Dunia March 2016

March 2016

Term 2 edition

Turning the tide

Annual Report highlights

Environmental stewardship

Turning the tide

By Chris Edwards

Head of College

Something remarkable has happened.

The Harvard Graduate School of

Education has issued one of the most

significant and potentially powerful

reports I have read on the matter

of university admissions. Entitled

Turning the Tide: Inspiring Concern for

Others and the Common Good through

College Admissions, the report sets

out recommendations for university

admissions processes that are intended

to adjust the focus of young people (and

their parents) away from exclusively

individual success and towards

contribution to the common good.

The report comes from exploratory

meetings hosted by the Making Caring

Common project at the Harvard

Graduate School of Education, and

is signed and endorsed by 80 key

stakeholders in admissions from US

universities (including the Ivy League

universities). Specifically, the focus

is on “how to improve the role of

the college admissions process in

promoting and assessing ethical and

intellectual engagement.” The following

quotation from the Executive Summary

encapsulates the position very clearly:

“Too often, today’s culture sends young

people messages that emphasize

personal success rather than concern

for others and the common good.

And too often the college admissions

process—a process that involves

admissions offices, guidance counselors,

parents and many other stakeholders—

contributes to this problem. As a rite

of passage for many students and a

major focus for many parents, the

college admissions process is powerfully

positioned to send different messages

that help young people become more

generous and humane in ways that

benefit not only society but students

themselves. Yet high school students

often perceive colleges as simply

valuing their achievements, not their

responsibility for others and their

communities … The messages that

colleges do send about concern for

others are commonly drowned out by

the power and frequency of messages

from parents and the larger culture

emphasizing individual achievement.”

Now my opening sentence used the

word remarkable because this report

does nothing less than redefine student

achievement. It endorses an approach

to education that has meaningful

service and concern for the common

good at its heart.

Since arriving at UWCSEA in July

2014, my mantra has been that of the

Buddha: one candle can light a thousand

others without losing its lustre. I believe

that narrow lives can quickly become

shallow lives and it is all too easy for

us to avoid engaging with the wider

world. For many, engaging, if they do

it at all, is a spare time activity. We

live in what those who do not work in

schools frequently call “the real world,”

and from time to time we at UWCSEA

are quietly and often apologetically

pulled up for not doing enough to let

young people know that if they want

to “succeed” later in life, it’s a dog eat

dog, kill or be killed paradigm. The

conversation will often finish with

“that’s what happens in business.”

How US university admissions can make a better world

Photo by Denise Wan

candidate crammed with thousands of

hours of extra tuition trump an equally

(possibly more) intelligent candidate

with super grades of course, but also a

broad portfolio of meaningful service,

a deep understanding of and concern

for social justice and the potential to be

creative and effect change? We think

not. Indeed, we have long thought

not. And now it would appear the

most significant voices are saying the

same thing.

As pressures grow on students, schools

and parents, we dare to hope that

Harvard, Yale, Princeton and other

US universities may be about to help

release the pressure on students to

focus on a narrow understanding of

education that is confined to academic

achievement, and instead see success

and achievement as deeply connected

to acts of service to others and the

world around us.

Following such an endorsement,

the temptation to smugly trumpet

“told you so” must be resisted. True,

UWCSEA has been focused on high IB

Diploma scores and developing ethical

students with a bias for action for more

than 40 years: indeed, our current

Impact Study (coincidentally, led by

researchers from Harvard Graduate

School of Education) is focused mainly

on whether or not we develop students

capable of ethical decision-making,

with a concern for social justice and an

appreciation of the diversity of human

life. But until we learn more about our

impact, we must exercise caution.

What we can say is that the finest

minds in America’s top universities are

telling us we have long been journeying

on the right road. There is much

comfort, hope and inspiration

in that. We do not change

direction: we quicken our step.

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

Stepping into

their shoes

Infant School

leadership spent a day

in the classroom – as a student

The power of words

Personal and Social Education unit

develops thoughtfulness and kindness

Middle School

Dragons basketball

Strong start to the season for both

the boys and girls teams

Fresh fruit Fridays

Supporting migrant

workers develops

teamwork

High School

Fresco supper club

One boarder is keeping it local and

raising funds for refugees in her home

country of Malaysia

SEASAC success in

Season 2

Team reports on

SEASAC basketball,

tennis, rugby and touch

Community

UWCSEA sweeps

ACSIS Swimming

Championships

Careers Fair

Family Festival

Cover: East Campus Grade 9 and 10

Drama production, Cyrano de Bergerac.

To an extent, league tables for schools’

academic performance (whose

correlation with how academically

selective you are renders them all

but meaningless) start this process of

commodification. To get into a Ferrari

school, some parents will start the

academic coaching process early, and

to get into a Rolls Royce university that

coaching will continue for many years.

Many people want their child to have

an edge. Heavily coached young

people who are crammed with facts

are a godsend to assessment and

admission systems because it doesn’t

take a Stephen Hawking to work out

that memorisation is very easy to

measure. It is an important skill, of

course, and in my view its significance

is sometimes downplayed too much.

