Dunia December 2022

December 2022

THE HOUSE

THAT TABITHA

BUILT

page 28

THE POWER

OF DEEP SELF

REFLECTION

page 4

STEPPING STONES

TO THE GREAT

OUTDOORS

page 10

My takeaway from my time in the rainforest restoration project

applies to climate change perfectly. A Chinese idiom states:

十年树木,百年树人—it takes ten years to nurture a tree, but a

hundred years to train a man. Climate change requires a long time

period to change people’s mindsets and for the actions we are

taking right now to actually show their effect … I trust that with

collective effort, we can slowly turn the wheels around for a better

and more sustainable future.”

Lantian Christina ’24, Grade 11, Dover Campus, speaking at the

2022 Caixin Summit Singapore Satellite Event on 18 November

2022 as a representative of the SMART Talks on Climate Change

Programme co-hosted by Caixin Global and Yale Centre Beijing

02

STRATEGIC

PLANNING AND

THE FIRST GIFT

OF TEACHING

A message

from Nick Alchin,

Head of College

04

THE POWER

OF DEEP SELF

REFLECTION

Looking to the past,

planning for the future

06

UWCSEA

COMMUNITY

AGREEMENTS

By the community, for

the community

08

LINGUISTIC

INCLUSION

Creating community

for all learners

10

GETTING BACK

TO OUTDOOR

EDUCATION

Overnight stepping

stones

12

CURRICULUM

IN ACTION

Grade 5 hands-on

learning

14

USING ART

FOR GOOD

Student wins

international film

contest

15

SUPPORTING

STUDENT

INNOVATION

Alumni mentorship

programme

16

CULTURAL

CELEBRATIONS

RETURN

Showcasing UN Night

and CultuRama

18

A NEW PATHWAY

TO LEARNING

UWCSEA Grade 9–10

Programme

20

THE ENERGY OF

AN AUDIENCE

Celebrating poetry

22

SEASAC

Welcoming visiting

senior sports teams

24

NATURE

EXPLORERS

Infant Outdoor

Education

25

MARINE

CONSERVATION

Connecting students

across campus

26

BUILDING

WELLBEING IN

MIDDLE SCHOOL

Learning through the

practice of positive

education

28

THE HOUSE

THAT TABITHA

BUILT

A tribute to our

GC partner

32

TAKING IN THE

GOOD

Meet the new High

School Principal on

Dover Campus

COVER IMAGES

Front: Grade 6

students at Sarimbun

Scout Camp,

Singapore

Back: UWC Day on

East Campus

December 2022

Dunia is published two times a year by UWC South East Asia. Reproduction in any manner in

English or any other language is prohibited without written consent. Please send feedback to

dunia@uwcsea.edu.sg.

Writers: Sarah Begum, Sinéad Collins, Shaiful Rashid, Lucie Snape, Jules Wainwright and

Kate Woodford | Photography: Elena Bell, Janrius Rogers, Joseph Tan, Jules Wainwright and

members of the UWCSEA community | Design: Nandita Gupta and Grace Hong

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

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

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

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

Printed on 100% recycled paper with environmentally friendly inks | MCI (P) 033/02/2022 | MKT-2223

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Visit the newsroom of UWCSEA:

perspectives.uwcsea.edu.sg

OPINION

Strategic planning and the first

By Nick Alchin, Head of College, UWCSEA

As I come to the end of my first term as Head of College, I can safely say that I have

never been on such a steep learning curve. Having known the College since 1995, as

teacher, Principal and Head of East Campus, I had a good insight into its educational

and strategic workings and the special nature of our community. This term I have

also come to see the immense complexity of operational, administrative and

governance work that supports the learning. What’s not surprising, however, is

the dedication of all the teams, who know that the business of educating the next

generation for peace and a sustainable future is a noble goal that provides real

meaning to the everyday tasks we undertake.

This idea of meaningful work is a recurring theme for me. Indeed, providing students

with meaningful work is a common theme in the educational press these days—and

often goes under the term agency. One of the basic ideas here is that we allow

students to make decisions and to get used to thinking and acting for themselves,

rather than just doing what they are told. That is, of course, one of the central goals

of a progressive education.

The pedagogy that supports agency can be deceptively simple—asking students

lots of open questions; giving them time to discuss; asking them to explain ideas in

their own words using their own examples; taking a genuine interest in those ideas;

presenting those ideas to the class for peer feedback; choosing their own areas of

interest to explore and so on. It can also be taken further, and it’s interesting to see

how far we can take this last strategy—which is often called co-constructing the

curriculum with students.

We all know that learning is easier when we are really interested in the material we

are learning, and so adapting the curriculum to suit student interests is appealing.

Where they have flexibility, teachers will to some extent do that naturally; for

example by spending longer in areas that engage students to learn more deeply.

Taken to its extreme, co-construction can mean collaboratively deciding with

classes or individuals the entirety of what they learn. This is a position that finds a

lot of advocacy on social media these days.

So I was interested to read a well-known champion of liberal education, Professor

Gert Biesta, arguing against this position in his 2022 book World-Centred Education.

His starting point is that agency is, in itself, a values-neutral quality. Students—and

adults, as we can see reading world news—can exercise agency to good or bad ends,

and our goal has to be broader than just agency for its own sake.

Biesta’s main point is that as professionals educators have a broader responsibility

than to simply offer students only what they want and what they are interested in (of

course all parents know this!) Biesta talks about the first gift of teaching—being given

what you didn’t ask for and argues that education should give students what they did not

ask for—first and foremost because they didn’t even know that they could ask for it.

