Community Report 2022/2023

COMMUNITY

REPORT

UWC South East Asia

2022/2023

01

MESSAGE FROM

SULIAN TAY,

CHAIR OF BOARD OF

GOVERNORS

02

MESSAGE FROM

NICK ALCHIN,

INTERIM HEAD OF COLLEGE

03

UWCSEA GUIDING

STATEMENTS, GOVERNANCE

AND LEADERSHIP

05 UWCSEA Guiding Statements

07 UWC Movement

09 UWCSEA Governance

and Leadership

13

UWCSEA STRATEGY

2018–2023

15 UWCSEA Strategy

19 UWCSEA

Community Agreements

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

21

STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT

25 Academics

35 Activities

41 Outdoor Education

45 Personal and

Social Education

49 Service

1 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

On behalf of the Board of Governors, I am pleased to present

the UWCSEA 2022/2023 Community Report, which provides

an overview and reflection of the College’s achievements over

the last school year and tells the story of our community,

united in purpose and committed to our Mission.

The 2022/2023 year was the last year of the UWCSEA 2018–

2023 strategy. Over the course of those five years, the College

made significant progress to embed ten strategic priorities,

which supported our vision to equip UWCSEA students with

the skills and qualities to become compassionate, engaged

global citizens who seek to make positive differences towards

peace and a sustainable future. In 2023, we continued this work

by embarking on a process to develop the UWCSEA Strategy

to 2030. Students, staff, parents and alumni participated in

generative and decision-making sessions, and leadership teams

engaged in ‘horizon-scanning’ to understand what the future

may hold in key areas of learning, schools, technology and

work. It was a year of collecting and synthesising information,

which culminated with the Board approving the Strategy

to 2030 in June 2023. We are confident that this Strategy

will be "more like a river than a rock" in that it can adapt to

circumstance and that the shared thinking that generated it

will help us to be the best school we can be.

During 2023, it was possible for conversations regarding the

expiry of the lease on the Dover land in 2030 to continue in

earnest. Governors and leadership engaged in dialogue with the

Singapore Government, which is likely to result in a decision

within the current calendar year that can then be shared with

our community. Whatever the outcome, we know that we have

the support of the Singapore authorities and are proud that

they consider us partners in their current and future success.

The 2022/2023 school year saw significant change in

leadership as Nick Alchin took up his position, first as interim

and then as confirmed Head of College. We also welcomed

three new members to the College Leadership Team. By the

end of the year Madan Menon had completed his term as Chair

of our Board of Governors. We are most grateful to him for his

service over the difficult years of the pandemic.

The role of the Board of Governors is to ensure that the College

is run in line with our Mission, values and strategy. Governors

have a fiduciary responsibility and must also 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. As part of this responsibility, last year we

undertook a review of our governance practices resulting in a

revised philosophy of governance, Board Charter, Board Code

of Conduct, and Committee Terms of Reference. This work,

though behind the scenes, is essential for our College and its

ongoing success.

Volunteering is a feature of life at UWCSEA and the parent

community dedicates countless hours to support the College

in fulfilling our Mission. Thank you to all our parent and

community volunteers, to our Governors and Advisers to

the Board who work tirelessly to ensure that the College is

operating at the highest standards of governance, and to the

leadership, teachers, staff, parents and above all our students,

in whose service we all stand.

Sincerely,

Sulian Tay

CHAIR OF

BOARD OF GOVERNORS

MESSAGE FROM

2 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

Welcome to the Community Report for the 2022/2023

school year. Each year the Community Report tells a story of

community success and achievement, and last year was no

exception.

The 2022/2023 school year was my first as interim and then

confirmed Head of College. Over the years, as teacher, Head

of Department, Principal and Head of Campus, I learned

about our community in different ways. As Head of College,

I have now added the Board and Governors lens to my view

and now have an even deeper appreciation of our College.

Happily, at UWCSEA the views from our different lenses are

shared collaboratively and constructively, as we all come

to a better understanding of where our school is now, its

proud 50-year history and its possible futures. We are helped

enormously in this collaboration by our agreement on what

should be on the other side of the lens, regardless of which

one we are looking through: our students and our Mission. I

have never worked in a community where there is so much

care for students, alongside commitment to purpose.

