Dunia December 2014

December 2014

The Aceh Project

UN Night and CultuRama

Grade 12 and Grade 5

collaboration

Living the mission on a grand scale

By Chris Edwards

Head of College

UWC South East Asia

“How many?”

It was as if all my friends had gone deaf.

At first, I would give my answer to that

incredulous “How many?” sheepishly.

After all, you can’t possibly get to know

all the staff, let alone the students in

a school that size, and how can such

a state of affairs possibly be a good

thing? But now, as my first term at

UWCSEA hurtles towards completion,

I answer the “How many?” question

with the quiet assuredness of Clint

Eastwood. Not only do I look deep

into people’s eyes when I tell them

the UWCSEA enrollment, but I’m also

perfecting a “You gotta problem with

that?” stare to prevent further silliness

about big schools being impersonal

or unmanageable.

How wonderful, how worthy of

celebration, how vital that we have so

many students, so many staff, so many

parents living and promoting the UWC

mission in the heart of the world’s most

dynamic region. UWCSEA is crackling

and fizzing with the movement’s

values, and just as Singapore and

East Asia rush into the future with

outstretched, welcoming arms, so

we must go forward with our scale,

location and passion helping to further

those values that brought most of us to

UWCSEA in the first place. I’ll admit it’s

not all fun and laughter amid the bright

lights: how I sometimes envy the castle

or cliff-top retreat of other UWC’s—

especially when the traffic prevents

me from getting from one campus to

another in good time—but for every

small wave of urban frustration there

is a crashing sea of positive action,

altruism and compassion that makes

every day transformational.

Cheap rhetoric? On the contrary: my

words undersell the reality. You might

expect me to whip out the propaganda

manual at this point and list a host

of student achievements, but instead

I’ll turn to the parents. I am writing

this on a Sunday, and in the week just

gone I attended three large events

organised by and involving hundreds of

UWCSEA parents, all of which raised

money for UWCSEA Global Concerns

in South East Asia. Significantly,

though, I discovered many parents have

established on the ground links with

these charities. These are busy people

not simply giving money—that’s the

easy bit—but offering time, know-

how, compassion as well. And they are

engaging others so that they too might

get involved. That’s the community

I am discovering beyond the campuses.

I am thrilled and, frankly, moved to

discover the reality.

Inside the walls of Dover and East, the

question has not been “How many?”

but the more taxing “How are you

finding it?” Well—and let’s keep that

propaganda manual on the bookcase—

I am finding it inspiring, unique,

imperfect, mission-driven, occasionally

believing its own hype, transformative,

frenetic, outward-looking, often savvy,

sometimes naïve, relevant, complex

and, crucially, so intent on trying to do

exactly what it says it does that I could

cry with gratitude. I can see why lots

of students and staff might not want

to come here: I can see why everybody

should.

It seems to me that you should steer

clear of this place if you are a cynic,

lazy, entrenched or out to change the

world by preaching at people.

(Or maybe such people should

be forced to come kicking and

screaming). This is a doing place.

The mission describes impact rather

than educational experience, and I

am everyday meeting young people

who are not afraid to change, to fail,

to innovate. Resilience is thus bred

alongside ambition. And because of

that, ideals often become actions.

Nowhere have I met young people

so engaged in the world beyond

examinations and parties. Not that

those two pillars don’t have their place

of course—not all my teenage red-

Many articles in this edition have

expanded content on eDunia

(www.uwcsea.edu.sg/edunia)—

look for the symbol as you

read the magazine and visit

eDunia for more photos, video

and expanded content.

Other stories featured only on eDunia:

Primary School

Infants days of sport

A chance for our

students to put their

PE skills on display

One minute squat

The Grade 3 Water Warriors GC

takes action on sanitation

Middle School

The Big Draw

Dover Campus hosts a

week-long draw-a-thon

under the tent

Tiny Toones GC

A story of student action

Vote for soap

Students partner with Hilton, DHL

and soapcycling to save lives

High School

Senior sport

Write ups across

the region including

Football, Volleyball,

Touch Rugby, Rugby,

Golf and more

Community

Alum Linda Steinbock

(Class of 2006)

Reflects on how her

UWCSEA education has

helped her thinking in

her humanitarian work

Cover: High School students performing

a traditional Cambodian dance at

CultuRama 2014 on East Campus

eye mornings were due to revision—

but here they know their place. The

service initiatives—local, regional

and international—are so varied I can

barely credit their scope. There is a

giddy, feverish whirl about the desire

to get out and engage. And yet—this

is the point that I still can’t quite

fathom—there is a profoundly gentle

and intimate quality to nearly all the

human interactions I have witnessed

around the College. It ought not to be

like that in a College this big and this

busy. But there are moments when

UWCSEA can feel like a village school,

and the bustle of Singapore becomes

a rustle of leaves.

And if ever a College bore out Karl

A. Menninger’s maxim “What the

teacher is, is more important than

what he teaches”, it is UWCSEA. I

have already been astonished by many

colleagues’ selfless examples of living

the mission. This applies to academic,

administration and support staff.

What happens in UWCSEA classrooms

is great; what happens afterwards

and elsewhere is greater. A sadness

is that no matter how hard I try to

make it otherwise—and I will certainly

try—my relationship with colleagues

will inevitably be more like that of a

University Vice Chancellor with his

faculty (the comparison serves purely

for scale): I will never get to know all

staff well, anymore than I will get to

know all students well. What I do know

is that there is talent, brain-power and

commitment here that would impress

on Wall Street, in governments,

laboratories, sports fields, the media,

the Arts and a host of other spheres.

I rejoice that such people chose

UWCSEA. (And another thing: I suspect

most colleagues don’t get ‘exciting’

confused with ‘boring’, which is a

surprisingly frequent condition in

many schools).

Honeymoon over. The complaints have

started rolling in. Disputes over matters

of principle (and disputes over nothing

at all) are peppering the in-box. In

some corners, the end of term will

doubtless witness stress, frustrations

and panic. A few people will drive

selfishly and make others angry.

Surveys will repeatedly demonstrate

there is never one hundred per cent

consensus even though people will

sometimes talk as if there is. In all

those respects and many more, this is a

school like any other.