Nonetheless, the place of memorisation

in the hierarchy has rightly changed,

and now the higher order skills of

acquiring, analysing and synthesising

information reign supreme along with

the wider skills such as working well in

teams, using initiative, problem solving

and creativity. And so the disconnect

between what the 21st century

demands and what it is testing grows

ever wider because assessing these

new skills is trickier than asking an

eighteen year old to name the capital

of Honduras.

So now let’s ask ourselves an important

question. What is the good of higher

and wider skills if all they mean is we

have a few more collaborative friends

in our narrow home? Should not these

skill sets enable us to dive deep into

the waters around us, be they clear

or murky, and share, generously and

humanely? And should not that sharing,

which will be a two-way process as

we learn from those we engage with,

be recognised not as tangential but

central to the university admissions

process? Should an unengaged young

By Frazer Cairns, Head of Campus,

Angela Erickson, Head of Middle

School English and

Seán McHugh, Digital Literacy Coach

Dover Campus

Handwriting is in decline. Many of us will

have written a shopping list or a note

on a post-it in the past few days but few

of us will have drafted a long text—a

‘proper’ letter, for example—using a pen.

It is not, of course, true that everybody

has the same access to alternatives such

as email—even though the number of

users had increased tenfold from 1999

to 2013, nearly 75% of all internet users

in the world live in just 20 countries.

The remaining 25% are distributed

among the other 178 countries, each

representing less than 1% of total.1 That

said, a survey in the UK of 2,000 people

in 2015 reported that one in three

respondents had not written anything

by hand in the previous six months. On

average they had not put pen to paper in

the previous 41 days.2

But if handwritten copy is fast

disappearing in the workplace and at

home, what effect does this have—

should this have—in schools? In the

United States ‘cursive’ writing (in which

the pen is not raised between each

letter) has been dropped from the

Common Core Curriculum Standards.

Forty three states no longer require

the teaching of cursive handwriting

in public schools. Finland, a country

whose education system rocketed to

prominence by occupying the top spot

when PISA tests were first introduced,

has also announced that from 2016

students will be taught only print

handwriting and will spend more time

learning keyboard skills.

However, there is concern in some

quarters that giving up handwriting may

affect how future generations learn

to read or, indeed, might hinder their

overall learning. Marieke Longchamp

and Jean-Luc Velay, two researchers at

the cognitive neuroscience laboratory

at Aix-Marseille University, have

studied children learning to write.

They found that children who learned

to write letters by hand were better

at recognising them than those that

learned to type them on a computer.3

The evidence suggests that handwriting

provides on-line signals from a variety

of sources including vision, motor

commands and kinaesthetic feedback.

In contrast, typing predominantly

requires only visual discrimination.

Though there is less robust research

in this area, there is also evidence that

writing in cursive seems to have some

benefits as the brain has to visually

track rapidly changing positions of the

pencil and control hand and finger

movements. To learn such skills,

the brain must improve its control

over eye-movement saccades and

the processing of visual feedback to

provide corrective feedback. According

to William Klemm, “Both tracking

and movement control require much

more engagement of neural resources

in producing cursive or related

handwriting methods.”4

Daniel Oppenheimer and Pam Mueller’s

research indicates that older students

who took handwritten notes retained

the information learned for a longer

To hand write or to type?

duration of time. After a week, those

who took longhand notes performed

better than the laptop users on both

factual and conceptual questions.

For Mueller and Oppenheimer, the

reason is clear: because working on

paper by hand was a more laborious

process, people tended to paraphrase

information. This required them to

carry out a preliminary mental process

of summarising and comprehension.

By contrast those working on a

keyboard tended to take verbatim

notes. Transcription, it seems, requires

little mental engagement. In a recent

interview, Mueller explained: “There

is such thing as a desirable difficulty,

having a little bit of difficulty when

you’re trying to learn something is

actually beneficial and longhand note-

taking might be just that for us.” Maria

Alonso reached a similar conclusion:

“Since handwriting is slower, the pace

of the inner voice allows more time for

rehearsal and facilitates in a greater

scale the retention.”5

All that said there are, of course,

a host of advantages to typing

rather than handwriting in many

circumstances. There is clearly the

question of speed: an average person

hand writes at 31 words per minute

for memorised text and 22 words

per minute while copying whereas

an average professional typist types

usually in speeds of 50 to 80 words

per minute. More than this, though,

online tools also allow one to read,

review, and edit text almost anywhere;

there is access to proofreading tools

such as a thesaurus and a dictionary;

one can cut, copy, paste, drag and

How can schools balance the rise of digital technology with evidence that handwriting could

be better for learning?

1 http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm

2 http://media.cfhdocmail.com/2012/06/handwriting-dying-slow-death.html

3 http://www.ac-nice.fr/iencannet/ien/file/apc/velay_longcamp.pdf

4 https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/memory-medic/201502/improve-reading-hand-eye-coordination-learning-cursive

5 Alonso, M., A., P. Metacognition and sensorimotor components underlying the process of handwriting and keyboarding and their impact on

Learning. An analysis from the perspective of embodied psychology, p.266. 2015.

drop, undo, redo, format, develop and

edit without starting again; students

can use text to speech features to

hear how their writing sounds, or to

motivate reluctant readers, who may

well be more inclined to listen than

decode; one can collaborate online

with peers who can respond. Indeed,

according to Ito et al, this ‘peer-based

learning’ is characterised by ‘a context

of reciprocity,’ where participants don’t

just contribute, but also comment

on, and contribute to the content

of others.6

When students come to examination

time there are also some benefits to

using digital technologies. A number of

studies have suggested that teachers

and professors grade students less

positively if they have poor handwriting,

even if the content is identical to

someone with good handwriting.