There are few greater opportunities as a new Head than to

work with Governors to lead a strategic planning process,

and the process allowed me to meet with a wide range

of stakeholders and hear their aspirations for the College.

Dozens of consultative sessions and surveys generated

thousands of pieces of data to inform our thinking, and the

Strategy approved by Governors at the end of year contains

four Strategic Commitments:

• Exceptional People and Teams: We will attract, retain

and grow outstanding people and teams, and build our

organisational strength and capacity

• Immersive Learning: We will ensure that our students’

learning is rich in experiences, relationships, and

connections to people, places, organisations and ideas

• A Sense of Belonging: We will create and sustain a sense of

belonging for all members of our community, past, present

and future

• Curiosity and Exploration: We will leverage our sense

of curiosity and pioneering spirit to drive incremental and

disruptive innovation, and sustainable change

These Commitments will inform our strategic priorities each

year and ensure a whole College approach to our progress.

This progress will take place in a context where our starting

point will continue to be providing a world-class education for

our students and the fulfilment of our inspirational mission to

make education a force to unite people, nations and cultures

for peace and a sustainable future.

With that, much of what you read here will be familiar

from previous years—and that’s a good thing. The

College continues to operate at full capacity (we remain

oversubscribed in changing times); the IB results remain very

strong (and our students’ university placements are typically

impressive and diverse); and we continue to offer an amazing

number of trips, activities and service projects (probably

more than any other school in the world). In this report, you

will, therefore, see these details alongside stories of student

achievement and success, as well as a review of our Strategic

Plan 2018–2023. We hope these will give you confidence that

the College and our community continue to flourish under

our great mission.

Nick Alchin

HEAD OF

COLLEGE

MESSAGE FROM

"As a proud member of the UWC movement, what endures most of all is being part of something bigger than

us as individuals, bigger than an institution, bigger even than education: the chance to contribute to a more

peaceful and sustainable future for our children, and our children's children. This endures."

NICK ALCHIN, HEAD OF COLLEGE, UWCSEA

3 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA GUIDING STATEMENTS,

GOVERNANCE AND LEADERSHIP

5 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

Because UWCSEA is driven by its mission, values and educational goal, we create an environment that is underpinned by

wellbeing and learning principles, and provide a holistic Learning Programme through a K–12 concept-based curriculum. The

UWCSEA Learning Programme thoughtfully and deliberately provides all students with age-appropriate opportunities to develop

the knowledge, skills, qualities and mission competencies that will enable them to live the mission throughout their lives.

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.

UWCSEA

GUIDING STATEMENTS

UWCSEA Guiding Statements

Because UWCSEA is driven by its Mission, Values and Educational Goal, we create an environment that is underpinned by

Wellbeing and Learning Principles, and provide a holistic Learning Programme that develops the Qualities, Skills and Mission

Competencies that enable students to live the Mission throughout their lives.

6 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA WELLBEING PRINCIPLES

Our culture of care creates a shared commitment to

cultivate wellbeing for all members of our community. While

we know that feelings of wellbeing are personal and vary

between individuals, the College is responsible for providing

the conditions for community wellbeing to flourish. This

includes opportunities to feel connected, autonomous,

and competent—for students, staff and parents alike—as

described here:

Connected: we feel connected when we feel known, heard

and cared for by others

Autonomous: we want to feel we can self-regulate our

actions, where possible, and make our own meaning of events

Competent: a sense of competence arises when we feel

effective and that we can continually develop craftsmanship

around our work

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

UWCSEA LEARNING PROGRAMME

Our Learning Programme consists of five interlinking

elements: Academics, Activities, Outdoor Education,

Personal and Social Education and Service. Delivered

through a carefully crafted K–12 concept-based curriculum,

the elements are combined to provide our students with a

holistic education that develops them as individuals and as

members of a global society.