This seems to me to be such common sense, and so aligned with the graduating

students who over the years consistently tell us I didn’t see the point of this at first,

but by the end I learnt just how relevant and important it is or the long-graduated

who write, years later, I didn’t know at the time how valuable all those things I learnt

2 | Dunia December 2022

gift of teaching

at school would be. So the extreme of co-construction would impoverish the scope

and breadth of their learning; and a lot of passions would remain dormant because

children never came into contact with, say, theatre, service, hiking, cross-country,

coding, capacitors, or calculus.

But the key idea here is more than merely encountering new ideas, important

though that is. The broader point is that we learn about ourselves, and grow into

ourselves as we encounter and challenge our desires—not just follow them. It is a

deep human truth that we may not need what we desire, and may not desire what

we need—that’s as true for adults as it is for students. Furthermore, the journey of

understanding the difference between our needs and desires unfolds over a lifetime.

It’s worth quoting Biesta at length:

So the slow work of the educator … is to accompany children on this journey,

encouraging them to go on the journey, and helping them to gain insight in their

desires, to gain a perspective on their desires, to come into relationship with their

desires, so as to find out which desires are going to help them with living one’s life well

in the world and which other desires are going to hinder in this task.

One could and should argue that the work of education professionals is not just [to

give] students what they ask for, but it is about engaging with them in the process of

figuring out what it is that they might need …. That makes school, perhaps, a place

of revelation.

This last sentence resonated strongly for me when I read it. Earlier this year, in April,

we held an inspirational two day celebration of 50 years of UWCSEA—our 50th

Anniversary Forum—and some of it felt like a revelation indeed. After a difficult

few pandemic years, thousands in our community came together to honour

our Mission, and commit to the future. It was just what I needed, though in the

intense preparation and run-up it might not have been what I entirely wanted!

At our Forum, we heard the Executive Director of the UWC Movement, Faith

Abiodun, speak about the possibility and promise inherent in the future of the UWC

Movement. He was unquestionably inspirational, but what was most uplifting about

the conference for me was the idea that he awoke precisely those things suppressed

over the pandemic years, and we all knew it as we heard him speak.

For the last few months, UWCSEA has been a revelation to me once more. This has

been nowhere clearer than through the strategic planning process. If the first gift of

teaching is giving our students what they didn’t know they could ask for, then the

first gift of strategic planning is to consult widely and consider many alternatives, so

that we hear the heartfelt needs our community did not know they could ask for.

John Gardner argues that the most gifted leaders understand that the needs of people

cannot be fully plumbed by asking them what they want or why they want it. One of

the deepest of truths about the cry of the human heart is that it is so often muted, so

often a cry that is never uttered. So, as we look through the input to the strategic

plan from students, parents, staff and alumni, we will need to separate wants from

needs, and devise a plan that will help our students and wider community work

towards a more peaceful and sustainable future. There is much meaningful work—

and agency—here.

References

Biesta, G. (2022) World-Centred Education.

Routledge

Gardner, J. (1993) On Leadership. The Free Press

… the first gift of

teaching—being given

what you didn’t ask for

… education should give

students what they did not

ask for—first and foremost

because they didn’t even

know that they could ask

for it.”

Professor Gert Biesta

Author of World-Centred

Education

December 2022 Dunia | 3

The power of deep

self reflection

FEATURE

Looking to the past, planning for the future

Adapted from a reflection by

Andrew Ruane, Head of Grades 9

and 10 Science, Dover Campus

A commonly asked question in

education is “how do schools ensure

they deliver on what they promise?”

It is widely accepted that attainment

data from exams offers only a narrow

view on student achievement. As a

school focused on our Mission, at

UWCSEA we strive to dig deeper and

to understand how we achieve a more

long lasting impact.

One of the ways we do this is via

accreditation. Council of International

Schools (CIS) International

Accreditation recognises a school’s

commitment to student well-being

and high quality teaching and learning,

as well as to global citizenship and

intercultural learning. Accreditation is

achieved through a rigorous and deep

self review, confirmed by external

evaluation led by our peers. UWCSEA

elects to receive joint accreditation

from the Western Association of

Schools and Colleges (WASC).

Dover Campus completed the CIS/

WASC re-accreditation process last

school year; this year East Campus has

begun their 18-month journey.

Andrew Ruane, Head of Grades 9 and

10 Science on Dover Campus, served

as the CIS Accreditation Coordinator.

Working closely with Lizzie Bray, then

Head of Dover Campus who had led

Dover’s previous accreditation, Andrew

led our 18-month Self Study review.

A complex process which involved all

teaching and many non teaching staff,

Andrew reflects on how the Self Study

has direct relevance to the Strategic

Planning process that the College has

embarked on this school year.

Iteration is key

One of the first things I was taught

during my teacher training was to

reflect. My own father often asks

how I will teach the same lesson for

over 30 years. The answer to that

is that I reflect. Every time I teach

the same lesson it is different to the

previous iteration. Not only are the

students different but as teachers we

constantly strive to do things better, for

example by making it more engaging,

using different contexts and case

studies and ensuring what we teach

remains relevant.

Measuring the performance of a school

takes place in much the same way:

by reflecting on the things we do well

and the things we need to improve.

It is clear that the people who know

this best are those who are a part of it.

And so my rationale in taking on the

role of CIS Accreditation Coordinator

was: how do we ensure that we reflect

authentically on the entire operation

of one of the largest schools in the

world, celebrating our successes and

looking for those areas in which we can

do better? The answer was quite clear:

involve everyone.

Connecting across the College

This served a second purpose too. In

any large organisation, it can be easy

to remain in our area of expertise and

not see how other areas work. Not only

can this lead to missed connections that

may strengthen our shared purpose,

but it can also lead to people feeling

disconnected, or worse, not valued.

4 | Dunia December 2022

This was particularly evident during the

pandemic where many teams began

working remotely. CIS Accreditation

served as an important opportunity to

bring the community together again.