But where it really counts, this is

like no other school on earth. For

all Singapore’s glass towers, the

commerce, the getting and spending …

Kurt Hahn would know us in a moment.

I have surely come home.

By Pat Meyer

UWCSEA Parent and TEF volunteer

Determined to make a difference in

the aftermath of the Indian Ocean

earthquake and tsunami in December

2004, the UWCSEA community offered

immediate support, but also wished

to make a positive, long-term impact.

Physics teacher Wayne Fozzard wanted

to do something to help the victims

and through discussions with Anthony

Skillicorn (then the Global Concerns

coordinator) and others, the Tsunami

Education Fund (TEF) was established.

Its aim was to provide long-term

financial support to children who

had lost their parents in the tsunami.

The plan was to fund each tsunami

yatim piatu (tsunami orphan) through

their high school education, rather

than provide short-term or one-off

payments. Modest payments would

be made directly to a bank account

in the child’s name; a sum not meant

to make students (or new family)

dependent upon the funds, but to

motivate the students.

The region around Banda Aceh,1 near

the epicentre of the earthquake and

tsunami, had been in conflict for 30

nearly years; it had not been safe for

foreigners to travel there. So in the first

few weeks after the tsunami, Uchu Riza,

an Indonesian UWCSEA parent, travelled

to Medan and then to Banda Aceh

to assess the situation. She took

photographs, looked into safe

accommodation, estimated prices for

food, fuel and transport, and delivered

basic supplies of clothes, shoes and food.

Three months after the tsunami, as

talks on a peace agreement were

underway, the first of many UWCSEA

teams—this one composed of teachers

and an alumnus—travelled to Banda

Aceh. There they saw the extent of

the disaster, but also that schools had

resumed operation—some holding their

classes in tents, while other schools

doubled up to share undamaged

buildings. Led by Susan Edwards and

Dave Allen, this group also began

planning ways to help with the long-

term recovery.

In March 2005, fundraising for the

TEF started with a nine-day, 1,500km

bike ride by UWCSEA teachers Wayne

Fozzard, Douglas Wills, Phil Woolrich,

Angelo Coskinas and Steve Webster and

parent Graham Nyman, from Singapore

The Aceh Project: ten years of helping

to Phuket, Thailand (pictured on

page 5). The successful bicycle

marathon was followed by a record-

breaking basketball marathon2 by

students from UWCSEA and Singapore

Polytechnic, including two students

from Banda Aceh. The basketball

marathon raised funds for rebuilding

sports courts, so that young people

could return to their games and play in

Banda Aceh.

The Aceh Project, which encompasses

all of the work by UWCSEA in Banda

Aceh, commemorates its 10th year in

2015. Many people have supported

this work—teachers, students, staff,

scholars and scholars’ families, a Global

Concerns group, Project Week groups,

alumni, parents, as well as community

members from Banda Aceh. The GC

group began by raising awareness and

fundraising, then helping with record

keeping, and (in later years) maintaining

a Facebook page. The projects have

been learning experiences for everyone

involved—a chance to learn about relief

efforts, to witness the recovery of a

community from a natural disaster and

a 30-year conflict, and an opportunity

to get to know a community through

1 At the tip of the Indonesian island of Sumatra, is the city of Banda Aceh and the neighbouring district, Aceh Besar. Together they occupy

an area just over four times the size of Singapore. This area was closest to the epicentre of the December 2004 earthquake and tsunami. In

this region alone nearly 23,000 students and 1,300 teachers lost their lives. Over 300 schools were damaged or destroyed. (From Educa-

tion Master Plan, Post Earthquake and Tsunami in NAD and Nias, 13 April 2005, Ministry of National Education RI).

2 Guinness Book of World Records for the Longest Continuous Game of Basketball (pictured on page 5)

sustained involvement in long-term

service projects.

For a while, members of the UWCSEA

community travelled to Banda Aceh

every six to eight weeks. There was

much to do to determine whether it

would be possible to work there: Would

it be safe? Could we find a local partner

who shared our goals? How best to

help tsunami yatim piatu? How would

children who needed help be identified?

How about identifying a school to

rebuild? How could we make sure

that the financial support went to the

intended recipients?

Soon a partner was identified—a

community leader in Banda Aceh with

contacts throughout the area, who was

interested in the long-term welfare of

the region. Bapak Nazar and two of his

children provided essential support:

introductions, translations, knowledge

of the area and of communities in need,

advice, record keeping, report collection,

and transportation. His son and

daughter grew up, finished high school,

and went to university, all the while

keeping track of students and school

reports in the TEF project database.

One of the UWCSEA students who

helped lead student teams on visits to

Banda Aceh, and later managed TEF

financial accounts was Ikram Lailul

(Class of 2008), “I feel most grateful

to the many people who were involved

in the project. They used their time

and energy, to rebuild Aceh. Their

spirit inspired me to work towards the

community. It was this experience that

motivated me to continuously want to

make positive change, such as by doing

a peace project in Aceh funded by the

Davis Peace Project Organization.”

Rossa Darni (Class of 2009), the first

UWCSEA–Trafigura Foundation scholar

from Banda Aceh, concurs, “I am so

honoured to be able to see the project

grow throughout the years. As one of

the earliest Acehnese scholars involved

in the TEF, I am so thankful to get to

work with all of the people who have

contributed to make it successful.

This project was a result of excellent

collaboration between students,

teachers, and parents, and I believe it

gave a little something for all of us. In

this project, I gained a family, people

who until today are still guiding me

towards goodness. Nevertheless, the

TEF inspired me to work for something

that can directly make a difference in

other’s lives.”

Initially, the teams visiting from

Singapore focused on identifying a

school for rebuilding and locating

tsunami yatim piatu. By May 2005,

seven students, all from SMP4, were

registered as the first TEF recipients.

SMP4, a middle school located in the

downtown market area of Banda Aceh

(picture on page 4), had been destroyed.

With generous financial support from

Trafigura Foundation, Global Energies

and UWCSEA fundraising activities,

SMP4 was rebuilt and reopened for

students in March 2006.

Teams continued to visit schools in the

region to identify and register students;

by June 2006, 159 students were

receiving funds through TEF. Monthly

payments were made to each child’s

bank account. TEF supported students

from kindergarten to high school, and,

initially, the amount was just enough

to cover transportation costs to school.

