Annual Report 2018/2019

ANNUAL REPORT

UWC South East Asia

2018/2019

01

MESSAGE FROM ANNA

LORD, CHAIR OF BOARD

OF GOVERNORS

03

UWCSEA GUIDING

STATEMENTS,

GOVERNANCE AND

LEADERSHIP

05 UWCSEA Guiding

Statements

07 UWC movement

09 UWCSEA Governance

and Leadership

13

UWCSEA

STRATEGY

2018–2023

Contents

67

BUSINESS REPORT

69 Human Resources

71 UWCSEA Foundation

73 Finance

75 Admissions

53

OUR COMMUNITY

57 Students and families

59 Boarders and scholars

61 Staff

63 Alumni

65 Parent Community

19

STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT

23 Academics

31 Activities

37 Outdoor Education

43 Personal and Social

Education

47 Service

1 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

Welcome to the UWCSEA 2018/2019

Annual Report, which provides an

overview of the College’s achievements

over the year. This year, the report has

been developed to better reflect life at

the College. While the statistics are as

useful as ever, the inclusion of student

achievement ‘in action’ stories in this

report speaks to the heart of who we

are. Read in partnership with the Impact

of Giving Report, we see a community

united in common purpose, equipping

our diverse group of incredible students

with the skills and qualities to create a

more peaceful and sustainable world, in

the fulfillment of the UWC mission.

The 2018/2019 year was the first

full year of the implementation of

the UWCSEA strategy. As the year

unfolded, the relevance of the strategy

to our long-term future became

increasingly apparent. The launch of

a review of the learning programme

with the Future of Education in mind;

the diversity cafés, which brought the

community together to define the

concept of diversity for UWCSEA; the

development of a peace curriculum

transferable to multiple contexts;

further progress on a sustainable

approach to food service; the further

development of policies and procedures

to support safeguarding practices; the

reinforcement of the UWCSEA Culture

of Care; and the implementation of

budgeting, procurement and fundraising

compliance structures—all of these

efforts will benefit us as we head

towards 2021 and the celebration of 50

years of UWCSEA in Singapore.

The celebration will look as much to

the future as it does the past, and our

vision for our next 50 years will build

on strategy and practices put in place

today. Our educators are acutely aware

of the importance of making ‘education

a force’ in today’s world, and they are

working tirelessly to empower our

students to lead the way in finding

their sense of purpose, realising their

individual potential and making an

impact on the world, whether it be in

the arts, science, politics, commerce

or a field that few of us can even

conceptualise today.

2018/2019 was also a year of transition.

The Greek philosopher Heraclitus said

that the only constant is change, and

international communities are more

susceptible than most to changes in

leadership and staff. While the UWCSEA

community is unusually stable (with

only 6.7% of families leaving in June

2018, compared with a 15% average

in like schools in the region), the size

of our community does mean we say

goodbye to many families and to staff

each year. Last year we bid farewell our

Head of College after a five-year tenure,

and so a key focus of the year was the

recruitment of a College President.

The re-imagining of the President role

was part of a wider restructuring of

the leadership teams to better reflect

the strategic direction of the College.

The President’s main focus is to ensure

that the College’s external-facing

responsibilities and opportunities

(including with the UWC movement and

the Singapore authorities) are fulfilled,

while the Heads of Campus guarantee

the quality of the learning programme

and the student experience. The

search took place over seven months

and involved people from across all

stakeholder groups. We were delighted

to identify and secure Carma Elliot, who

began her new role in August 2019, and

whose already significant impact will be

reported on in next year’s report.