Clearly this is an effect that is reduced

with word processing. Interestingly,

Nora Mogey and James Hartley report

that in the end there is little difference

stylistically between examination

essays written by hand and those that

are type written.7 They then go on

to suggest that the disappearance of

handwritten essays in examinations

is ‘inevitable.’

It is easy to see how this issue could

be a polarising one; however, a way

forward rests on a simple question:

How can we best support students to

be successful learners? When looking to

develop a strategy, it might be useful to

keep in mind four guidelines:

• We need not create a false dilemma

between handwriting and typing as it

is not an either-or situation. Schools

should try to support children to

develop the necessary skills for

proficiency in both techniques

without forcing them to prioritise one

of the two methods.8

• In early childhood (and beyond) we

most effectively learn to recognise

and form letters through handwriting.

The additional context provided by

the complex task of writing results in

better memory.

• Students who have taken notes on

a laptop often perform worse on

tests of both factual and conceptual

understanding than students

who have taken notes longhand.

Assimilating new information through

good note taking is not a question of

transcription but of active processing.

This requires note takers to have the

skill and motivation to summarise

and recast information regardless

of whether they are using a pen or

a keyboard.

• Typing can make accessible a host of

advantages, not least of which is that

it can be faster and more efficient

than writing by hand and will be used

for assessment purposes in essay

examinations.

If we look at the history of writing and

we look at the history of technology,

there is both loss and positive change.

Socrates famously worried about

what writing would do to civilisation.

With writing there was a loss of the

required vast memory that those in

an oral culture hold. However, we

gained all of the benefits of living in a

literate culture. On the horizon, we can

foresee the loss and positive change

that will someday occur when speech

recognition and dictation tools are likely

to supplant both handwriting and the

keyboard. But for now, as a society,

we are navigating the loss of writing

by hand as the primary tool to record

information and thoughts. We can

see the positive changes and it is our

collective job to mediate the perceived

loss. For the foreseeable future,

therefore, schools will need to actively

manage the tension between the use of

a pen and a keyboard.

6 https://mitpress.mit.edu/sites/default/files/titles/free_download/9780262513654_Living_and_Learning.pdf

7 Mogey, N & Hartley, J. “To Write or to Type? The Effects of Handwriting and Word-Processing on the written Style of Examination Essays.”

Innovations in Education and Teaching International, v50 n1, pp.85-93. 2013.

8 https://sites.udel.edu/victorp/files/2010/11/Psychological-Science-2014-Mueller-0956797614524581-1u0h0yu.pdf

The annual Writers’ Fortnight organised

by the East High School English

Department brings published writers to

campus to speak about their experiences

as a writer and to encourage students

in their own writing. This year, students

met novelists Alison Jean Lester, Mukul

Deva and Chris Huntington, and special

guest speakers—migrant workers

supported by Transient Workers’

Count Too.

In addition, poet-in-residence Kosal

Khiev came from Cambodia thanks

to support from the UWCSEA Annual

Fund’s Artist-in-Residency programme.

Through assemblies and student

workshops, Khiev shared both his

remarkable personal story of going from

‘prisoner to poet’ and his passion for

his craft.

Grade 9 students were given the writing

assignment to persuade the intended

audience of something they feel strongly

about, as authentically as possible,

following their experiences during

Writers’ Fortnight.

Following are two examples of the

student writing that was produced by

Grade 9 students on East Campus. The

first is about Kosal Khiev and written in

the style of a feature article. The second,

an op-ed, seeks to remind people of the

power of literature and persuade them

to read more books.

By Aparajitha Anantharaman

Grade 9

East Campus

Piercing brown eyes which have

experienced too much grief, yet still

gleam with exuberance. Deft hands

which have been beaten one too many

times, yet still bear the crafty gait of

an artist. A man, who has been forced

to confront his darkest fears, who

has been exiled from his own home;

a man, who has been broken to the

point of oblivion. You would expect

his face to be streaked with tears, yet

Kosal charges on with the passion of an

ardent fire.

When we first heard about Kosal Khiev,

the man who had gone from “prison

to poetry”, our reactions were mixed:

while most of the class were slightly

apprehensive about meeting someone

who had been imprisoned for 14 years,

there were others who couldn’t wait.

His story was a touching one, and we

were all keen to hear about how poetry

came to him, and brought him out of

the abyss of insanity he had nearly

fallen into.

“I realised, that I had the power of choice”

Kosal Khiev: the man who found poetry

Before our first workshop session, the

fifth floor was abuzz with the constant

chatter of eager Grade 9 students:

“Will he tell us about his experience in

solitary confinement? Can we ask about

that? How did he turn to poetry?”. The

questions were infinite, and there was

a tingle of excitement lingering in the

air. Upon entering the room, and seeing

him up close, he seemed different. We

might have expected him to be cold,

and quiet, but there was a glowing aura

of warmth surrounding him, and it felt

as if the tips of his fingers were almost

spewing out energy.