Accreditation is achieved by evaluating

ourselves against a number of CIS

Standards1, in what is called a Self

Study. These Standards are set in a

framework of nine Domains that cover

all areas of school operation:

• Domain A: Purpose and direction

• Domain B: Governance and leadership

• Domain C: The curriculum

• Domain D: Teaching and assessing for

learning

• Domain E: Well-being

• Domain F: Staffing

• Domain G: Premises, facilities,

technology systems and auxiliary

services

• Domain H: Community and home

partnerships

• Domain I: Residential services,

boarding and/or homestay

Initially, the leadership team submitted

a Preparatory Report with input from

many others in the community. This

was followed by a Preparatory Visit

in September 2020; pandemic travel

restrictions meant the two senior

evaluators visited us virtually. By using

the report and evidence obtained from

meetings, interviews and observations

during this visit, the evaluators helped

us identify areas to focus on during the

Self Study.

Holding ourselves to account

To begin the Self Study, all staff were

invited to nominate themselves to

contribute to a Domain Committee.

Whilst some chose to review their area

of working in school, adding the needed

expertise, a number elected to work on

areas other than their own; their fresh

sets of eyes were a useful way for us to

gain new perspectives.

Over 350 staff participated on the

committees. The leadership team did

not join specific committees or provide

direction in this process, a testament

to their belief in the College and its

staff, and the value they place in the

accreditation process.

Committees began by unpacking the

Standards within their Domain, deciding

on how best to respond to them

within the context of Dover Campus.

To determine whether we exceeded,

met, partially met or did not meet the

Standard, they then gathered evidence

in one of three forms:

1. Intent: what the College is aiming

to achieve

2. Implementation: how the College

is working to achieve something

3. Impact: the outcome of what has

been achieved

To facilitate evidence gathering, a

Saturday Professional Development day

in January 2021 connected Committee

members with experts from many areas

of the school through a complex series

of Google Meet engagements. We

also invited a number of student and

parent representatives, and members

of the Board, to focus groups. This

complex undertaking meant that

committees were able to build a deep

understanding and begin responding to

their Domain standards.

Outcomes and actions

The 18 month Self Study allowed us

time to identify issues and begin to

take action to address them. In all,

the Domain Committees made 103

assessments which we submitted to

CIS and WASC. A 13-person Evaluation

Team joined us (virtually) in February

2022 to explore the details, and

respond to the Self Study, including

a recommendation on awarding CIS/

WASC re-accreditation.

In June 2022 we were delighted

that re-accreditation was awarded

to Dover Campus with immediate

effect. We were immensely proud to

be commended in many areas, most

particularly: our purpose and direction,

curriculum planning, teaching,

conceptual learning, assessment

and reporting across all levels of the

school as well as Outdoor Education,

Service, wellbeing, Diversity, Equity and

Inclusion work, and Boarding.

The team also identified areas for

continued growth, including the need

to clarify the College organisational

structures, roles and responsibilities

and to communicate clearly regarding

strategic initiatives. Because the Self

Study had already identified these

areas of focus we had already begun to

address these, and evidence gathered by

the East Campus in some of these areas

in the Preliminary Report phase (which

they are currently in) reflects some of

the progress we have already made.

United in purpose

The process to achieve re-accreditation

involves an incredible amount of work

from a large number of people. For

mission-led schools like UWCSEA, this

is where the true value of accreditation

lies—in the authenticity of the report

combined with the chance for all staff

to reflect, and to learn more about their

campus and the College.

As the College continues to develop

its strategic vision for the years ahead,

the Self Study reports serve as a

chance to recognise and celebrate

the achievements of the 2018–2023

UWCSEA Strategy. Importantly, they

will also provide us with signposts as we

plan and reprioritise, ensuring UWCSEA

continues to be a mission-focused

school whose students and graduates

are equipped to create a peaceful,

sustainable future.

Footnote

[1] CIS/WASC standards provide detailed

descriptions of how candidate schools are

asked to measure their attainment in key

areas identified in each Domain.

December 2022 Dunia | 5

FEATURE

Anyone involved in the development of our Community

Agreements from the beginning, undoubtedly had

moments of wondering if they would ever be finished.

From the start of the Values in Action process to the

announcement of the Community Agreements in October

2022 was two full school cycles. Viewed today, with their

few simple words and visuals, it is hard to believe that

they required so much time to produce.

In a community with such a strong bias for action, why did

it take so long for us to come up with these statements?

Well, the answer is in their name. Agreements emerge

from a consensus-driven process to identify what every

person in the group needs from each other. Other schools

have codes of conduct, ‘norms of behaviour’ or contracts

for parents. We wanted agreements. Not just because

‘norms’ makes assumptions about what is appropriate or

acceptable and begs the question of whose ‘normal’ we

are referring to, but because the process of constructing

the agreements was as important as the outcome. We

wanted it to be consensus-driven, collaborative and

values-based, and we wanted the outcome to be relevant

to everyone in our community­—staff, students and

parents alike.

Nick Alchin, Head of College, in his letter to the

community launching the agreements said, “It is a

fundamental belief of mine, borne from experience in

many schools, that the way we interact with each other as

UWCSEA

COMMUNITY

AGREEMENTS

By the community,

for the community

6 | Dunia December 2022

adults will be how we interact with our students”. Building

agreement on the link between our values (what we

expect from ourselves and each other) and the behaviours

(actions) that demonstrate them needed to be thoughtful

and driven by our belief in the importance of how we are

in relationship with one another.

The many consultations with stakeholder groups,

synthesis, testing with groups, further feedback,

adjustments, final versions (which took three attempts

to really be final!), design, translations and the launch

needed a whole community of stakeholders. In this the

Parents’ Associations on both campuses were invaluable

partners and champions. They challenged assumptions,

helped to test concepts and language across cultures and

guided us in our process and our communication. They

were quickly onboard with the idea that belonging for

everyone in our community would be an outcome of our

individual and collective behaviours, and, along with the

wider parent and staff community, drove us to examine

each word carefully and through various cultural lenses.