UWCSEA PROFILE

Students are given multiple, age-appropriate opportunities to

develop the following Qualities and Skills we have identified

as required to help to fulfil our Mission:

Qualities

Commitment to care

Principled

Resilience

Self awareness

Skills

Critical thinker

Creative

Collaborative

Communicator

Self manager

UWCSEA MISSION COMPETENCIES

Ultimately, we hope that when they leave the College our

students will be equipped with these competencies so that

they are able to enact our shared Mission to unite people,

nations and cultures for peace and a sustainable future

throughout their lives:

• Essential Literacies

• Interpersonal and Intercultural Understanding

• Peacebuilding

• Sustainable Development

• Self and Community Wellbeing

7 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA is a

member of the UWC

movement, a group

of 18 schools and

colleges around the

world supported by a

network of National

Committees, made

up of volunteers

in around 150

countries. The College

was opened on 15

December 1971 by

then Prime Minister

Mr Lee Kuan Yew and

is the largest UWC in

the movement.

UWC MOVEMENT

San José, Costa Rica

UWC Costa Rica

Opened in

2006

Student population

192

Age group

16–19

Dilijan, Armenia

UWC Dilijan

Opened in

2014

Student population

220

Age group

16–18

Moshi and Arusha, Tanzania

UWC East Africa

Opened in

1969

Student population

500

Age group

3–20

Karuizawa, Japan

UWC

ISAK Japan

Opened in

2014

Student population

200

Age group

15–19

UWC South East Asia

Dover Campus, Singapore

Opened in

1971

Student population

3,119

Age group

4–18

East Campus, Singapore

Opened in

2008

Student population

2,808

Age group

4–18

UWC Adriatic

Duino, Italy

Opened in

1982

Student population

182

Age group

16–19

UWC Atlantic

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

570

Age group

15–18

All information correct as at 31 July 2023 | UWC student population source uwc.org

8 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

Phuket, Thailand

UWC Thailand

Opened in

2008

Student population

380

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

900

Age group

4–19

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 Community Report 2022/2023

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

and Foundation act to further their

stated objectives, and that the College

and Foundation have appropriate

systems in place to properly account

for and safeguard the funds and assets

of the College and Foundation The

Board of Governors works closely with

the management and stakeholders of

the College to shape the vision, chart

the major directions, and oversee the

programmes and initiatives to produce

a strong and enduring impact for the

College in Singapore and beyond.

UWCSEA BOARD OF GOVERNORS

At the end of the financial year, the UWCSEA Board of Governors comprised 15

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:

• Audit and Risk: which oversees audit and risk matters

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

management strategies

• Engagement and Foundation: which is responsible for improving the engagement

and outreach of the College locally and globally, including the UWCSEA Foundation

(This committee also oversees the investment and disbursement of the funds of

The UWCSEA Foundation and thus has a minimum of one [and a maximum of four]

Independent Directors of The UWCSEA Foundation sitting on this committee)

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

and digital infrastructure

• Governance: which is responsible for nominations and governance matters

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

committee among the Chairs of the Board and Committees

There are also Board approved ad-hoc working groups set up to address specific

issues; each with its own Terms of Reference and scope of works. These ad-hoc

working groups either report to a committee or to the Board directly. Once their

work is complete, the ad-hoc working group is dissolved.

Governors periodically re-evaluate the committee structure to ensure it is effective,

strategic and forward-looking.

The Board meets a minimum of four times each year. Each Governor is usually a

member of one committee, which also meets a minimum of four times per year.

Board Effectiveness Review

Following the completion of the constitutional review and the outcomes and

deliverables of the various working groups which were set up to support this work,

the Charity Sector Administrator, approved the changes to the Constitution and the

revised Constitutions for UWCSEA and UWCSEA-East were duly lodged with the

regulators in April 2023.

A Philosophy of Governance Statement, Board Charter and Code of Conduct have

been duly introduced and launched. Terms of reference for all Board committees

were also renewed. This work underpins the strong foundations of governance that

will support the strategic work of the Board going forward.

These principles support the Board to govern with confidence, charting a path of

continuous improvement for the College, managing risk effectively and taking thoughtful

and reasoned action based on evidence and shared expertise. They are strengthened by

the Board’s willingness to review and reflect on its own progress and effectiveness.