The role of the Board of Governors

is to ensure that the College is run

in line with our mission, values and

strategy. The Board has a significant

fiduciary responsibility to ensure that

the College has appropriate systems

and processes in place to both further

its objectives today and safeguard what

we value for the future. Each quarter,

Governors review a dashboard, which

contains main metrics for success, as

agreed with the leadership teams. These

metrics include, among other things,

academic achievement data and student

participation and wellbeing data;

financial, admissions and HR data; key

risks for the College; and achievements

against the strategy. At the same time,

each quarter, each of the six Board

committees conduct ‘deep dives’ into

specific topics in their subject area. For

example, in 2018/2019 the Education

and Talent Committee reviewed the

recruitment and retention process

for Teachers while the Audit and Risk

Committee commissioned an internal

audit on the Activities programme. This

approach ensures that committees can

work closely with leadership teams to

support and enhance critical functions

at the College.

Volunteering is a feature of life at

UWCSEA and the parent community

dedicates countless hours to support

the College in fulfilling our mission. I

am very grateful to all our volunteers,

CHAIR OF BOARD

OF GOVERNORS

MESSAGE FROM

2 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

not least to the 17 Governors and

seven advisers to the Board who work

tirelessly behind the scenes to ensure

that the College is operating at the

highest standards of governance.

The 2018/2019 year was another

exceptional year for UWCSEA, made

possible by committed staff, supportive

parents, a huge number of dedicated

volunteers, partners and supporters,

and of course our exceptional students,

whose endless optimism and boundless

energy embody the spirit of UWCSEA.

On a more personal note, and since this

will be my last message as Chair of the

Board of Governors, I would like to say

what a privilege and pleasure it has been

to work alongside such a talented and

committed group of people for the last

eight years.

Thank you all.

Anna Lord

3 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

“I’ve always had with me the activism and the motivation to do something

for others but at UWCSEA I’ve learned how to do it and that I can do it.”

VALERIA OBREGON DIAZ ’19, UWC National Committee Scholar from Mexico

UWCSEA GUIDING STATEMENTS,

GOVERNANCE AND LEADERSHIP

5 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

The mission of the UWC movement is to make education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a

sustainable future. As both the starting point and the end goal of a UWCSEA education, our mission guides every decision made

at the College as we strive to educate individuals to embrace challenge and take responsibility for shaping a better world.

UWCSEA LEARNING PRINCIPLES

Our learning principles are based on the understanding that

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 that learning is effective when learners:

• construct new understanding by activating prior knowledge

and experience

• use timely and goal directed feedback

• collaborate

• are challenged

• feel secure and supported

• construct meaning by seeing patterns and making

connections

• actively process and reflect

• apply meta-cognitve skills

• understand the purpose of the learning

• have ownership of their learning

LEARNING

PRINCIPLES

The diagram describes how our

educational goal springs from

our mission. By establishing our

learning principles and developing

knowledge and understanding

through the five elements of the

UWCSEA learning programme,

we strive to develop skills and

qualities in our students that

will enable them to fulfil our

educational goal—and therefore

our mission.

UWCSEA

GUIDING STATEMENTS

6 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

HOLISTIC

EDUCATION

UWCSEA

LEARNING

PROGRAMME

Our learning

programme consists

of five interlinking

elements: academics,

activities, outdoor

education, personal

and social education

and service. The

elements combine to

provide our students

with a holistic, values-

based education

that develops them

as individuals and

as members of a

global society.

UWCSEA

PROFILE

UWCSEA PROFILE

We have identified the qualities and skills needed by

our community to help to fulfil our mission. Students

are given multiple, age-appropriate opportunities to

develop the following:

Qualities

Commitment to care

Principled

Resilience

Self awareness

Skills

Critical thinker

Creative

Collaborative

Communicator

Self manager

UWCSEA Ambition: Our ambition is to be a leader in international education, with 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.

7 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

UWCSEA is a member of the UWC movement,

which was founded in 1962 by the influential

educationalist Kurt Hahn. Opened by the then

Prime Minister Mr Lee Kuan Yew as Singapore

International School in 1971, UWCSEA was the

second member of the UWC movement. Since

then, UWCSEA has expanded to become a K–12

school of more than 5,500 students over two

campuses, making it the largest UWC in the

movement, and one of only seven that enrol

students before the IB Diploma in Grade 11.