The translations were a wonderful project in themselves,

as we understood that it was less about translation and

more about interpretation, as our language experts

translated the words not just for their meaning but for

their cultural value. We worked through the complexity to

reach simplicity, and everyone involved is justifiably proud

of the results.

There are inevitably challenges when imperfect people

with diverse backgrounds build community together.

These Community Agreements help us to navigate those

challenges. They are living statements, and we expect

them to evolve and change alongside our community.

They help to build our community culture and our

community culture is the basic root that not only gives

our students, staff and parents their daily experience at

school, but is an important determining factor for how

our community grows. With our UWCSEA Community

Agreements as a basis, the future looks bright.

Scan the QR code to view these

agreements in multiple languages:

December 2022 Dunia | 7

The most successful multilingual communities are those

who create opportunities for the entire community to hear

and see different languages in use every day, by creating

space and opportunities for visual and aural reminders of our

linguistic differences.

This is not to say that we shouldn’t have a lingua franca—but

to create an inclusive community in line with our values

we acknowledge that while English is our main language of

instruction, it is simply one of many in regular use across

our community.

Ellie Alchin, Director of Teaching and Learning at Dover

Campus has led a multi-year strategy for linguistic inclusion,

citing benefits for students in both wellbeing and learning. “A

growing body of research shows that bi- and multilingualism

bring cognitive, linguistic, socio-cultural and emotional benefits

and that all members of a community benefit from being

in a multilingual environment because it provides increased

opportunities to develop intercultural understanding.”

“All languages are valuable,” Alchin notes, “and multilingual

people have great advantages over monolinguals

intellectually and socially. Multilingualism not only builds

language skills, research shows that it also flexes conceptual

learning and critical thinking in ways that build more complex

neural pathways in the brain. This is one of the reasons that

we aim to develop bilingualism for all our students, regardless

of how many languages they speak at home.”

This year, nearly 50% of our community has a home language

other than English, and we are continually looking for ways

to acknowledge and harness the linguistic diversity of our

classrooms and campuses to enhance teaching and learning.

Examples of this are heard and seen in classrooms with

translanguaging strategies being used widely by teachers,

Linguistic inclusion

Creating community for all learners

50.8% English

Others 10.3%

(69 languages)

Dutch 1%

Tamil 1%

Spanish 1.2%

German 1.6%

French 1.9%

Korean 3.9%

Japanese 4.5%

14.9%

Chinese (Mandarin)

Hindi 8.9%

79

First languages

spoken at

College

supported by posters in different languages and growing

library collections. There are also a growing number of

murals, posters and signs displayed around our campuses,

and recently our UWCSEA Community Agreements were

translated into the 17 most frequently used languages in

our community.

Alchin highlights that all of these elements contribute to the

College’s Strategy to develop an inclusive community. “The

aim is to equalise the status of all languages as equal, and

usualise the use of first languages for our community. This

enhances belonging, and encourages students to use their

first language to support their learning more generally.”

UWCSEA First Languages profile

8 | Dunia December 2022

Case study 1 | Finding a common language

UWCSEA’s K–12 English as an Additional Language (EAL)

programme supports students whose home language is

not English to develop English language skills to support

their participation in the learning programme, and to create

connection and belonging within their UWCSEA community.

However, there are benefits to all students, says Nina-Noelle

Hall, Head of High School EAL on Dover Campus, “The EAL

programme helps with the obvious in that it teaches skills and

supports acquisition of academic and personal vocabulary

for students in the EAL programme. However, working with

our teachers on strategies that make our learning spaces

more equitable for EAL learners, such as explicit and focused

vocabulary expansion, has highlighted that this supports

learning for all students by creating shared definitions and

understandings for everyone in the group. For example,

High School teachers are experts in their own fields, who are

sometimes teaching teenagers who may never have heard of

‘apartheid’ or the word ‘ameliorate’. This collaboration and

coaching approach to creating shared understanding creates a

positive impact for everyone in the group.”

A post-pandemic initiative to promote multilingualism is

the Grade 11 English B students reading with Infant School

students. This is a wonderful way for our English B students to

practise their English pronunciation in a different setting and

context. And so in the David Watson Primary Library on Dover

Campus, K2 students gather around their Grade 11 student

readers every month. Hunched together in corners, they are

mesmerised by the power of the words in their books.

“Young children have no filter, which means they are

comfortable telling our Grade 11s that their pronunciation is

wrong. It’s excellent learning all around! We’re also planning

for our Grade 11s to read in their home languages to students

who share their home language, and to continue their

support of the Home Language lessons,” says Hall. “This is a

beautiful way to build relationships across the school.”

Case study 2 | Translanguaging in action and on stage

Translanguaging is an intentional strategy that teachers

draw on when needed to personalise the classroom

experience for each student, by encouraging and supporting

them to access and process their learning using their home

language. This enhances their conceptual understanding of

the subject, whilst helping them maintain and develop their

academic knowledge in, and of, their home language. The

approach is successful for students of all ages, and can be

applied creatively in many settings.

“An example of a teaching strategy that promotes inclusion

and the use of first languages to support student learning, is

simply for teachers to ask students how to say a vocabulary

word they are learning in their home language. This

highlights the skill of the multilingual student to their peers,

and can lead to interesting discussions as meaning and

intent are clarified. It also provides the teacher a way to role

model curiosity and language learning,” says Nina-Noelle

Hall, Head of High School EAL on Dover Campus. “Learning

from our mistakes can be a humbling experience; I can’t

tell you how many times classes have laughed about my

pronunciation of a word in Chinese or Hindi, for example.

But we laugh together and I try again, and in the process we

become closer as a community.”