Funding continued through high school,

as long as students submitted their

school reports and remained in school.

Some students used the money for

books, transportation or tuition; others

used it for food for themselves and their

elderly guardian; and a fortunate few

had guardians who were able to provide

for all their needs, enabling the student

to save for their future.

Through our visits to the region,

we came to understand that while

financial help was appreciated, the

encouragement and psychological

support from the regular visits and

contact were just as important. The TEF

students saw themselves as part of a

group; they knew that people in Banda

Aceh and Singapore cared about their

progress and would be visiting again.

Photos supplied by Pat Meyer and Susan Edwards

Rahmat Ashari (Class of 2016), a

UWCSEA–Trafigura Foundation scholar

from Banda Aceh explains, “Instead

of looking at it from an economic

perspective, I have learnt that the

values acted in the works of TEF are

truly essential. It is not only about

transferring money, it is also about

building up the relationship between

TEF, the TEF’s students, and TEF’s

helpers in Aceh. I learnt that going from

asking “How much money have we

donated?” to “How have we impacted

our recipients’ life?” is a great jump. In

this context, UWCSEA, through TEF, has

absolutely brought me beyond turning

ideas into action to expanding the social

connection through actions.”

On our early visits we saw many foreign

organisations and NGOs involved in

the rebuilding effort. But after three

years, most were gone. Although the

individuals involved in the Aceh Project

have changed, the TEF project continues

till today.

The Aceh Project has been successful in

large part because it is a relatively small

project with strong local links. Through

regular visits, we have gotten to know

the community and been able to closely

follow its progress. Because UWCSEA

students, staff and teachers make the

visits, we have a clear understanding

of the situation on the ground, and

we have not had problems with

“fabricated” students or missing funds.

Still, there were frustrating challenges.

There were differences in educational

cultures and priorities. Keeping up to

date with the students and receiving

their school reports on time was a

huge challenge. Many students and

their guardians were unfamiliar with

bank operations; distances from the

students’ homes to the bank or record

collection point were formidable,

older guardians were illiterate. Yet,

people came together to find solutions.

Teachers, headmasters, security guards

alerted us to tsunami yatim piatu. In

one middle school, a biology teacher

collected all the TEF reports and

submitted them. In another remote

community, the guardians of the

elementary-age TEF students formed

a network, and a grandfather collected

and submitted all the reports. The

headmaster and deputy from another

distant elementary school brought

their TEF students and reports to the

open house by motorbikes. Singaporean

university students developed an

online programme to allow people in

Singapore and Banda Aceh to share TEF

student records and information. Teams

from UWCSEA held long discussions

with Bapak Nazar and school leaders,

conducted teacher training, invited all

TEF students to open house sessions,

and visited tens of schools to track

down students and their reports.

We visited TEF students at over 80

elementary, middle or high schools in

the region. Over 700 students have

received support. Currently we’re

funding 70 students in middle or high

school, and will continue funding until

they all complete high school. We are

heartened to meet TEF high school

graduates looking ahead to the future

with confidence. Some students will

continue further training in hospitality

or nursing while others are studying at

UNSYIAH, the branch of the national

university in Banda Aceh.

Kirkha Kaharsyah (Class of 2014),

a UWCSEA–Trafigura Foundation

Acehenese scholar observes, “What I

have learnt from TEF is that the smallest

changes that we made, it could make

a big impact. I have seen students who

received the scholarship become quite

successful on pursuing their education

after high school. They received

invitations and scholarships from some

universities. I know that the scholarship

provided by TEF is not the most

prestigious scholarship, but the students

made the best out of it which makes me

think that UWC values are reflected not

just in UWCSEA students, but also in the

people who are helped by every existing

global concern that we have.”

Rossa adds­, “The TEF project has shown

me that you are never too young to

bring positive change to a society.

I learned how education can really make

a difference in people’s lives. Working

with the Acehnese children throughout

the years motivated me to study and

work harder so I can find more ways in

the future to give back to my people and

develop my hometown. Listening to the

children’s life-stories and future goals

taught me that there is never a reason to

give up. Despite of everything

they have been through, they

never stopped smiling.”

By Susan Edwards

Head of Global Concerns

Dover Campus

In December of the year Jackson English

arrived at UWCSEA, the world was

rocked by the devastating impact of

the Asian tsunami. Local communities

all along the west and north Sumatran

coasts were decimated and SurfAid, an

NGO founded to support communities

in the isolated Mentawai Islands and

which Jackson was already involved

with, began to respond to the disaster.

Soon after his arrival Jackson was

involved in supporting two large

marathon events to raise funds as part

of UWCSEA’s tsunami relief initiatives.

First, a group of six community

members rode bicycles from Singapore

through Malaysia to Phuket, Thailand to

raise funds for the Tsunami Education

Fund and then a few months later,

a group of UWCSEA and Singapore

Polytechnic students broke the

Guinness World Record for the longest

continuous game of basketball.

However, very little tsunami relief had

arrived to the communities on the

remote Mentawai Islands that were

supported by SurfAid. It was during

a morning swim session that Jackson

thought of organising the first 24 Hour

Swim Challenge. The concept was

simple: open the pool for 24 hours and

invite the College community to swim

as many laps as possible.

The first 24 Hour Swim Challenge was

held in 2006 at the Dover Campus pool.

Close to 500 staff, students and their

families swam as many laps as they

could in a carnival-like atmosphere.

Since that first event, the College has

hosted eight ‘swims’—the last three at

the East Campus, and now known as

Swim4Life. At the 2014 event in May,

over 1,500 swimmers participated over

the 12-hour event.

Jackson recounts three significant

memories around the swim events:

After the first 24 Hour Swim Challenge

participants were asked to return money

raised to Jackson’s classroom by the end

of term. On that last day of Term 1, a

staggering $30,000 cash was submitted.

At the 2008 swim, 10 year old Grade

4 Dover Campus student Eleanor

Diggle (now in Grade 10) swam 100

laps. Earlier in the day her father had

committed to donating $100 per lap.

After the 2014 Swim4Life, East Campus

student Jeremy Kemp (Grade 6) said,

“The reason I never gave up swimming

for the whole 12 hours was because I

knew that every five laps, I was buying

one mosquito net for the people

struggling with malaria. That is why I

swam 23.5km (188 mosquito nets).”