The 17 schools and colleges in the movement

are supported by a network of National

Committees, made up of volunteers in 150

countries worldwide, who help to find and select

many of the Grade 11 and 12 students who

attend the colleges around the world as National

Committee scholars.

This information is as at 31 July 2019. In August

2019, UWC East Africa (UWCEA) became the

18th member of the UWC movement.

UWC MOVEMENT

San José, Costa Rica

UWC Costa Rica

Opened in

2006

Student population

175

Age group

16–19

Dilijan, Armenia

UWC Dilijan

Opened in

2014

Student population

219

Age group

16–18

Karuizawa, Japan

UWC

ISAK Japan

Opened in

2014

Student population

175

Age group

15–19

UWC South East Asia

Dover Campus, Singapore

Opened in

1971

Student population

3,035

Age group

4–18

East Campus, Singapore

Opened in

2008

Student population

2,557

Age group

4–18

UWC Adriatic

Duino, Italy

Opened in

1982

Student population

182

Age group

16–19

UWC

Atlantic College

Vale of Glamorgan,

United Kingdom

Opened in

1962

Student population

350

Age group

15–19

UWC

Changshu China

Changshu, Jiangsu

Province, China

Opened in

2015

Student population

443

Age group

15–18

8 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

Phuket, Thailand

UWC Thailand

Opened in

2008

Student population

460

Age group

2–18

Montezuma,

New Mexico, USA

UWC-USA

Opened in

1982

Student population

235

Age group

17–19

New Territories,

Hong Kong SAR, China

Li Po Chun UWC

Opened in

1992

Student population

256

Age group

16–18

Flekke, Norway

UWC Red Cross

Nordic

Opened in

1995

Student population

205

Age group

16–20

UWC Mahindra

Pune, Maharashtra, India

Opened in

1997

Student population

240

Age group

16–18

UWC in Mostar

Mostar, Bosnia

and Herzegovina

Opened in

2006

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

Pearson College

UWC

Victoria, British

Columbia, Canada

Opened in

1974

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

Maastricht, Netherlands

UWC Maastricht

Opened in

2009

Student population

915

Age group

4–18

Freiburg, Germany

UWC Robert

Bosch College

Opened in

2014

Student population

200

Age group

16–19

Mbabane, Eswatini

Waterford

Kamhlaba UWC

Opened in

1963

Student population

600

Age group

11–20

9 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

UWCSEA

GOVERNANCE AND LEADERSHIP

OVERVIEW

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 17 members. The Board includes

respected business and industry leaders, academics, educators, entrepreneurs and

professionals. All members serve on a voluntary basis.

Size, Committees and Meetings

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.

Board Effectiveness Review

The Board carries out formal Board effectiveness reviews, externally every five years

and internally every two years. Heidrick & Struggles were commissioned to conduct

an external Board effectiveness review and their report and the Board’s response

were made available to the College community in May 2019.

Heidrick & Struggles concluded that the Board is effective and that we should

celebrate the achievements made in recent years towards effectiveness and impact.

As requested, they also recommended a number of ways in which the Board can

improve, including providing assurance to key stakeholders on important issues.

As part of efforts to implement the recommendations of the report, work on re-

evaluating the College values has already taken place. Work has also commenced on

evaluating and redrafting the Terms of Reference of each committee and the Board

Charter. Other key pieces of work include:

• Improving documentation to clarify the independence of all Governors, including

those elected by parents and/or staff

• Creating efficiencies by streamlining Board and committee papers

• Improving induction and support for new Governors and Advisers

• Providing useful and tailored training, engagement and team building

opportunities for Governors, Advisers and management

The Board has committed to report to the College community on progress every six

months, within the Board minutes.

10 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

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 Governors – in 2018/2019, 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 from each campus.

Governor Recruitment, 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, culture and alignment with the mission

• 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 and Reviews

Governors serve a maximum of two, three-year terms. Only the Chair may serve up

to two additional terms of three years.