The Board continues to carry out formal Board effectiveness reviews (per the relevant

policy), externally every five years and internally every year. This information is used

10 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

to assist in the planning and strategising for the following year’s agenda contributing

to the continued commitment to increased transparency and accountability.

Composition

The Board consists of three groups of Governors:

• Board Elected Governors and Members – The majority of Governors are

appointed by the Board itself through a rigorous selection process. Many Board

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

the Board benefits from independent thinking, there may also be non-parent

Governors

• Ex Officio Governor and Member – the Head of College

• Community Elected Governors and Members – These Governors and Members

are elected directly by their constituencies and include two parent-elects and two

academic staff-elects, one from each campus

Governor Recruitment, Selection and Induction

Board Elected Governors are recruited through a robust process that responds to

clearly defined skill requirements necessary for the Board. Most candidates are first

appointed as Advisers to Board Committees, following the relevant policy guideline

in place; New Board Elected Governors are usually only selected from that pool of

Advisers who have previously served on a Committee. Appointments are based on an

assessment of the following factors:

• Professional skills and fit with Board

requirements

• UWCSEA Competencies

• Technical Competencies

• Governance Competencies

• Connections to Communities

• Board Effectiveness and Capacity

• Behavioural Competencies

• Impact on Diversity

• Nexus with UWCSEA; Conflicts

There is a comprehensive and thorough 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 one additional year of service, should they be appointed as Chair during their

tenure (a maximum of 7 years in total).

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

A self evaluation and 360 peer review is conducted at the end of each term (three

years for Governors and two years for Advisers). Governors and Advisers complete

a self evaluation which is then shared for 360 feedback with fellow Governors,

Advisers and members of the College Leadership Team, against the following criteria:

• Contributions to Strategic Board initiatives

• Board Effectiveness and Capacity

• Behavioural Competencies

• Impact on Diversity

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 make an annual

declaration 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 Code of Conduct

(which Governors are required to sign),

responsibilities set out in the Board

Charter and Confidentiality Agreements.

Commissioner of Charities

Oversight

In applying good governance practices as

corporate entities, the Board of Governors

has adopted best practices in key areas

of governance that are closely aligned

to the principles outlined in the Code of

Governance for Charities and Institutions

of a Public Character (the “Code”).

The Charity Council requires that charities

disclose the extent of their compliance

with the Code and has rigorous annual

reporting requirements. UWCSEA’s

Governance Evaluation Checklist Financial

Statements and Annual Reports can be

found via the Charity Portal website.

11 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION BOARD MEMBERS

Heather Carmichael

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Chair of Education and

Talent Committee

Committee of Chairs

Yukiko Izumi

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Chair, Audit and Risk

Committee

Committee of Chairs

Priti Devi

Board Elected Governor

and MemberChair

of Engagement and

Foundation Committee

Committee of Chairs

Sajjad Akhtar

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Vice Chair and Acting

Chair from 1 June 2023

Chair of Governance

Committee

Committee of Chairs

Sharon Heller

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Education and Talent

Committee

Seng Chee Ho

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Education and Talent

Committee

Dimple Sanghi

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Chair of Finance and

Infrastructure Committee

Committee of Chairs

Sulian Tay

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Education and Talent

Committee

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

Community Elected

(Academic Staff, East)

Governor and Member

Governance Committee

Kim Teo ’76

Board Elected Governor

and MemberEngagement

and Foundation

Committee

Governance Committee

Gayathri Nair

Community Elected

Governor (Academic

Staff, Dover) and Member

Engagement and

Foundation Committee

Daire Dunne

Board Elected Governor

and Member

Engagement and

Foundation Committee

Angel Wu

Community Elected

(Parent, Dover) Governor

and Member

Audit and Risk Committee

Nick Alchin

Ex-Officio Governor –

Head of College

Education and Talent

Committee

Engagement and

Foundation Committee

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Governance Committee

Jeff Plein

Community Elected

(Parent, East) Governor

and Member

Audit and Risk Committee

All information correct as at 31 July 2023.