Then he began to speak, nay,

articulately recite his thoughts with

conviction. The poetry took over him:

the words weren’t words anymore, but

rather, slicing twangs of significance.

Kosal was working his magic with us,

transporting us back in time, back to

the harsh days in his confinement cell.

The room was stock-still: mouths

agape, faces hanging, and eyes bulging

out of sockets, immersed in the awe-

inspiring tale he was retelling—spinning,

weaving, nimbly intertwining the pieces

of his life together through poetry. We

could feel what he had felt, understand

what he had gone through as if it

had happened to us. Such was the

power of Kosal’s poetry. The pace, the

rhythm, the pathos, was exhilarating;

he had struck us, with his jagged bolt

of enchantment.

But how does one create such an

intense feeling through poetry? Life had

thrown one of its greatest challenges at

Kosal, and instead of passively accepting

his fate, he had picked himself up.

Instead of giving in to the confinement

cell, he battled on, searching for the

light in the darkness, and in the process

he found poetry.

“I had the power of choice,” he said,

“The power to fight, or to die.”

He found solace in poetry: he was

able to express his deepest feeling and

emotions through words. This did not

make them go away, but gave him

strength to face them. The great thing

about Kosal, is that when he performs

his poetry, he performs for himself—so

unaware of his surroundings, that he

touches the depths of a poem. And in

that blissful process, not only does he

Literary persuasions

Writers’ Fortnight 2016

rediscover himself, but he also takes

the audience on a sensational journey

through poetry.

“There is no umbrella, or ceiling to poetry.

There is nothing new under the sun. There

are ideas everywhere, so all you’ve got to

do, is take what’s out there and make it

your own. When one commits oneself to

poetry, there is magic.”

So what can we learn from Khiev? We

can learn to reflect on our past—it is

not about what happened, but the

important thing is how we learn from

it, and how we become better people.

Poetry teaches us empathy, and with

that, we can turn sympathy and pity,

into compassion and kindness. We can

learn to stand up for ourselves: if life

The power of literature

By Urja Gaurav

Grade 9

East Campus

Take a moment, stop taking selfies for

Snapchat, or checking Facebook for

your friends’ recent updates and try and

remember the last book you read. What

do you remember about it? Which

character was your favourite? Did you

enjoy it? Who was the author? Can you

even remember what it was about?

In our world today, technology

has taken over. It’s in everything,

smartphones, televisions, cars, iPods,

Kindles, laptops, microwaves, even

some toilets are computerised.

Many young children, instead of

going outside or reading a book, are

glued to their television screens or

phones. While we are blessed to have

automated voices telling us the latest

sports updates, children, especially

teenagers have gotten lost in the

interwebs and have forgotten what a

good book can do for them. Fictional

writing takes you into a different

world. At least that’s what it does for

me. I remember, when I was little, I

had a bookshelf and it was completely

stacked with all of my favourite books.

I loved them. The words captured

every part of me and the illustrations

sparked images in my mind that no

TV show or YouTube video has ever

done. I spent every spare moment on

the couch, reading. Even today, after

hearing an author, Alison Jean Lester

talk about how she fell in love with

writing and everything that literature

has done for her just reminded me

about how powerful it is.

There’s nothing not to love about

reading—its complexity, its smell, its

feel, everything about it. It’s so close

to magical. Everyone gets one life and

in that life, you follow your own story.

Your life is a story but every time you

pick up a fictional piece of writing, you

get the chance to explore another story,

explore another life. It’s just that a

bright screen is a lot more inviting than

a small beige page with words on it. The

problem is, easy access to computers

and the incredibly knowledgeable

side of Google has caused a decline in

reading habits …

“Literature is the reflection of human

experience”, every literary piece is

based on an experience that someone

goes through and experiences are

different through different people’s

eyes. It is a tool that lets writers and

readers go back in time and relive big

and small moments that for some

reason or another, changed a life or two.

It is a tool that lets people see the world

from a different perspective. It is a tool

that gets people to think, feel and live

through the imagery of the words the

author uses.

Literature is one of humanity’s most

powerful tools. It has been around for

centuries and is the foundation of our

entire world. Writing, reading, these

are skills that a lot of people want to

be able to do, and are skills that a lot of

people can do. So try it! Stop watching

TV and pick up a book. Learn about the

different characters that this author

has come up with. Follow along with

the crazy plot and brace yourself for

every twist and every turn. Savour the

feeling of the smooth pages between

your fingers. And remember that the

book you’re holding has an entire world

inside it.

hurls us down, it is always possible to

get back up, every time, stronger than

before. And we can learn to embrace

our fears, like Kosal said, “Courage and

bravery cannot exist without fear, they

go hand in hand. Every time you take a

risk, you overcome a fear.”

To read more of the

Grade 9 persuasive writing

pieces, please visit eDunia.

is that real writers will only devote

their energy and their skills to pieces of

writing that they think are good enough

to revise. It’s a very different lesson for

the students to take on board and a far

more positive one. Real writers will tinker

with a piece that is worth tinkering with;

the rest goes in the bin if they feel they

can never take it anywhere.

This poem by Avi is a lovely example

of a piece of writing inspired by an idea

which resonated with him. Avi may look

at it again and decide to revise it and we

may even encourage him to do so. The

difference will be that if we do, Avi will

take that as a compliment to his work

rather than as a criticism. Well done Avi

for experimenting with a form of writing

that was new for you as a writer.