Jackson has also combined his passion

for the ocean and paddling with raising

funds and awareness for SurfAid on

his own time. In 2007, he paddled

from Sentosa to Batam and back, over

two days. Then, in 2010, as SurfAid

celebrated their 10th birthday Jackson

again competed in the grueling world

paddle board championships; a 32 mile

paddle between the islands of Molokai

and Oahu in Hawaii, to raise funds for

SurfAid programmes.

Since 2006, under Jackson’s guidance,

UWCSEA has helped raise over

$500,000 for SurfAid and their projects,

specifically for the Malaria Sucks and

Mother and Child programmes. Our

contributions have made a positive

impact on the lives of thousands of

people. For this, Jackson was recently

honoured with SurfAid’s ‘Humanitarian

of the Year’ award. Jackson accepted

the award not for himself, but for all

those at UWCSEA who have helped

contribute to SurfAid’s programmes

over the last eight years.

Congratulations, Jackson and

thank you.

A SurfAid story

Congratulations SurfAid Humanitarian of the Year 2014, Jackson English

By Mireille Couture, Head of

Environmental Systems and Societies,

and Kath Lane and Andrea McDonald

Grade 5 teachers

East Campus

With a shaky voice the lesson began

… the teachers seemed younger than

usual. They were in fact the Grade 12

students from the IB Environmental

Systems and Societies (ESS) diploma

course at East Campus and today they

faced a new kind of challenge. They

were tasked with teaching Grade 5

students different sampling methods

to collect biological and ecological

scientific data. “It was hard for me to

speak and explain well … However, they

seemed curious about the things we

taught,” said one ESS student. “To go

out of our comfort zone and take the

role of a teacher, being the one having

to explain the method to someone

else, adjusting to the right level of

understanding, was a challenge.”

The Grade 5 students were in the

midst of preparing to embark on their

expedition to Taman Negara, the

oldest rainforest in the world. What

better place for students to observe,

investigate and immerse themselves

in the natural world? This expedition

enables students to bond with their

new class and also provides teachers

with the ideal outdoor classroom. Here,

lessons on biodiversity, adaptation,

and interdependence spring to life.

Kath Lane explains, “It is imperative

for students to experience the awe

and wonder of the natural world, if

we are hoping they will protect our

planet in the future. With our busy

urban environment, some children are

not afforded opportunities to feel this

affinity with nature. Watching students

float down a tropical river, step

cautiously along the canopy walkway,

and hearing their excited whispers

as they observe a wild tapir, snake or

scorpion is pretty magical.”

In addition to studying biodiversity,

part of the Grade 5 curriculum involves

introducing students to fair testing and

the scientific process. Grade 12 students

modeled the fieldwork sampling

techniques that they would use on

their own field trip to Tioman Island for

their younger peers to conduct in the

CULTIVATION OF

COLLABORATION

rainforest. Mireille Couture and Kath

Lane thought this would be a perfect

opportunity for a meaningful learning

experience that would deepen the

understanding of rainforest ecosystems

and investigation skills for both grade

levels. Reflecting on the success of this

approach, one Grade 12 student said,

“Teaching someone else skills that

you have developed allows for your

knowledge to expand and you are more

likely to remember it.”

Essentially, the Grade 12 scientists

were helping their Grade 5 buddies to

understand that practical ecosystem

investigations require a variety of

methods, tools and technologies to

collect reliable measurements and

record observations. They were able

to analyse and derive meaning from

the connections that exist between

living and non-living components of

ecosystems such as: canopy cover,

light intensity, plant population

and tree circumference. One Grade

12 commented, “This type of team

activity taught me how to work in a

group in a more efficient way. It also

taught me that we underestimated the

Grade 5s and they knew more than we

thought they knew. It helped me revise

and think about the ways we will be

collecting data.”

The Grade 5 students, for their part,

were impressed by the expertise of the

older students and willingly undertook

a scientific study for their buddies in the

high school. Once they returned to the

classroom, they set about analysing the

data they had collected and reflecting

on their initial hypothesis. They were

able to use reasoning skills to determine

the veracity of their results and to

consider why the experiment did not

reflect their original hypothesis. One

Grade 5 student noted, “The guides

from the rainforest gave us additional

information and we understood that

different tree species and ages have

different requirements. This might have

impacted our results.”

While on Tioman Island, the Grade

12 environmentalists independently

designed investigations for data

collection to measure and compare

primary and secondary rainforest.

They collectively shared data from

their seashore study on molluscs,

sponges and padina algae species to

increase sample sizes and reliability of

the data. In the mangrove ecosystem

students quantified different types

of pneumatophores, measured

conductivity and salinity levels and

crab holes as indicators of population

density. A snorkeling trip had them

identifying fish species from published

keys and applying underwater line

transect techniques.

In early October, after their trips,

several groups of Grade 5 and Grade

12 students had the opportunity to

meet again and share the results

of their experiments. Both groups

had new insights and a greater

understanding of ecosystem dynamics.

With the overwhelming success of the

collaborative work, the High School

and Junior School teachers are looking

forward to repeating this partnership

again next year.

This Grade 5 student sums up the

collaboration, “Thanks to the Grade 12s,

we now have the experience and know

how to do experiments. We can think

about how we can find out the answers

to our questions. We might even study

ecosystems ourselves when we go

to Middle and High School

because it’s all so interesting.”

Photos by Andrea McDonald and Mireille Couture

10

outdoor education course. For many of

those I interviewed, the experience had

taken place eight to 10 years before. A

significant majority stated that they

derived benefits from that experience

that had transferred to their personal

and professional lives, that they

continued to draw from 10 years later.

Really? Airplane pilots got something

out of an outdoor education experience

that was so powerful it continued to be

relevant to their lives, a decade later?

This may be difficult to believe, but it

makes sense if you look at the history

of outdoor education as an academic

discipline. Just like law, music, medicine

or other disciplines, practitioners can

earn advanced degrees. It requires

mastery of specific knowledge and

skills through formal education and/

or practical experience. Extensive

theories, research and evaluation

support it as a practice and profession.