12 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS: THE UWCSEA FOUNDATION LIMITED

Kirtida Mekani

Jean Sung (appointed 10 February 2023)

Board resignations during the year

Leon Toh (resigned 11 August 2022)

Stefanie Green (resigned 18 November 2022)

Benjamin Detenber (retired at AGM on 19 January 2023)

Mark Porter (retired at AGM on 19 January 2023)

Jonathan Forth (resigned 19 May 2023)

Madan Menon (Chair) (resigned 31 May 2023)

UWCSEA BOARD ADVISERS

Rahul Raj (resigned 2 March 2023)

Chas Pope

Anthony Hodge

Brian Arcese

Penny Shone (appointed 9 December 2021)

Mara McAdams

Ijlal Naqvi

Don Stokes

Luke Furler (appointed 6 October 2022)

Betty Yang (appointed 16 March 2023)

Varun Dutt (appointed 6 October 2022)

Charmaine Chin (appointed 21 June 2023)

Neeti Jain (appointed 16 March 2023)

All information correct as at 31 July 2023.

The audited Financial Statements and full Corporate Governance reports for each campus and the Foundation are available on the Charity Portal: charities.gov.sg.

UWCSEA/UWCSEA-EAST/UWCSEA FOUNDATION COMMITTEES

Audit and Risk Committee

Yukiko Izumi, Chair

Jeff Plein

Anthony Hodge (Adviser)

Luke Furler (Adviser)

Betty Yang (Adviser)

Education and Talent Committee

Heather Carmichael, Chair

Seng Chee Ho

Nick Alchin

Sharon Heller

Sulian Tay

Ijlal Naqvi (Adviser)

Mara McAdams (Adviser)

Engagement and Foundation

Committee

Priti Devi, Chair

Gayathri Nair

Nick Alchin

Daire Dunne

Kim Teo

Kirtida Mekani (Independent Director)

Jean Sung (Independent Director)

Penny Shone (Adviser)

Varun Dutt (Adviser)

Finance and Infrastructure

Committee

Dimple Sanghi, Chair

Nick Alchin

Sulian Tay

Brian Arcese (Adviser)

Charmaine Chin (Adviser)

Governance Committee

Sajjad Akhtar, Chair

Nick Alchin

Pamela Kelly Wetzell

Kim Teo ’76

Don Stokes (Adviser)

Neeti Jain (Adviser)

Committee of Chairs

Sajjad Akhtar, Acting Chair

Heather Carmichael

Priti Devi

Dimple Sanghi

Yukiko Izumi

"We are facing unprecedented challenges driven by accelerating globalisation and technological

developments … Education needs to aim to do more than prepare young people for the world of work; it needs

to equip students with the skills they need to become active, responsible and engaged citizens."

FROM EDUCATION 2030: THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION AND SKILLS

13 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA STRATEGY 2018–2023

15 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

UWCSEA STRATEGY 2018–2023

During the 2022/2023 year, the College and campuses concluded the final year of the five-year strategy which was based on four

areas of focus.

Each campus continued with the projects that brought the areas of focus to life through different strategic projects. Some

projects were in their final year whilst others will continue and fall into the next strategic plan beginning 2023 - 2030. The Board

of Governors oversees progress through a report on specific strategic areas of focus at each of the four meetings during the year,

while the senior leadership teams monitor the detailed projects.

The following pages highlight the 2022/2023 outcomes of the campuses’ progress at the conclusion of the UWCSEA Strategy

2018–2023 in each of the four areas of focus.

UWCSEA STRATEGIC VISION (2018–2023)

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 wellbeing and their

readiness for the future of political, economic and environmental uncertainty.

Effective operational practices 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 Community Report 2022/2023

Education as a Force

At UWCSEA, we educate

our students to impact

on individuals and society

in accordance with the

UWC Mission. Educational

excellence infuses student

learning across all five elements of our Learning

Programme and balanced with a serious commitment

to wellbeing, helps to inspire our community to rich

experiences and high achievement.

Our innovation aligns with our values. We will take

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

boundaries of our strategies and practices.

In our Learning Programme, we will seek to be inclusive

and diverse, in accordance with our definitions of

these concepts, and will recognise the importance of

intercultural competence.