By Avi Asthana

Grade 4

Dover Campus

When I think of South Africa I think

of all the greenery, space, blue skies,

my friends, safaris and the museums.

I was inspired by Nelson Mandela, the

Apartheid Museum and South Africa.

Apartheid and the freedom struggle are

a part of every museum. The exhibitions

in the Apartheid Museum were very

informative and interesting. They

kept answering questions that I asked

or thought.

I wrote a poem, Freedom, during class

after I had just come back from a holiday

in South Africa. It was decided soon after

that holiday that we will move there for

a few years. When I wrote this poem

I was mostly thinking of how people

were treated and how much struggle

there was for freedom. I wanted to tell

everybody who read the poem how

things changed and how much effort

went into it.

Freedom

Freedom,

Protests, Arrests,

Segregation, Apartheid,

Jail, prison, political freedom,

Prisoners, death,

Freedom, freedom, freedom,

Struggle, struggle,

Hard.

When I wrote a poem for a first time I

thought all poems had to rhyme and

have a happy thought behind it. After

I studied poetry in class I realised that

I could write a poem about anything,

anywhere. The idea came to me when

the poetry unit was coming to an end,

and I started writing poems.

Nelson Mandela and South Africa

continue to inspire me. Freedom means

different things to different countries

and their people. Freedom to me is what

brings people together.

Inspiration

is entirely

individual

By Brian ÓMaoileoin

Primary School Principal

Dover Campus

In our Writing Workshop lessons,

students are encouraged to do what real

writers do and write about what interests

them. Before we introduced this model,

though we never told the students what

they had to write, we did often tell them

what they had to write about in terms

of subject matter—we integrated our

writing with our humanities studies, for

example. The quality of the language in

the children’s writing since has improved

immeasurably.

Ask any writer and they will tell you that

generating ideas for writing in the first

place is very often the hardest part of

the entire process, and our students are

no different. When students are stuck

for ideas, which happens often, they are

reminded to think of a place or a person

or a feeling that had recently struck

them. Every unit begins with generating

ideas and the students keep track of

these in their writer’s notebook and

choose them to elaborate upon during

the weeks that follow.

Whereas in the past, sending students

back to their desks to revise a piece of

writing gave them a clear message that

it was because their current efforts were

not yet up to standard, now our message

Readers and Writers Workshop

methodically and strategically

teaches students to read and write

in a critical way. Researched and

developed by the Teacher’s College

Reading and Writing Project at

Columbia University, the programme

was adopted in the Primary School

in 2011. Supported by the UWCSEA

Foundation, the College has run a

tailored professional development

programme for staff with visiting

specialists from Columbia University

and expanded the model into the

Middle School. More details

can be found on eDunia.

“Do not judge me by my successes, judge

me by how many times I fell down and

got back up again.” – Nelson Mandela,

former UWC Honorary President

Through his

magnifying

glass

“I love writing, as I can share

my thoughts that can help

others to look at things

differently.”

Aryan Shanker, Grade 6

Commitment to care:

Willing Hearts

Willing Hearts is a soup kitchen where

volunteers help to make meals for

people in need in Singapore. It is a lot

of hard work and it is worthwhile to

participate in different food preparation

activities. This also helps the students

to improve their kitchen skills and

collaboration skills.

My school has chosen this organisation

for the Grade 5 local service project

as 22 pairs of extra helping hands can

make a big difference. When I went for

my first visit, I saw a very big kitchen.

There were other people making food.

I looked around and saw a peeling and

chopping station, egg cracking area,

scooping and packaging area, and

cleaning area.

I imagined myself in a big restaurant …

and was reminded of the mouse chef in

the Disney movie Ratatouille, and the

crazy kitchen there as well. I felt like a

little chef on a major mission. I love to

eat but cooking is a lot of work. I was

assigned to the chopping and peeling

station and given a small chopping

board and knives and peelers to use …

I cut zucchini and cucumbers and

almost cut my finger. Phew!

… The cleaning station was a lot of hard

work too … This environment was a

tough place to accept and to get used to.

After my first visit, I was eager to tell

my Mum all about the experience … I

told her everything, and she smiled at

me. I thought she felt proud. But she

had a mysterious smile … I knew she

had some other plans for me.

On the weekend, she got me into the

kitchen and told me to chop the vegetables

for a minestrone soup. WHAT?!

This started a whole new journey of

cooking at home.

Critical thinker, creative and

collaborative: Songwriting

All my learning of music has come

from school. Through the years, it

has been fun to learn to play different

instruments like the Balinese gamelan,

samba drums and tambourine, and

to perform on stage. Over the years,

Music class helped me to become more

creative and explore new things.

In Grade 5, a big assignment was to

do songwriting independently. I was

surprised, and thought it would get

tough. I was no musician, but it was

amazing to learn the chords on piano

and work hard to do the lyrics and the

melody. It was a difficult journey for me

but I made it in the end.

My Music teacher showed us how to

make a short piece of music. It was a

process that I had to follow. It made

me go through different stages of

songwriting like brainstorming the idea,

choosing chords and writing lyrics that

made sense.

I continued to experiment more and

try out new things in my song … I felt

powerful that I could really create

something out of nothing.