In Term 3 last year, the Dover Campus Grade 9 and

10 Drama production Dunsinane explored language

as an element that allowed students to shape their

own interpretation. The play, written by David Greig,

is an allegory for the British intervention in Iraq and

Afghanistan, and tackles notions of colonialism and modern

interventionism. Picking up from the end of William

Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the narrative follows a group of

English soldiers in the aftermath of the Battle of Dunsinane.

The play twists and turns as several internal factions try

to fill the power vacuum. Meanwhile, the foreign forces

who intervened in the civil war under the guise of being

liberators, slowly see themselves become the oppressors.

“Parts of the original script are performed in Gaelic, and Grieg

offers no translations or phonetic pronunciations. The Gaelic

is used to demonstrate the displacement of the English troops

and how ill-equipped they were to be in a foreign land dealing

with a conflict that wasn’t theirs. We made the creative choice

to use the cast’s home languages as a substitute for Gaelic.

The students created their own translations, and often a

character spoke the lines in one language and was replied to

in another. It turned out all of the home languages spoken

in our production were from nations and cultures that were

historically occupied, invaded or colonised by the British

Empire; Tamil, Bengali, Hindi, Mandarin, German and Korean,”

explains Jay Douglass, Middle School Drama Curriculum Leader.

As a company, we purposefully offered no help in translation

to the audience, so depending on the observer you were

either lost with the English soldier as to what the Scots were

discussing, or you were able to catch the subterfuge and

resistance of the oppressed.

“The play was a timely choice, closely aligned with

UWCSEA’s values in creating interpersonal and intercultural

understanding, as well as our aspiration to be inclusive

linguistically,” Douglass reflects. “While there were many

difficult topics explored in this project, challenging both our

students and the audience, it also gave students a unique

opportunity to bring their home language to life on stage in

a very relevant context.”

FEATURE

December 2022 Dunia | 9

Camilla grabs the rope firmly with

both hands. She closes her eyes, takes

a deep breath and launches herself off

the platform. Swinging forward, she

just misses the landing pad, and quickly

starts spinning backwards. Just in time,

a flurry of hands reach out and halt her

momentum, helping her balance and

stay on target.

Camilla launches off the platform

alone, but she lands with the help of

five classmates.

Camilla is an East Campus Grade 6

student participating in the Sarimbun

Scout Camp overnight, part of the

first set of overnight trips run by

the UWCSEA Outdoor Education

Department (OED) since the start of

the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. After

having missed out on overnight trips

the past few years, she says she felt

anxious about overnighting, but she was

embracing the challenge.

“It’s a really good experience to get

back in camp,” she says. “You get closer

to your classmates. It’s a fun experience.

If you’ve never gone camping, I think

it’s just a great experience for everyone

to get outside and do a bunch of fun

activities together.”

Singapore’s loosening of COVID-19

restrictions has signalled a return to

normalcy to many aspects of life at

UWCSEA. Nowhere has that change

been felt more than in the OED, which

had seen much of its critical activity,

like international expeditions, put on

hold. But rather than merely a return to

business as usual, the overnight trips at

Sarimbun represent more of a new way

forward, combining best pre-pandemic

practices with lessons learned from

operating through two years of circuit-

breaker lockdowns and other restrictions.

From international to

hyper-local

When the pandemic disrupted

travel from February 2020, the OED

quickly pivoted, creating a ‘hyper-

local’ programme. This saw students

engaged in specially-designed on

campus itineraries that created

learning opportunities while respecting

COVID-19 health advisories. By pivoting

like this, UWCSEA was the only school

programme in Singapore able to

operate Outdoor Education consistently

throughout the pandemic.

“The COVID-era undoubtedly posed a

significant challenge as we had to reign in

on what we had previously been doing,”

says East Campus Head of Outdoor

Education, Chris Newman. “However it

has also been an opportunity to adapt

by utilising the best of what we could

control and access, on the campuses and

in Singapore.”

“This was only possible due to the

emphasis placed on the holistic whole

child development view that exists

at UWCSEA,” Newman says. “The

grounding and resources were already

in place to get creative and problem

solve an existing Outdoor Education

programme from 80% overseas

overnight expeditions to an initially

100% campus based and then to a

hybrid campus and local programme.”

With a newfound focus on keeping

things local, the OED was able to turn

the inability to travel from a daunting

challenge into a real opportunity—one

whose benefits will continue to be felt

as the programme moves forward.

“One of the things about these trips

is taking advantage of the local

opportunities that we’ve got here,”

says Dover Campus Head of Outdoor

Education, Oli Sampson. “Singapore’s

got a lot to offer and the students can

learn a lot just by being here. Having

that local experience, extending it a bit

further with the overnight component,

gives classes an opportunity to come

together at the beginning of the year.

Then they are more prepared for later in

the year when that extends to a longer

trip, further afield.”

“I think it’s combining the best of

something new and the best of

something old,” says Sampson. “What

we’ll do in the next couple of years is try

and find the balance of what’s been great

about what we’ve done over the past

UWCSEA’s Outdoor Education

programme gets back on track

Stepping

stones to the

great outdoors

FEATURE

10 | Dunia December 2022

couple of years and what’s been great

about what we’ve done historically. If

we don’t learn from the last three years,

with the things we’ve done in Singapore,

that would be a real shame.”

Stepping stones

For students like Camilla—as well as

parents and teachers—overnight trips

like Sarimbun are an important stage in

their Outdoor Education journey.

“These overnight trips are a really big

stepping stone for several reasons,”

says Sampson. “First, the students are

having an experience they haven’t had

for the past two years. For many of

them that’s quite a big deal. And it’s a

fundamental warm up to the next trip,

which is going overseas.

Second, it’s a big step for parents as well.

Parents haven’t let their children go for

a few years, and that’s a really big deal

and we recognise that. So giving the

opportunity for them to practise that,

that’s an important step for them as well.