It is interesting to note that this

research points to many human health

benefits of positive experiences in

By Dr Michael Gassner

Oregon State University

During the 2013/2014 school year,

the College made the decision to

participate in a seven-year longitudinal

study that will help to evaluate the

Outdoor Education programme, and

better understand the impact of the

programme on overall student learning

and development. The study is being

conducted by faculty researchers at

Oregon State University, Dr Michael

Gassner and Dr Christopher Wolsko, who

are experts in the fields of experiential

education and social psychology. The

study was launched this term. Here,

Dr Gassner reflects on the study and the

thinking behind it.

Last September, I went for a long walk in

Pasir Ris near the East Campus. I needed

some time to think, having recently

returned from a Grade 7 expedition to

Pulau Sibu. My colleague and fellow

researcher at Oregon State University,

Dr Christopher Wolsko, and I are starting

a seven year, long-term project that

will be looking at the contributions

the UWCSEA Outdoor Education

programme makes to overall learning for

students from Grade 6 to Grade 11.

This outdoor education project is

attempting to answer some difficult

and complicated questions. We want

to know what exactly the students are

learning on these expeditions. Does

outdoor education make a difference in

their academic and personal lives? What

do students perceive outdoor education

contributes to the their overall learning?

What are the specific knowledge, skills,

and qualities that graduates of UWCSEA

leave with that may be attributed to

the Outdoor Education programme?

Which expeditions instill what qualities

and skills? Great questions, but no

easy answers.

As I continued to walk, I reflected

back to 2006 when I was in Singapore

working on a different project. At

that time, I interviewed a number

of Singapore Airlines pilots who, as

cadets, had undertaken a three week

Journey as destination:

evaluating the UWCSEA Outdoor Education programme

Photos by Karen Niedermeyer

11

the natural world. Programmes and

interventions in a variety of educational

and health-related contexts have been

designed with these benefits in mind.

In other words, the positive long term

impact—physiological, emotional and

psychological—of outdoor education is

well documented.

The UWCSEA study involves students

on both campuses, who participate on

a purely voluntary basis. A short survey

before they undertake their expedition,

and another after they return home,

provide us with some insight into their

attitudes to the natural environment and

their self-perception. As we build a view

over time, we expect to see some trends

in terms of changes in attitudes, skills or

qualities that we can trace back to the

students’ outdoor education experience.

Some preliminary data from our trial

surveys in April 2014 shed inspiring light

on what may lay ahead. In open-ended

reflections, many students commented

on building tremendous self-confidence

after meeting the substantial challenges

of their expeditions. Learning to work

in a trusting and cooperative manner

with one’s peers is also coming to the

forefront as a core quality that is clearly

being nurtured in these environments.

All of this work reminds me of a phrase

Yvon Chouinard, founder of outdoor

clothing company Patagonia and

legendary mountaineer, has used on

occasion: conquistadors of the useless.

He was referring to a long journey he and

some friends took in the 1960s: from

California in the USA to Patagonia in

South America, to climb a mountain. At

the time, many of his friends and family

asked him why he was undertaking

the expedition. He admits that he did

not, at the time, have an answer to

the question, but that was the point.

It was the journey that mattered, not

the outcome. The process of going,

trying, and reflectively seeking along

the way was what made the journey

transformational.

Although our study is informed by

prior outdoor education research and

practice, in many ways it shares some

characteristics with Chouinard’s South

American journey. We are intentionally

limiting our preconceived notions

of what we may find and have fully

committed to the idea that it is the

journey that teaches. While in some

ways this makes the project more

challenging, we are confident that by

continuing to ask the right questions, we

will discover the answers.

We know that the study will have a

positive impact on student learning by

providing feedback that will help the

UWCSEA outdoor education staff to

adapt and develop the programme to

further enhance the student experience.

For students, it will also be a way to

safely and anonymously document their

journey through a series of outdoor

education expeditions from Grade 6 to

Grade 11.

The outcomes for parents are less

obvious. While any improvement in

the student experience is a benefit to

parents, I would also argue that the

enormous trust in their children (and the

school) that allows a parent to send their

13 year old kayaking in Chiang Mai for

two weeks, is a growth experience that

matches any mountain a student might

climb during their time at UWCSEA!

There is no doubt that though parents

are not on the expedition, they too go on

a journey as their children leave them for

outdoor education experiences.

It is our hope that this longitudinal study

will confirm what we know anecdotally

and through experience: that outdoor

education experiences have a positive,

long term impact on students that stays

with them and is transformational.

12

and culture of their home country,

which facilitates a smooth return, and

ensures growth as balanced bilinguals.

The programme also contributes to

preserving language diversity at a time

when UNESCO estimates that half of

the languages spoken around the world

will have disappeared by the end of

the 21st century. High School students

at UWCSEA East have celebrated

International Mother Language Day by

sharing poems and songs with students

and staff, learning about endangered

languages, and reflecting on what

it means to be part of a global, yet

diverse world. Some IB students of

School Supported Self-Taught (SSST)

Literature have also participated

in panel discussions with parents,

outlining the challenges of growing up

bilingually and building literacy skills in

multiple languages. So, not only does

the programme uphold the UWCSEA

mission of peace and sustainability, but it

also incorporates elements of service as

well as personal and social development.

In more practical terms, the IB

Diploma’s SSST Literature course gives

students the opportunity to study over

57 languages at Standard Level. The

course involves studying 10 literary

works, including two in translation.

Through learning about literature,

students not only develop analytical

and writing skills which they can

transfer to other disciplines, but they

also learn about their cultural heritage

and are able to relate better to their

communities of origin. This definitely

fosters the cultural and linguistic

sustainability that the school aspires to

develop in students.

The ambition of the programme is high;

so is the level of commitment required

from students to be successful in the

SSST course. Besides being fully literate

in their mother tongue, they need to

show skills and qualities which they

will further develop as they engage

in the learning process. In the past I

have had model students who were

Mother tongue and

literacy at UWCSEA East

By Laurie Kraaijeveld

Head of High School Languages

East Campus

Since the opening of the East Campus,

the mother tongue programme in

High School has been expanding, a

development which will continue with

the introduction of a school supported

language and literature course in

Grade 9 in August 2015. The campus

is committed to catering for the needs

of mother tongue students as part of

embracing the growing diversity of

the student body. School supported

self-taught literature programmes play

a demonstrable role in breathing life

into the UWCSEA mission statement

of “mak[ing] education a force to unite

people, nations and cultures for peace

and a sustainable future.” How is

this achieved?