When UWCSEA East opened in 2008,

Aryan Shanker was among the first

intake of K1 students. He and his peers

are now Middle School students in

Grade 6. Over the course of his years in

the Primary School, Aryan discovered

a love of writing—along with a mission

to always have fun. As mentioned in

the previous article, Writers Workshop

encourages students to write about

their interests and passions. As Aryan

learned about the UWCSEA profile, he

began to notice everyday experiences

at school that helped to develop and

reinforce the qualities and skills, and

started writing them down. Eventually

the compiled stories and anecdotes—

organised around the qualities and

skills—became a book. In Through My

Magnifying Glass, Aryan ‘zooms’ into

moments from his primary school

years that illustrated or deepened his

understanding of particular qualities

or skills in the UWCSEA profile.

Following are two excerpted stories

from the book.

Aryan’s book was published

through a company sponsorship

and the paperback is available for

sale in the College Shop on both

campuses with proceeds going to

support I-India and the UWCSEA

Annual Fund. A Kindle

e-book version is also

available online.

Aryan speaking on the ‘True Value of Fun’ at TEDxUWCSEAEast on 27 February. Photo by Aaryan Natali

10

Asian Arts and Culture Week

Focus 2016: Cambodia

From 1–5 February, East Campus’ annual Asian Arts and Culture Week

(AAC) celebrated Cambodia’s rich history of traditional art forms. Now in its

third year, AAC aims to deepen understanding of a specific Asian culture by

providing multiple perspectives on the arts of that country. Respect, empathy

and a connection to the country are fostered through participation in

activities such as workshops where students work directly with visiting artists

from the focus country.

Layers of Cambodian culture were uncovered and explored through arts

workshops, talks, demonstrations, games and performances. Workshops

introduced students to a range of art forms including the kramas dance,

lotus flower folding, pin peat music, coconut dance and, for the whole of

Grades 1, 4 and 7 shadow puppetry art. Grade 9 and 11 arts classes were led

by two visiting troupes: Epic Arts and Cambodian Living Arts (CLA).

Through performances by Epic Arts and CLA in assemblies across the schools,

students had the opportunity to witness some beautiful physical and creative

performances. The impact of the performances, which not only brought to

life traditional arts such as shadow puppetry but also showcased a creative

and thoughtful representation of Cambodia before and after the Khmer

Rouge, was deeply felt. In addition, the libraries had educational displays and

collections of books about Cambodia available, and the plaza was a hub of

activity with lunchtime performances as well as stalls for raising awareness of

the many Cambodian Global Concerns groups and their NGO partners.

The focus on Cambodia was particularly meaningful because of the deep

connections our community has through our Global Concerns and NGO

partners. It also provided an opportunity for the Cambodian students at

East Campus to take pride in sharing stories from their childhood as well as

their thoughts about the future of their country. They also shared culinary

skills, talks, photos and hosted the visiting artists with kindness, patience and

respect. Following, a Grade 12 Cambodian scholar who has been at UWCSEA

East since Grade 8 writes about the experience of celebrating her culture

through AAC.

11

Sharing my culture

By Kimheang Chham

Grade 12

East Campus

This year’s Asian Arts and Culture Week

focused on Cambodia. It was definitely

a highlight of the year for all of the

Cambodian students at East Campus,

especially for two of us who got to see

it before we graduate in May. I was

fortunate to be involved in part of the

organising process and was incredibly

proud to be able to share my culture

with the UWCSEA East community.

There were so many moments that just

took my breath away.

We had the privilege of having the

Cambodian Living Arts (CLA) NGO

on campus to run some workshops

with students and to give several

beautiful performances of traditional

arts. On Tuesday, they performed

Cambodian shadow puppetry for my

grade’s assembly. That brought me

to tears as soon as the music started,

which reminded me so much of the

beauty of Cambodian culture and how

much I miss it. I couldn’t describe the

feeling during that time; it was a mix

of pride that my culture was being

shown abroad to my classmates and of

reminding me of the spirit of who I am

and where I come from. I was amazed

by the performance. It was also very

special because many Cambodian

traditional arts are in decline or are

already lost after the Khmer Rouge; and

it was my first time seeing a Cambodian

shadow puppetry performance.

Nobody in my hometown knows how

to perform this art anymore and in the

whole of Cambodia, being able to see

such a performance is a luxury.

On Thursday of AAC Week, I

presented my personal story about

rural Cambodia and where I come

from. During the mid-term break in

October, I brought a group of friends

from East Campus, who come from

all over the world, back home with me

to Cambodia. It was an incredible trip,

both for the fun we had with my family

and also hearing my classmates say that

they had never seen anything similar

before and that they all learned a lot.

It was very nice to tell more people in

school about the specific area where I

come from, which is representative of

life in rural Cambodia. I was so excited

to tell the story during AAC and was

also nervous. It was amazing to be able

to share about where I grew up, which

left me with such great memories,

but I was also nervous to do it wrong

because the town means so much to

me. It was great to have support from

friends, staff and even Junior School

students at the talk.

On the last day of the celebration

week, we had some Cambodian

performances from CLA, Epic Arts and

Cambodian students in the community

along with some other students. It

was another incredible moment to

share our different types of music and

dance. One of the best moments was

when I started singing a folk song and

a member of CLA joined me (I was

very honoured to sing with him). Then

many others from the audience and

CLA joined us with dancing to show

their support. That moment reminded

me so much of what it is like when we

celebrate arts and music back home

in Cambodia. This shared musical

celebration was an amazing way to end

a very special week.