Finally, it’s important for our instructors

and teachers, who haven’t had the

opportunity to really engage with

that pastoral care in the way that a

residential experience allows.”

From overnights to expeditions

The resumption of overnight trips at

the Sarimbun Scout Camp is a shift

towards the re-establishment of the

expeditionary trips and the powerful

outdoor education experiences that

are essential to UWCSEA’s OED

programme. Similar to longer trips in

Malaysia or further afield, overnights

at Sarimbun are designed to challenge

students, facilitate learning with others,

develop expedition skills and connect

to nature. The camp’s rustic facilities

provide the perfect escape from the

city, with ropes courses, campfires,

and simple cabins. A nearby overnight

here helps prepare students, carefully

building up experiences that have been

missed over the past few years.

As one of the core elements of our

holistic learning programme, the OED

is always striving to create a rigorous,

experiential and more sustainable

programme. A balance of local and

international trips can help to achieve

this, combining the lower impact

of local experiences with the full

expeditionary experience that only

international travel can provide.

With that in mind, the first multi-day

international expeditionary trips are

scheduled for Gopeng and Tioman,

Malaysia starting January 2023. But just

as important as the question of when

will expeditions return, is what they will

look like when they do.

“Despite the success of our adaptations,

we see our students have missed

many of the fundamental experiences

that have made UWCSEA what it

is,” says Sampson. “For many, those

expeditions and trips are a cornerstone

of a UWCSEA experience. As we are

emerging from covid restrictions we are

busy exploring and planning for next

year’s programmes and what Outdoor

Education will look like into the future.”

“The College has undertaken a review

of the sustainability of our expeditions

and trips,” says Newman. “This is to

ensure that trips are filtered through

a sustainability lens. Each trip and

expedition is planned with sustainability

built into the process, reducing our

impact on the environment and

building in decisions and habits to

support sustainable practice. Aligned

with this we will continue to ensure

that the connection to nature further

fosters environmental stewardship and

support students to be ambassadors for

a sustainable future.”

For Camilla and her classmates, that

experience on the Sarimbun scout

camp may have just seemed like a fun

experience shared with friends. But

for UWCSEA, it represents a vital step

towards rebuilding, and reshaping our

Outdoor Education programme for a

more sustainable future.

December 2022 Dunia | 11

By Andrea Strachan, Primary School Curriculum

Coordinator and Tamsin Armstrong, Primary School

Environmental Stewardship Coordinator, Dover Campus

UWCSEA is one of 18 United World Colleges (UWC) around

the world, with a shared mission of making education a

force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and

a sustainable future. On Wednesday, 21 September we

celebrated UWC Day. This year’s theme was, ‘Peace Begins

With Us.’

Peace is one of the “Five P’s” that the United Nations

(UN) uses to conceptualise Sustainable Development,

together with People, Planet, Prosperity and Partnership.

Peace education is built into our Service Curriculum, and

is anywhere students learn about Sustainability. In 2019,

UWCSEA named Sustainable Development as one of the five

Mission Competencies which the College aims to develop in

students through our holistic learning programme.

But what does learning about Peace and Sustainability look

like in our Primary School context? We can explore answers

to this question by looking more closely at our Grade 5

programme, the culminating year of Primary School.

In Grade 5, Systems Thinking and concepts connected to

Sustainability are woven throughout the curriculum. The

year begins with a Unit of Study titled, ‘What If I Were You?’

Explorations of personal identity are incorporated into

class discussions and learning engagements, and students

consider the ways in which people around the world are able

to meet their basic human and emotional needs depending

on the resources they have access to. Students learn about

organisations working to support prosperity in places where

people struggle to access what they need to flourish and lead

fulfilling lives.

Mid year, students engage in a Unit of Study focused on

conflict transformation and peace, using case studies that

FEATURE

Concept-based

curriculum in action

Grade 5 hands-on learning

for peace and a sustainable future

12 | Dunia December 2022

emerge from both students’ lived experiences, and local

and global events. They learn about the difference between

positive and negative peace, and how peace is so much more

than simply the absence of war. They learn that peace begins

with personal peace, extending outward to interpersonal

peace and global peace.

Our Grade 5 programme culminates with a student Expo,

where learners inquire deeply into an environmental issue

connected to the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and

action we must take to protect our planet’s climate and

natural resources in partnership with others.

All five of the P’s in our Sustainable Development

framework—people, prosperity, peace, planet and partnership

—are found within our Service Programme. Service is one

of the core elements of a fully articulated K–12 curriculum

designed to shape students who self-identify as capable

global citizens, who have a sense of agency and understanding

of their individual ability to enact meaningful positive

change in the world. Service is more than just an individual

endeavour, and is not about simply doing “for” others. Rather,

it is about standing alongside one another, and collective

efficacy. Quite simply put, it is understanding that together

we can achieve more. In our Primary School, we use UWC Day

as the launch of our Service Programme.

For Grade 5s, leading a Primary School composting initiative

connected to our College-wide commitment to sustainability

is a core component of their Service Programme. This

service initiative is connected to another Grade 5 Unit of

Study, called ‘Web of Life’ that looks at biodiversity, and

the importance of caring for the natural environment as all

living things are interconnected. Grade 5 students begin by

working together to communicate information to the rest

of the Primary School community about the importance of

composting, and distribute composting containers to different

parts of the school. Classes take turns each week collecting

the waste materials, and delivering them to the college

composting area.

On UWC Day this year, Grade 5 students had the opportunity

to take usable compost, the product of the College’s

composting initiative, and work with our facilities team to

help spread it in our gardens. Students were able to see the

full impact of their service initiative, and the ways in which

small individual changes can lead to a larger, positive impact

on our environment.