Key developments during 2022/2023 school year:

Strategy E1: Extending Excellence

• significant preparation for Learning Support review to

follow in school year 2023/2024

• Review of the K–5 curriculum College-wide and in line

with review cycles to ensure it continues to meet the

changing needs of our youngest learners

• deep-dive into the Middle School (MS) curriculum with a

view to understanding and increasing interdisciplinarity

and making more connections between subjects

Strategy E2: Deliberate Innovation

• decision to retire IGCSE in August 2025 and focus on

continued expansion of the UWCSEA 9/10 Programme

• decision to partner with the International

Baccalaureate to develop an innovative new course

• comprehensive review and formalisation of the

assessment and feedback policy

• implemented an OEd ‘hub system’ giving students

more choice over their OEd adventure

Strategy E3: Diversity and Inclusion

• launched teaching for DEIJ with a culturally responsive

pedagogy

• created more opportunities for students to engage in

‘Positive Education’ practices

• opened a High School wellness and support centre on

Dover Campus

• appointed the College ​Senior DEIJ Lead and a team of

nine Designated DEI Leads

• completed extensive research into PSE curriculum in

preparation for PSE review (2022/2023)

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. 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

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 2022/2023 school year:

Strategy P1: Working for Peace

• finalised a review of the concept of Peace across the

curriculum and early stage preparations for writing an

updated curriculum began

Strategy P2: Sustainability as a Systemic Response

• conducted early stage reviews of service and

sustainability curriculum, to be continued into the

next school year (2023/2024)

• opened an experiential learning space on

East Campus where students can learn about

environmental stewardship, animal care, urban

farming and permaculture

• overseas trips resumed and were planned in accordance

with the new sustainability and feasibility framework

• created sustainability guidelines for Activities with

a framework for reviewing practices, partners and

supply chains

• UWCSEA East received a certificate from the NEA

for its participation in a pilot food waste for recycling

project (January 2017 to September 2023) in which

more than 126 tonnes of food waste was recycled

EDUCATION

AS A FORCE

PEACE AND

A SUSTAINABLE

FUTURE

18 | UWCSEA Community Report 2022/2023

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 2022/2023 school year:

Strategy C1: Strengthening our Community

• delivery of community focussed events including the

Family Festival and CultuRama on East Campus and

the Community Fair and UN Night on Dover Campus

• launched the Community Agreements and translated

them into 11 languages in support of the diverse

College community

• new strategy planning sessions were conducted and

included more than 20 community consultations with

parents, staff, students and alumni to form the key

areas of focus for the College in the 7–10 years ahead

• launched the Careers Programme, incorporating

alumni mentorship, internships and company visits, to

give High School students and young alumni access to

experiences in the world of work before graduation.

Strategy C2: Keeping People Safe and Well

• staff Wellbeing Working Group launched Staff

Wellbeing Principles in preparation for continuing this

work in 2023/2024

• new head of Risk Management was appointed and

began in role

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.

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.

We will establish decision-making processes and leadership

structures that enhance operational effectiveness while

retaining flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances.

Key developments during 2022/2023 school year:

Strategy S1: Ensuring Long-term Financial Sustainability

• accounting policies and procedures systematically

reviewed. External and internal audit systems fully

implemented

• moved towards coherent, integrated systems.

Restructured, consolidated teams, streamlined functions.

Implemented a full-fledged investment strategy

• new budget reporting process aligning to long

term financial goals and giving budget holders full

accountability

• standardised reporting, launched monthly budget reports

Strategy S2: Embedding Effective Systems

• planning for the new inquiry and application system

• all regulatory materials submitted on time and in

accordance with applicable regulations. UWCSEA was

awarded a Charity Transparency Award at the 2023

Award ceremony held in November 2023

Strategy S3: Establishing Effective Decision-Making

Structures

• new Heads of College, Dover and East Campus, and

CHRO began in role

• reviewed the Governance practices, established

Charter and Governance framework

• increasingly aligned roles across campuses e.g:

Learning Systems, Facilities

• invested in a policy platform, created a group of Policy

Administrators overseen by a Policy Leader; clear and

time-bound approach to policy management

A UNITED

COMMUNITY

OUR STRENGTH

AND CAPACITY