To see more photos from Asian Arts and Culture Week as well as the slides Kimheang shared during her

presentation on life in rural Cambodia, please visit eDunia.

Third photo at the top by Kit Ling

12

By Cathy Jones

High School Vice Principal

East Campus

What happens if your family relocates

just as you are about to start Grade

10? Or if you want to begin the IB

Diploma Programme but you’ve never

experienced inquiry-based learning

that requires you to be self-motivated

and independent? At UWCSEA we are

lucky to be able to provide an answer

to these questions: you enrol in the

Foundation IB (FIB) course. Designed

to provide both breadth and depth of

learning, the one-year FIB provides

both a perfect introduction to the UWC

mission and learning programme and a

solid preparation for the rigours of the

IB Diploma Programme (IBDP).

The FIB group is typically highly

diverse. Students come from a range

of educational systems and cultural

and national backgrounds and many of

them come as boarders. All are new to

the College. Most speak a number of

languages, with English often a second

or even third language for them. They

are looking to share their experiences,

extend their thinking and prepare

themselves for the IBDP academic

programme. Their positive approach

and new perspective make them an

important part of the Grade 10 cohort.

Students tell us that some of the

academic challenges of the FIB courses

are connected to new ways of learning.

Critical thinking, independent research

projects, working collaboratively, or

creating new solutions and knowledge

are sometimes new skills to acquire.

The ability to devise research questions

of their own, to use a wide range

of sources and analyse data are all

essential skills for the IBDP. FIB courses

are designed to build these skills.

One student said, “At my last school

teachers told us what to think but in the

FIB programme my biggest challenge

has been to understand many new

perspectives and think critically about

my own.”

FIB students also have the opportunity

to focus intensely on two defining

aspects of the College: the UWC

mission and the UWCSEA profile.

Students develop the skills and qualities

of the UWCSEA profile, while focusing

on all five elements of the learning

programme. For many students it is

the first time they have been involved

in an outdoor education trip or service

activities. This introduction to the UWC

mission and the learning programme

is also excellent preparation for both

Project Week in Grade 11 and the

Creativity Activity Service (CAS)

component of the IBDP.

Most importantly, the specific FIB

service learning and outdoor education

programme has a significant impact

on students. On East Campus, this

programme involves working with

fishermen on Bintan, who are members

of the Panglong community. This

community used to be a sea people but

they have had to transition to the land,

and now need to develop an income

that’s land-based. Students work with

them to develop ideas around how

they might tap into the tourist industry

on the island. Helping them to set up,

advertise and market a tour and appeal

to tourists visiting the area is a new

venture for both the community and

the students. It requires students to not

only understand the challenges faced

by the community, but also to adapt

their academic learning to a ‘real world’

situation.

One FIB student described the learning

that took place through the Bintan

project: “Before this trip, we were

discussing what we could do to solve

it or we were creating goals that we

thought were right. But when we

actually visited this village, it appeared

that some goals or solutions might not

work, because we had been thinking

theoretically … When we went there

we saw real life and different situations

require different solutions and goals.

So it helped to understand the problem

from inside, to see it and how a solution

would need to work.”

This ability to adapt their thinking, to

apply academic learning to practical

situations, to collaborate and to stretch

themselves beyond what they believe

they can achieve are critical for success

in Grades 11 and 12. The FIB year is

intense and challenging but students

finish with a deeper understanding of

themselves as learners and as members

of the UWCSEA community.

TO FIB

OR NOT

TO FIB

13

By Danny O’Connor

High School Principal

Dover Campus

Examinations are a necessary and

important part of the High School

years, as students strive to achieve

internationally recognised qualifications

that are widely accepted by higher

education institutions and employers

around the world as evidence of

academic achievement. However,

if there is one thing students dread

most, it is the thought of having to sit

examinations. This shouldn’t come as a

surprise to teachers and parents and I’m

sure the distant memories of entering

an examination hall will still bring about

physiological changes akin to running up

a flight of stairs. The pressure of exams

influences people in different ways and

for some it can result in high levels of

anxiety and an inability to think clearly. It

takes time and practice to perform well

under pressure and the exam process

in the High School has been carefully

planned to help students develop the

essential skills and qualities that will

prepare them for their all important final

examinations in Grade 12.

The first set of examinations in the

High School takes place near the end of

Grade 9. For the majority of students,

these internal examination are the first

time that they will experience sitting

in the Exam Hall, surrounded by up to

300 other students. The key focus for

this first set of exams is to experience

what it is like to work under exam

EXAMINATIONS

conditions and to learn how to revise

properly. An extensive study skills

programme is taught as part of the

personal and social education element

of our learning programme. Students

are guided through all aspects of the

examination process, which educates

them on how to develop a revision plan,

identify effective revision strategies, deal

with exam related anxiety and to learn

from the feedback given to all students

following their examinations. Having the

opportunity to practice using different

revision strategies is essential, because

many students have misconceptions

about the most effective strategies

to help them remember information.

