Steve Okun (Adviser)

FINANCE AND INFRASTRUCTURE COMMITTEE

Vivek Kalra, Chair

Chris Edwards

Andrew McCarthy

Robert Harayda (Adviser)

Philip Motteram (Adviser)

GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE

Alexander Krefft, Chair

Chris Edwards

Davy Lau

Nicholas Chan

Surinder Kathpalia

Heinrich Jessen

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

COMMITTEE OF CHAIRS

Anna Lord, Chair

Alexander Krefft

David Maxwell

Priti Devi

Surinder Kathpalia

Vivek Kalra

Andy Budden

18 | Annual Report 2017/2018

18 | Annual Report 2017/2018