Through the academic study of their

mother tongue through literature,

students in Grades 10 to 12 expand

their knowledge of the language

13

exemplary in their study habits, level

of self-awareness, drive, discipline

and maturity, such as a student from

Swaziland who got up every Saturday

at 8am to skype with her Siswati tutor,

herself a UWCSEA alumnus, who is

based in the United States.

“If I couldn’t study my mother

tongue, I wouldn’t be able to

define who I am and what I

should do to be Cambodian.”

Kimheang Chham, Grade 11

Whilst the course presents students

a number of challenges, it also brings

many rewards. Upon graduating,

students often tell me how much they

have learnt about their home culture

and how much more confident they

feel in relating to their relatives and

home communities.

Schools that offer a strong mother

tongue programme are places

where diversity thrives as a fantastic

educational opportunity. They are

places where the voice of every single

student is heard and valued, where

students are welcomed as who they are,

and develop an understanding of how

multiple identities enrich personalities

and communities. They are places where

educators understand that students’

“cultural and linguistic experience in

the home is the foundation of their

future learning and we must build on

that foundation rather than undermine

it,” as Canadian professor, educator

and linguist Jim Cummins puts it. This

understanding lies at the heart of the

UWCSEA learning principles, together

with the need for learners to be

supported and challenged, to interact

and understand the purpose of their

learning as well as to take ownership of

it. All of these principles are embedded

Amu Muyanga (Class of 2014) reflects on her experience: My journey in

taking a self-taught language has had moments of uncertainty and frustration,

but also a tremendous amount of growth.

The first part of the programme was based on works in translation that all

the self-taught students covered, so we actually got to interact as a class to

discuss elements of plays and novels. Because the IB has very few Zulu past

papers, I did all the IB Zulu exams ever set and it took me only a week to finish

all of them. There was no IB prescribed list of authors, so I had to make my

own list. It was challenging to find books that were at the level of the course

that IB would approve and also that I could understand, given the fact that I

had never studied Zulu literature as in depth. Zulu back in South Africa was

very basic: grammar, language, some literature, some analysis of literature,

but I had never done a course that is completely based on analysing motifs,

themes and other elements. So the course in English has been challenging and

even more so in Zulu.

However, I have not been alone in this journey. My grandma back in South

Africa is a qualified Zulu teacher, and she was hired as my tutor. We worked

over Skype on Saturday mornings. Working one on one with a tutor and not

having another student as a reference can make it difficult to gain an objective

assessment. I was the only IB student my grandmother has ever taught;

everybody else she has taught has been within the South African system.

Taking Zulu has been much more taxing than if I had decided to take a

language ab initio, because you have to manage your own time, resources, and

set your own internal deadlines.

But you strive to do everything to the quality that you would like to present

as your best work; that has a lot to do with managing your time and having

standards for yourself and being responsible for that in yourself and not

handing the responsibility to an external teacher. The experience has been

incredibly demanding and incredibly frustrating at times, but I think the

lessons I have learnt have been invaluable.

in the SSST literature programme at

UWCSEA East.

Every year when the exam season starts

I am in awe of what the students are

able to do. While recording the students’

final orals, I am amazed by what

students who have learnt to read and

write with their parents and may never

have received instruction in mother

tongue prior to joining the programme

achieve … Not that I could understand

what the student from Zimbabwe

was talking about in his individual

oral commentary and presentation …

It was all in Shona, a language I know

nothing about, but which encodes a

worldview, knowledge and texts which I

learned about while guiding the student

through the course. However, despite

my ignorance of the Shona language,

I was witness to the passion that he

radiated, manifesting itself through

body language that I had never had a

chance to observe before. The singing

tone of his voice also communicated a

love of the language that fascinated me

and drove home the value and rewards

of the programme.

14

Every year in Term 1, on opposite sides

of Singapore, small groups of Middle

and High School students gather

in classrooms, halls, the canteen,

the sports fields, corridors between

buildings, Primary School playgrounds

and even the Dover car park to rehearse

complicated moves and dances from

around the world. The goal? To perform

in one of two events that showcase the

joyful diversity of nationality and culture

that makes UWCSEA so special: UN

Night (Dover) and CultuRama (East).

How do students who have never

been to South Africa or New Zealand

give such meaningful renditions of

the gumboot dance or the Haka? It

seems that, with training from student

experts, knowledge of these dances is

passed down from student to student

and from year to year as they learn and

perform dances from countries on the

opposite side of the world to their own,

with conviction, with commitment

and above all, with heart. This

extraordinary alchemy takes place on

both Dover and East, and for two nights

(five performances) the community

can enjoy polished and authentic

UN NIGHT 2014

15

expressions of the cultures represented

at the College.

But there is more than heart at work.

Both productions are organised,

produced and presented by the students

themselves with minimal involvement

from teachers, and the quality of the

work is exceptionally high. Auditions are

tough and students hold themselves to

a standard that teachers might hesitate

to expect from them.

At both events, the community comes

together to provide food from around

the world in the tent plazas, and

an important part of the evening is

wandering through the stalls, eating

smoked salmon from Ireland, followed

by kimchi from Korea and finishing it

all off with kanelbulle from Sweden. Or

whatever (untraditional) combination

you fancy.

Two exceptionally talented

communities of students, two

highlights of the year, one valuable

purpose—the celebration of

the wonderful diversity of our

College community.

CULTURAMA 2014

16

By Susan Edwards

Head of Global Concerns

and Cathy Elliott

Head of Local Service

Dover Campus

Surely every day at UWCSEA is a

UWC Day? However, it is not everyday

that 3,000 students take the time to

explicitly address the UWC mission

through action and service. Every two

years on UWC Day, the entire Dover

community enjoys a day away from

their timetabled classes to engage in a

wide variety of activities.