This Grade 5 service initiative is an excellent example of

the ways in which we use our campus as a classroom to

support place-based Sustainability Learning. We call these

Campus Case Studies, where students and teachers work

in collaboration with our Facilities and Operations team to

provide opportunities for real-world, hands-on learning.

At the end of the year in Grade 5, before embarking on

their Expo, students are invited to pause and reflect on their

learning experiences throughout the Primary School. Learners

are able to see connections between their previous learning

and all of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Through

student-driven learning opportunities such as the Expo and

our Service Programme, students are able to identify specific

ways in which they have had, and will continue to have, an

impact on the world around them. This focus on Sustainable

Development in our Grade 5 programme is an example of our

UWCSEA concept-based curriculum in action, emphasising

transferable learning to real world contexts.

Scan the QR code to read UWCSEA’s

White Papers on Peace and Sustainable

Development:

December 2022 Dunia | 13

USING ART FOR GOOD

East Campus student wins international film contest raising environmental awareness

Grade 11 student HaoMing recently won

Grand Prize in the 2022 Sony World

Photography Organisation Picture This

short film contest. HaoMing’s entry,

‘The Longer We Wait, The More it

Takes,’ is a stop motion film that he

made in June 2022.

Picture This is a global competition

that supports the United Nations

Sustainable Development Goals

(UNSDGs). The contest aims to help

amplify the voices of filmmakers, while

also raising awareness and inspire

action for the planet.

The theme of the 2022 contest was

‘The Time to Act is Now!’ HaoMing’s

entry was quite literally a home-made

film, made with his mobile phone in

his bedroom. Although simple in its

execution, it tells an impactful story, and

shows how one doesn’t need expensive

equipment, institutional support or a big

budget to create a powerful message.

All you need is a vision and a story to

tell—and maybe a little nudge from your

University Advisor.

“Since I’m focused on art, my university

guidance counsellor told me about the

competition and advised me to enter,”

says HaoMing. “When I found out that

the topic was climate change I was

excited because that was something

I’ve always been passionate about.

Ever since I was in Middle School I’ve

been learning about the UNSDGs, and

the idea of being able to take action

on climate change combined with my

passion for art was really exciting.”

After originally planning on a more

complex live-action film with his

friends, scheduling conflicts, and

COVID-19 forced HaoMing to rethink

his approach. Realising he would have to

create something on his own at home,

he decided on stop-motion.

“I used clay that I bought and trash that

I collected from my family over a few

weeks and put together an ad about the

effects of ocean pollution,” says HaoMing.

“I wanted to focus on ocean pollution

because it is something that I have taken

action on for school and services.”

Winning the global arts competition

has affected HaoMing in several ways,

as he makes his plans for life after

UWCSEA. Because Sony flew HaoMing

to the UK for the awards ceremony, he

was able to visit several schools there to

check in on their Fine Art programmes

in person, something he may not have

been able to do otherwise.

More importantly, winning the

competition has boosted his confidence

and opened his eyes to the potential

of working as an artist to promote

environmental awareness.

“After this competition, I realise that

I can combine my passion for the

environment with my passion for

art, that there’s a way of working

as an environmental artist,” he

says. “That’s not something I ever

considered before now. Before I might

just paint pretty landscapes, but

now I realise the potential for using

art to spread awareness, to fight for

the environment.“

“I learnt that it is as important to spread

awareness as to take action,” says

HaoMing. “So this was a good chance

for me to spread awareness while

exploring my creativity.”

COMMUNITY NEWS

14 | Dunia December 2022

Putting the spotlight on student innovation

and the Alumni Mentorship Programme

Adapted from a report by Vedant,

Grade 12, Dover Campus

In a world where change is more the

norm than the exception, an ‘outside the

box’ approach to problem solving is high

on the list of priorities for organisations

seeking to recruit the best young talent

in the market. At UWCSEA our learning

programme is built to equip students

with the necessary skills and qualities to

meet the fluid needs and challenges of

the future world of work and our Alumni

mentor programme is helping them to

pair and shape these skills and creativity

with current world experiences.

Vedant, a Grade 12 student on Dover

Campus, shares his story about using

innovative thinking to meet an important

need, and how he is tapping into the

UWCSEA Alumni mentor programme for

the support he needs to scale his idea.

The need

Through observations of and

conversations with friends and student

groups, I noted that there is a lack of

options for students to showcase their

work. Some students were posting on

Instagram, some on Medium, some

made physical magazines, and some

were simply unable to share it at all. I

wanted to create a single platform—a

positive, interactive and collaborative

space for student work.

The idea

Introducing, Lumenol—an online hub

for sharing and celebrating student-led

innovation. Students, or student groups,

can post creative work and others on

the platform can like and comment

on the work, creating a positive and

encouraging community around

student innovation and ideas.

The customisable profile pages also serve

as a personalised mini-website/portfolio

page for students which they could send

as part of their university application,

internship application, or job CV.

My vision is that Lumenol becomes a

one-stop-shop for all students to share,

inspire and engage with student created

projects and content.

The journey so far

My journey has been a non-linear

trail of discovery, pivoting and

problem solving.

I spent over a year understanding

the problem, and designing, building

and coding Lumenol from scratch.

My developing skills gained through

hackathons and projects at the UWCSEA

IDEAS Hub proved useful, but still, I had

never taken on a project of this scale. I

had to design and build with the future

in mind and anticipate challenges that

come with scale. I researched as much as

I could, tried and failed numerous times,

and learnt through the experience.

After finalising the initial designs, I

collaborated with friends to name the

platform. We decided on a variation on

Luminol, a chemical used by many IB

Chemistry students. Luminol creates

a beautiful blue glow and Lumenol

is designed to put the spotlight on

student creativity.

The growth of Lumenol has been a

journey of twists and turns, failing and

learning. It continues to evolve, helped

by the feedback and creative input

from students and mentors around

me. It’s this collaborative approach

instilled by UWCSEA that has made

Lumenol possible. It was a jump into the

unknown and I am glad I took it.