The College and the Board holds its Governors and Advisers to a high standard and

regularly evaluates each Governor against the following criteria:

• 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 Policy

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 policy requires Board and

staff members to disclose any conflict

of interest 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.

Policies on corporate

and individual behaviour

The Board also adheres 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.

Commissioner of Charities

Oversight

The Board has adopted best practices in

key areas of governance that are closely

aligned with the Code of Governance

for Charities and Institutions of a

Public Character (the “Code”). In line

with the Commissioner of Charities

requirements, UWCSEA’s Governance

Evaluation Checklist can be found

via the Charity Portal website

www.charities.gov.sg.

11 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION BOARD MEMBERS

Anna Lord

Chair

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Surinder Kathpalia

Chair of Audit and Risk

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

Committee of Chairs

Heather Carmichael

Chair of Education and

Talent Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Audit and Risk Committee

Committee of Chairs

Priti Devi

Chair of Engagement

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Subodh Chanrai ’82

Chair of Governance

Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Sajjad Akhtar

Chair of Finance and

Infrastructure Committee

Ad Personam Governor

Committee of Chairs

Heinrich Jessen ’86

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

Mark Porter

Interested Party Governor

– Teacher Representative

Education and Talent

Committee

Seng Chee Ho

Ad Personam Governor

Education and Talent

Committee

Caroline McLaughlin

Interested Party Governor

– Parent Representative

Engagement Committee

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

Interested Party Governor

– Teacher Representative

Education and Talent

Committee

Kim Teo ’76

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

Margarita

Encarnacion

Interested Party Governor

– Parent Representative

Education and Talent

Committee

Audit and Risk Committee

Christopher Edwards

Ex-Officio Governor

Head of College

Benjamin Hill

Detenber

Ad Personam Governor

Education and Talent

Committee

Vivek Kalra

Ad Personam Governor

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Davy Lau

Ad Personam Governor

Governance Committee

All information correct as at 31 July 2019.

12 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS: THE UWCSEA FOUNDATION LIMITED

Andrew Budden

UWCSEA BOARD ADVISERS

Philip Motteram

Steve Okun

WT Cheah

Sumitra Pasupathy

Sharat Sinha

Leon Toh

Tara Garson Flower

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION COMMITTEES

Audit and Risk Committee

Surinder Kathpalia, Chair

Heather Carmichael

Margo Encarnacion

WT Cheah (Adviser)

Education and Talent Committee

Heather Carmichael, Chair

Chris Edwards

Seng Chee Ho

Benjamin Detenber

Margarita Encarnacion

Mark Porter

Sumitra Pasupathy (Adviser)

Engagement Committee

Priti Devi, Chair

Caroline McLaughlin

Chris Edwards

Steve Okun (Adviser)

Leon Toh (Adviser)

Foundation Investment and

Disbursement Committee

Andy Budden, Chair

Kim Teo ’76

Chris Edwards

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Sajjad Akhtar Chair

Vivek Kalra

Chris Edwards

Philip Motteram (Adviser)

Tara Garson Flower (Adviser)

Sharat Sinha (Adviser)

Governance Committee

Subodh Chanrai ’82 , Chair

Chris Edwards

Davy Lau

Surinder Kathpalia

Heinrich Jessen ’86

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

Kim Teo ’76

Committee of Chairs

Anna Lord, Chair

Heather Carmichael

Subodh Chanrai ’82

Priti Devi

Surinder Kathpalia

Sajjad Akhtar

Andy Budden

All information correct as at 31 July 2019.

13 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

“I believe you can fulfil the UWC mission if you are running a global bank,

or a suburban home with three children, or an NGO in sub-Saharan Africa,

or even if you’re sitting silently atop a mountain planning your next novel.”

CHRIS EDWARDS, Former Head of College, UWCSEA in Dunia magazine, December 2018

UWCSEA STRATEGY 2018–2023

15 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

UWCSEA STRATEGY 2018–2023

During the 2018/2019 year, the campuses embarked on enacting the College’s Strategy, based on the Strategic Vision which

describes the intended five-year outcome in each of the four Areas of Focus.