Some activities were designed to

enhance our campus environments,

from gardening projects involving

mulching, weeding, pruning and

propagation, to tending worm farms,

to painting walls and art projects,

which included painting canvases of

international leaders of peace, justice

and environmental activism, to hang in

the canteen. Students also smashed the

last of Pete’s Smashing Pots, collecting

the contents for the College’s service

programme and using the shards to

decorate plant pots.

UWC DAY 1 October 2014

Another unique project was the creation

of three large scale panels honouring

our late UWC President, Nelson

Mandela. One Grade 12 tutor group

worked in collaboration with a talented

artist from the HIV Patient Care Centre

to create the design prior to UWC Day

and then painted the panels on the

day—now we just need to find a wall big

enough to house them!

Middle School students experienced

dragon boating, learned the gumboot

dance, walked the Green Corridor,

tested their UWC knowledge in a quiz,

learned about apartheid, and watched

the film Girl Rising.

Visitors from Local Service partners

included young children from Healthy

Start, Child at Street 11 and Lee Kong

Chian Gardens School who spent the

day doing music, art, sport and drama

sessions with K1 and a number of High

School students. Elsewhere on campus,

students hosted the workers at our

new High School block to lunch, and

welcomed senior citizens from a number

of our Local Service clients to a Diwali

celebration in the Main Hall.

On campus, some students became

pen pals with the Manus Island

detainees seeking asylum in Australia,

or wrote letters of protest to politicians,

leaders and policy makers. Others

took part in the ‘We Can!’ campaign

to break stereotypes, while another

group documented the day as

photojournalists. The Grade 4’s learned

more about the people on their campus

by interviewing those who help to make

our campus clean, safe and efficient. The

Grade 5’s updated their iconic jigsaw

and tracked the campus’ biodiversity,

while Grade 1 learned about their ACRES

Global Concern, and created t-shirts

promoting animal conservation with a

little help from High School students.

Venturing off campus, groups of High

School students hosted a number of

outings including showing residents at

H.O.M.E around the Marina Bay area,

and escorting friends from MINDS

to the Trick Eye Museum on Sentosa.

Other groups carried out maintenance

at Riding for the Disabled, and mucked

out animal enclosures at ACRES, while

still others packed donations bound

for Cambodia or planted trees with

17

National Parks. Others visited the

Botanical Gardens with K2 and went

on a materials treasure hunt, or helped

Grade 3 clean up Pasir Ris Beach. On

Pulau Ubin, High School students

collected rubbish and recorded data

as part of the International Coastal

Clean-up co-ordinated by the National

University of Singapore.

A lasting legacy of the day are the

relationships between younger and

the older students, forging community

engagement, not only with our local

service partners, but also within our

own community. The High School

students no longer see those light blue

shirts as a moving mass, but know them

by name and it was touching to see

some students reconnecting over the

following days. In a very large school,

this was a welcome outcome.

It really was a day where the students

on Dover Campus were “a force to unite

people, nations and cultures

for peace and a sustainable

future.”

18

the shade of the awnings in front of the

Primary Clinic, where circles are formed

and the fun begins.

Can you help us with new singing

games?

At UWCSEA Dover, we are striving to

develop a broad repertoire of singing

games from around the world. One of

our favourite call and response songs is

‘A Keelie,’ a call to play that originated in

Ghana and is sung in the Twi language.

UWCSEA Dover Junior Music Teacher

Luiza Pliszka is teaching us the Polish

games Baloni (The Little Balloon) and

Pingwin (Penguin). We have also had

requests for Haida, a traditional Eastern

European Chassidic that featured in

last years UN celebration. This is a

dance that gets faster and faster with

each repetition. We are also looking at

introducing an Indonesian version of

Scissors, Paper, Stone.

Some of our English language favourites

are: Jump Jim Joe (USA), Love Sombody

(UK), Bungalow (USA), Double Double

(UK) and Syncopated Cyril (Australia).

By Susanne Khalek

Infant Music Teacher, Singing

Playgrounds and G2 Singers

Coordinator, Dover Campus

Whilst walking through the playground

at Dover Campus on at Friday lunchtime,

you may find yourself transported back

to your own childhood as you hear the

laughter of children and the enchanting

refrains of many different singing games.

Singing Playgrounds is an exciting

addition to our playground environment

in both the Infant and Junior Schools.

Developed in the UK by Ex Cathedra,

the Singing Playgrounds concept fosters

children’s personal and social skills

across the grade levels, through a child-

led culture of singing games. The idea

is not new, nor unique to the English

speaking world.

Term 1 saw the launch of Singing

Playgrounds into the Primary School.

At the beginning of the school year, a

variety of singing games were taught

in Music lessons. These games assisted

classes to get to know one another

whilst preparing a common repertoire,

across the grade levels, to facilitate an

easy transition into the playground.

When the idea was first presented to the

children, the enthusiastic response of

those wishing to become Song Leaders

was overwhelming. So as to enable as

many children as possible to embrace

a leadership role, a new team of Song

Leaders will be formed each term.

Leadership training includes developing

skills to lead singing games, and to

encourage other children to become

involved. The four golden rules are:

1. reach out to invite

2. make eye contact

3. smile

4. give a clear starting note … ‘Ready,

Steady, Off We Go!’

After the initial training session, Infant

Song Leaders travelled to Tanglin Trust

School where they met with their

counterparts and shared singing games

in the Music room before venturing out

into the playground to engage other

students. We look forward to Term 2

when Tanglin will visit us.

UWC Day provided a great opportunity

to share the Singing Playgrounds

initiative with others in our school and

in the local community. In the morning,

K1 children, supported by Grade 11 and

12 students, hosted children from Child

at Street 11. Each class visited the Music

room and played singing games. Later,

in the afternoon, K1 children with their

new Grade 11 and 12 friends joined

the Grade 1 students to form singing

circles down the length of the Primary

playground, a truly wonderful sight.

Since then, on Friday at both Infant and

Junior School lunch breaks, the children,

who wish to participate in Singing

Playgrounds, meet at the Song Stop, in

SINGING PLAYGROUNDS … ‘READY, STEADY, OFF WE GO!

Photo by Joseph Tan

Should you recall any singing games

from your childhood that you believe

would be suitable to teach our

children, please contact Susanne on

skh@uwcsea.edu.sg to arrange a time

to share.