The next steps with UWCSEA’s

Alumni Mentorship Programme

I’m now looking to leverage UWCSEA’s

incredible network of alumni to help

guide me through Lumenol’s future as

COMMUNITY NEWS

Scan the QR code

to view the Lumenol

prototype:

an official platform with students from

all over the world.

There are about 14,000 UWCSEA

Alumni globally, all with an amazing

array of skills and real-world experience.

The UWCSEA Alumni Relations team

has been extremely helpful, connecting

me with UWCSEA Alumni through their

mentorship programme. These mentors

will help and guide me with important

next steps to launching Lumenol. This

is one of the things that makes our

UWCSEA community so special, our

Alumni remain connected and give back

through programmes and opportunities

such as this. I’ll be an alumnus soon and

I hope to be able to do the same.

I hope to officially launch Lumenol soon

and I can’t wait to see the positive impact

it has on showcasing student innovation.

To find out more about the UWCSEA

Alumni Mentorship Programme, please

contact alumni@uwcsea.edu.sg

Vedant ’23 and Spencer Ansley ’95

December 2022 Dunia | 15

COMMUNITY NEWS

300

Student

performers

30

Countries

represented

UN NIGHT

UN Night is one of the most memorable and beloved annual events at Dover

Campus, with a longstanding tradition that began in 1979, just eight years

after the College was founded! The festival transforms our Tent Plaza into an

exciting international food fair, sharing a vibrant mix of cuisines along with

Global Concerns (GC) merchandise in support of our GC project partners,

in particular, the sale of our very own yearly Global Concerns calendar.

On top of that, the evening includes a spectacular showcase of creativity

and innovation by 300 students representing 30 countries through dance

performances. UN Night is the culmination of months of hard work and

dedication by hundreds of contributors, celebrating the diversity, unity and

generosity of our UWCSEA community!

COMMUNITY NEWS

16 | Dunia December 2022

CULTURAMA

Celebrating it’s tenth year anniversary in 2022, CultuRama is the annual

High School dance showcase at UWCSEA East that celebrates the diversity

in our community through a colourful showcase of different cultures. Since

its inception, it has blossomed into an exploration of cultures and national

identities through various art forms. Over 200 students were involved this

year, including performers, committee members and cultural ambassadors

from High School. Committee members worked behind the scenes in roles

such as marketing, music, photography and lighting coordinators to provide

support for two live shows. Cultural ambassadors were on hand to guide

performers and ensure that all performances were respectful to the various

cultures. It was a thrilling evening to mark the return of a live audience.

222

Student

performers

Countries

represented

December 2022 Dunia | 17

A new pathway to learning

A look at the new UWCSEA Grade 9 and 10 Academic Programme

After years of careful planning and

preparation, 2022/2023 marks the

first school year that East Campus is

offering its bespoke UWCSEA academic

programme in both Grades 9 and 10 as an

alternative to the International General

Certificate of Secondary Education

(IGCSE).

With the new programme, Grade 9

students embark on a learning journey

consisting of UWCSEA designed and

assessed courses, set within the holistic

UWCSEA learning programme. Like the

IGCSE, the Grade 9 and 10 Programme

is academically rigorous, yet is designed

to allow more flexibility for students to

pursue individual interests while engaging

in the transdisciplinary conceptual

learning that is core to UWCSEA’s

guiding statements.

Both pathways prepare Grade 9 and

10 students for the International

Baccalaureate Diploma Programme

(IBDP) in Grades 11 and 12. This year,

55% of East Campus Grade 9 students

opted for the new UWCSEA Programme.

On Dover Campus, plans to introduce the

new Grade 9 and 10 options have taken a

slightly different timeline, with the focus

on developing a First Language course to

replace IGCSE certificates that were no

longer available for students. In tandem

with this a UWCSEA “Narratives of our

World” English Language and Literature

course was launched for all students,

and plans are well underway for a more

extensive programme to be available on

Dover Campus from next August.

The new Grade 9 and 10 programme

builds on decades of experience in

developing and delivering a successful

specialised programme for students

entering in Grade 10, which was

previously called the Foundation IB. The

development of the new programme

now opens more academic options for

incoming Grade 10 students.

FEATURE

What is the IGCSE?

The IGCSE consists of standardised two-year courses offered to international

schools in over 150 countries by Cambridge International Examinations. Normally,

UWCSEA students enter IGCSE examinations in eight subjects: English Language

and Literature (two courses taught together), another Language, Coordinated

Science (double award), Mathematics, Humanities and a Creative Arts or

Practical subject.

IGCSE courses are assessed on a combination of coursework, a practical or oral

component, and final examinations. Although assessments differ slightly from

subject to subject, all IGCSE subjects have a series of external exams, which

students take over the course of six weeks at the end of Grade 10.

Why a new programme?

1. Alignment with UWCSEA mission and curriculum

“We wanted to launch this programme for several reasons,” says High School

Principal East Campus Damian Bacchoo. “First, we wanted to have more

mission alignment, with much more focus on the interconnected global issues

shaping our world.”

Whereas the IGCSE is a globally-standardised course, the UWCSEA Programme

is purpose-built to align more closely with the College’s mission and values.

For example, the UWCSEA programme intentionally includes concepts

like global peace and sustainability. The programme also follows the same

concept-based approach to curriculum design which has been applied in K–8,

which embraces interdisciplinary, transferable learning and allows students to

collaborate and think across different disciplines and courses.

“The new programme is an exciting opportunity for us,” says East Campus Head

of IB Mathematics Andrew Mollitt. “It allows us to dig deeper into concepts.

Students are really enjoying the freedom to work on project-based activities,

and linking mathematics to other areas of the curriculum that they’re studying.”

18 | Dunia December 2022