The four Areas of Focus identify 10 strategies that have become strands that will help the College to realise these outcomes.

These strands then guide planning and decision-making for campuses, schools and operational areas at the College.

During 2018/2019, each campus and operational area began implementation of the multi-year plans for the various projects that

will bring these strategies to life. Note that some strands will have been prioritised to receive focus in this first reported school

year, while other strands will be reported in more detail in later years. This priority will necessarily be different on each campus

given the operational maturity and priorities of each, as identified in the campus-specific strategies that were developed in

response to the launch of the College-wide strategy.

The Board of Governors oversees progress through a report on an Area of Focus at each of the four meetings during the year,

while the senior leadership teams monitor the detailed projects.

The following is an outline of the UWCSEA Strategy 2018–2023, highlighting 2018/2019 outcomes.

UWCSEA STRATEGIC VISION

Students will be equipped with the qualities and skills to become compassionate, engaged global citizens who seek to make a

positive contribution towards peace and a sustainable future. To achieve this, a diverse, united and caring College community will

focus creatively on students learning through a dynamic, holistic programme that supports individuals, their well-being and their

readiness for an uncertain future.

Effective operational practices will provide for the College’s long-term future in Singapore.

AREAS OF FOCUS

UWCSEA

STRATEGY

OUR STRENGTH

AND CAPACITY

PEACE AND

A SUSTAINABLE

FUTURE

A UNITED

COMMUNITY

EDUCATION

AS A FORCE

17 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

Education as a Force

At UWCSEA, we educate

our students to impact on

individuals and society in

accordance with the UWC

mission. Through a holistic

Learning Programme,

students develop the skills and qualities (which meld

to form the UWCSEA Learner Profile) to fulfil their

potential and become life-long learners and ethical

agents for change.

We understand educational excellence to be manifested

by student learning across all five elements of our Learning

Programme. This spirit of excellence, balanced with a

serious commitment to well-being, will help inspire our

community to rich experiences and high achievement.

Our innovation will align with our values. We will take

scalable, safe-to-fail approaches to probe and test the

boundaries of our strategies and practices.

Within the contexts of Singapore and our Learning

Programme, we will seek to be inclusive and diverse, in

accordance with our definitions of these concepts, and we

will recognise the importance of intercultural competence.

Key developments during 2018/2019 year:

Strategy E1: Extending Excellence

• Embedding of pedagogical approaches to concept

based teaching and learning

• Development of our structures to support digital learning,

creating significant coherence between campuses

• College wide development of data analysis to inform

learning and strategy

• Launch of a review of the learning programme,

evaluating current guiding statements and future

development

Strategy E2: Deliberate Innovation

• Working groups to review innovative approaches to

school timetabling convened

• Development of pilot courses in Grade 9 and 10 to

support Diploma Learning in Grade 12 and personal

growth for students

Strategy E3: Diversity and Inclusion

• Two World Cafés allowing the community to come

together to define the concept of diversity for UWCSEA

• Follow-up survey and analysis of data from World

Café process

Peace and a Sustainable

Future

Our community is

strengthened by diversity and

united in common purpose.

On local, national and global

platforms, we will seek to

engage with and impact positively on individuals and

communities who hold similar, disparate and diverse ideas.

All members of our community should understand

Peace to include concepts such as justice, equality

and human rights and to be more than the absence of

conflict. Our Learning Programme will help seed and

nurture these concepts. We aspire to promote Peace in

all of its contexts—for the individual, our communities

and our global societies. We will embed structures

to support learning for Peace and its systematic

implementation across the College, and develop

meaningful links with like-minded organisations that

are in pursuit of the same goals.

Sustainability as a systemic response means aligning

ourselves to the UN Sustainable Development Goals to

end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity

for all within the means of nature. We will engage

with these challenges by deepening our intellectual

and moral capacities, and building our collective

wisdom. We will develop our curriculum to ensure that

sustainability is woven into all five elements of our

learning programme from K–12. We will also develop

our community’s capability in systems thinking.