19

Collaborative online spaces

By Andrew McCarthy

Assistant Director of Learning

Technologies, UWCSEA

and Adrienne Michetti

Digital Literacy Coach

East Campus

Since its inception in 2011, UWCSEA’s

iLearn initiative has broadened our scope

of 21st century learning. While our early

focus was on providing students with

necessary digital tools and supporting

teachers to use technology effectively,

over time it became clear that our

traditional classrooms were expanding

to encompass a variety of online spaces.

One valuable effect of this is that our

online spaces allow for continued

discussions and learning long after the

bell has rung. Over the last three years

we have used Google sites, documents,

presentations and a variety of other

web-based tools to help classroom

learning continue online.

As our face-to-face classrooms in

Middle and High School evolved with

the addition of laptop computers, it

was inevitable that our online learning

spaces would also evolve. During the

2012/2013 school year, we began to

research and evaluate how online

environments might naturally extend

face-to-face learning. We established

working groups to test and pilot various

platforms that would support ‘blended

learning’ (the seamless amalgamation of

face-to-face and online learning).

Research suggests that blended

learning environments can be beneficial

to student learning under the right

conditions; that is, when they combine

the best of face-to-face learning and

online learning. Blended learning

environments need to have two key

elements to be effective. First, the

system must support asynchronous

and constructive dialogues; ie, they

must allow students to collaborate and

provide one another with feedback,

even when they are not online at the

same time. Secondly, there must be

opportunities for learners to digest

important content and teacher

explanations before a face-to-face

lesson (Luckin et al, 2012). Our vision at

UWCSEA is to provide online tools at

an institutional level, accessible by all

teachers and students, to support this

emerging best practice.

The result of our working groups’

research and development has been

this academic year’s soft-launch of our

new UWCSEA Online Learning Platform

(OLP). At the East Campus, the OLP

replaces and expands the components

of East Curriculum Online, and at Dover

Campus, it supersedes StudyWiz and

other Google Sites in the Middle and

High School.

A primary reason for needing a

new online learning environment

was to increase opportunities for

communication, collaboration, and

socialisation around learning now

that our face-to-face classrooms had

evolved. Further, we recognised a need

to provide ready access to curriculum

content resources such as unit outlines,

teacher instructions, or multimedia

materials. Long term, it will also allow

us to more effectively collect and give

feedback on student work, which will

help us to expand the ways we might

use student assessment for authentic

learning. Already habits are changing:

our OLP has become a one-stop shop

for learning and resources, resulting in a

noticeable reduction in emails.

The OLP is currently living and

breathing in a variety of ways across

the College Middle and High Schools.

In Music, students are sharing example

compositions with classmates, while

some History classes are using it to

encourage co-construction of meaning

and collaboration. Science departments

are developing units which allow

students to progress flexibly with course

material, or to review concepts ahead of

class to activate prior learning.

All teachers using the platform are

now posting homework tasks online;

doing so allows the OLP to synchronise

information from each student’s

multiple courses into one personalised

calendar. As such, our students now

have access to a dashboard all of their

individual homework, allowing them to

prioritise tasks and manage their time

to meet deadlines and other extra-

curricular commitments.

Over the last 12 months, UWCSEA’s

Digital Literacy Team have worked

closely with developers of ‘Teamie,’ the

Singapore company behind the OLP

framework. We continue to tweak and

enhance the system so as to effectively

support learning at the College. We

look forward to the continual evolution

of our learning spaces, mindful of best

practices for student learning with

digital technologies.

Sources

Luckin, R., Bligh, B., Manches, A., Ainsworth,

S., Crook, C., & Noss, R. (2012). Decoding

learning: the proof, promise and potential

of digital education. Retrieved from http://

eprints.lancs.ac.uk/66044/

Screenshot from Online Learning Platform

20

very individualised one for students.

However, since it is attached to what

is probably one of their first major life

decisions, what is sometimes forgotten

is that actually, the holistic admissions

process grew out of the desire of the

university to match its student intake

to its own goals and its own values. The

process, when viewed through this lens,

is a whole lot less personal.

What is holistic review, from a

university’s perspective? As the

University of Wisconsin explains,

holistic review is: “An individualised,

non-mechanical review of the

applicant. To do that effectively, the

admission decision should include

an evaluation of the applicant as an

entire person. The decision-making

process should consider a broad range

of factors that reflect the student’s

readiness for college, potential for

success, and contributions he/she can

make to the student body. Such factors

might include:

• Academic factors

• Demographic factors

• Socioeconomic factors

• Race/ethnicity

• Work experience

• Leadership and extracurricular factors

• Accomplishments

• Personal qualities

• Skills and abilities

• Other factors determined by the

institution”

Don’t take it

personally:

thoughts on

the holistic

admissions

process

Why are we concerned about the

mindset with which our students view

this process? This past spring, Stanford

University made the news for being

the most selective US undergraduate

institution in history, admitting just

5.1% of applicants for the Class of 2018.

With this trend of the highly selective

universities becoming even more

selective, we feel we need to help our

students better understand how to go

about deciding what type of university

is right for them.

Recently, Brian Wright, formerly a

University Advisor at UWC Costa Rica

and currently an Advisor at the new

UWC Dilijan in Armenia, gave a TEDx

talk about applying to universities

that use this holistic review. (You can

find the link on eDunia or search for

TEDxUWCCR on the TEDx Youtube

channel). He argues that it is necessary

to change the way students construct

their understanding of the university

application process at these universities.

Many students have the frame of

mind that by being something or

doing something they deserve a place.

However, as Wright explains, this is

not the case. Many other factors play a

part in a university’s holistic admissions

decisions—and as a result, students

should stop taking it all so personally.

The first step is examining how our

students are deciding what their “dream

university” really looks like. For many

students, the dream university is the

university they have heard about since

Johanna Fishbein

University Advisor

Dover Campus

When students enter the IB Diploma

programme and begin thinking ahead

to life beyond UWCSEA, students

(and their families) have some big

decisions to consider. Universities

around the world have very different

admissions processes; some are very

straightforward, like Australia, where

students are admitted based on their

IB Diploma points, and some are very

complex, like the US, where a holistic

admissions process is utilised.

As we guide our students through

the holistic review process we are

often struck by how personal it all

feels for them. And it is true that

the holistic admissions process is a