Key developments during 2018/2019 year:

Strategy P1: Working for Peace

• Engagement of a team to develop a Peace curriculum

that will be transferable to multiple contexts (and

potentially other schools)

Strategy P2: Sustainability as a Systemic Response:

• Redesign of the leadership teams to establish campus

based leadership

• Review of the interaction between Service and

environmental sustainability

• Further progress on solar panel projects and

sustainability learning spaces

• Further progress with Sodexo caterers on sustainable

approaches to food service

• Sustainable approaches to parent sponsored events

introduced

EDUCATION

AS A FORCE

PEACE AND

A SUSTAINABLE

FUTURE

18 | UWCSEA Annual Report 2018/2019

A United Community

A strong College community,

based on shared values, is

fundamental to our success.

Our community members

will demonstrate respectful

attention to diverse needs

and perspectives, and compassionate engagement

with others.

We seek to promote the educational significance of

UWC residential life and will seek to harmonise the

best of the day and residential experiences. We will

strengthen relationships with one another, between

campuses and with those outside our immediate

community of students, staff and parents. We will

build strategic relationships that extend our reach and

deepen our impact. We will intensify the focus of the

UWCSEA Foundation, enhance Alumni engagement,

and continue to dedicate an agreed percentage of our

annual turnover to scholarships.

Our fundamental responsibility to our community

members is to keep them safe, well and secure at all

times and in all situations. We will continue to develop

robust safeguarding practices, and empower our

community to identify and respond to safeguarding

situations. We will implement policies, practices and

programmes to support staff and student wellness and

safeguard everyone in our community.

Key developments during 2018/2019 year:

Strategy C1: Strengthening our Community

• Strategic planning for the future of Boarding embracing

structures, staffing and the Residential Life curriculum

• Refinement of induction and on-boarding practices for

students and staff

• Adoption of middle leadership development plan

• Review of the Personal Learning Programme on Dover

Campus

• Parents’ Association developed additional

programmes to further support College initiatives

Strategy C2: Keeping People Safe and Well

• Creation and update of policies and procedures to

support safeguarding practices, including compulsory

training for all staff

• Development of UWCSEA Culture of Care providing an

overarching approach to wellbeing

• Incorporation of Safe Behaviours learning into the

PSE curriculum, adapted to UWCSEA context from

Keeping Safe: Child Protection Curriculum

Our Strength and

Capacity

UWCSEA puts people, not

systems, first. Our plan for

sustainable growth will be

transparent and support

our community, while

reflecting and responding to current realities and future

possibilities. We will guarantee the financial security

of the College while balancing present and future

educational, environmental and organisational needs.

In order to retain education as our focus, we recognise the

necessity of humane, sustainable and effective systems.

We will develop operational systems that set a positive,

data-informed culture around rigorous practices,

adhering to all external regulatory requirements.

In adapting to any changes, we will support our

community and protect the College’s ethos and values.

We will establish decision-making processes and

leadership structures that enhance operational

effectiveness while retaining flexibility to adapt to

changing circumstances.

Key developments during 2018/2019 year:

Strategy S1: Ensuring Long-term Financial

Sustainability

• Implementation of zero-based budgeting to increase

visibility and management for budget holders

• Implementation of new procurement policy

• Decision to create an investment sub-committee to

oversee management of College reserves

Strategy S2: Embedding Effective Systems

• Preparation for implementation of new, efficient

modes of invoicing and payment eg. online invoicing

of school fees; enabling payments via PayNow

• Implementation of a formal and standardised

performance management system for administrative

and support staff

• Comprehensive compliance structures to support

student fundraising

Strategy S3: Establishing Effective Decision-Making

Structures

• Establishment of College Leadership Team (CLT),

representing both educational and operational leadership,

and including the new role of College President

• Recruitment of College President

A UNITED

COMMUNITY

OUR STRENGTH

AND CAPACITY