Several memory strategies1 have been

found to be effective and this first set of

examinations in Grade 9 allows students

to practise proven revision strategies and

to discover what works best for them.

Mock examinations for Grade 10

students are the second set of

examinations that students experience

in the High School. On Dover Campus,

they are scheduled in the two weeks

immediately after the December

break. The break allows students time

to relax with their friends and family

at the end of a busy term, whilst also

providing them with time for revision.2

The mock exams mirror as much as

possible the type of experience that

students will encounter in their final

external examinations and it provides

them with an invaluable opportunity to

use the revision strategies that they’ve

developed in Grade 9. Research indicates

that mock exams are an effective way of

improving a student’s subject knowledge

and their ability to recall information.3

The timing of these examinations

provides both students and teachers

with ample time to address areas that

need improvement before the final

external examinations in May.

The exam schedule for Foundation IB,

Grade 11 and Grade 12 students is very

similar to the format used for Grade 9

and 10 (I)GCSE candidates. It is worth

noting that results from any internal or

‘mock’ examinations are not included

on grade transcripts for university

applications. This alleviates some of the

pressure associated with this process

and encourages students to view these

exams as a learning experience.

The Personal and Social Education

programme in Grade 11 and 12, building

on the work done earlier in the High

School, focuses on developing resilience.

By the time students sit their final IB

Diploma examinations in May of their

final year at UWCSEA, they are equipped

with the revision strategies necessary to

be successful and they possess the skills

to deal with the pressure of high stakes

examinations. However, the learning that

takes place throughout this examination

preparation process doesn’t just benefit

students in these final examinations; it

helps them develop knowledge and skills

that will benefit them at university and

in life beyond UWCSEA.

1 http://www.innerdrive.co.uk/Release_Your_Inner_Drive/maximise-memory/

2 On East Campus, these mock examinations are held immediately prior to the December break, in order that the students will have time to

relax over the break. Both approaches have proved effective.

3 http://learninglab.psych.purdue.edu/downloads/2006_Roediger_Karpicke_PsychSci.pdf

An adrenaline inducing

opportunity for growth

14

The 2014/2015 Annual Report was published in February 2016, providing

up to date statistics on the College learning programme and operations.

Charles Ormiston, Chair of the Board of Governors, remarks in his

opening message that “the annual report reflects our commitment to

transparency about our achievements and our shortcomings, so that

we have no alternative but to improve … it is a clear demonstration of

our desire to be a global leader in international education.” As such, the

Annual Report plays an important role in the College’s reflection process

and provides the community with clear and detailed information on the

previous year’s activities, allowing anyone to raise concerns or provide

ideas for improvement.

As Charles Ormiston is coming to the end of his tenure as Chair of the

Board, he took the opportunity to reflect on both the 2014/2015 year

and the changes at the school since he succeeded Kishore Mahbubani as

Chair six years ago. In his opening message, Chris Edwards paid tribute to

Charles’ achievements, remarking that he “led with a blend of compassion

and precision such as I have seldom seen. Under Charles’ leadership things

changed at the College: quickly, significantly and for the better.”

Included in the report are sections on student achievement in each

element of the learning programme; information about our community,

including the results of the survey; the business report incorporating HR,

Admissions and the financial statements for the College; and a summary

of the activity in College Advancement. The report includes a large number of statistics that describe the breadth and depth of the

programme. A selection of those statistics is below.

Read the full report online at www.uwcsea.edu.sg/AnnualReport. If you would like a printed copy of the report, please contact

Farhani Alias, Communications and Marketing Officer (farhani.alias@uwcsea.edu.sg).

Annual Report highlights

Financials

Service

Outdoor Education

$1,292,339

691,416 82,416

Total money raised for Service

programmes across the College

Student hours spent

overseas

Staff/parent hours

spent overseas

Teachers salary and

benefits – 65%

Educational resources – 4%

Boarding salary and benefits – 1%

Administration salary

and benefits – 5%

Boarding expense – 2%

Depreciation – 6%

Central admin – 1%

Maintenance and

operations – 5%

Educational support salary

and benefits – 10%

Dover Campus

expenditure

Marketing and Communications – 1%

Teachers salary and

benefits – 65%

Educational resources – 4%

Boarding salary and benefits – 1%

Administration salary

and benefits – 5%

Boarding expense – 3%

Depreciation – 4%

Central admin – 1%

Maintenance and

operations – 7%

Educational support

salary and benefits – 9%

East Campus

expenditure

Marketing and Communications – 1%

Cash in bank

$3,439,882

Available-for-sale bonds

$2,385,125

Total endowment

$5,825,007

15

College IB Diploma results

Average IB Diploma score

30.1

Worldwide

36.2

UWCSEA

498

Students

Pass rate

98.4%

UWCSEA

79.3%

Worldwide

Activities

2,157

Activities

Community

5,389

Students on both campuses 344

Boarders

91

Student

nationalities

Net Promoter Score (NPS)

53%

From parents

Overall

NPS

(May 2015)

IB Diploma score comparison

UWCSEA

Worldwide

35–39

42.0%

18.1%

30–34

23.4%

28.3%

25–29

7.8%

31.6%

<25

0.2%

15.2%

40–45

26.5%

6.8%

Participation

The average

number of activities

that students in

each grade took

throughout the

year. Students in all

grades are taking

full advantage

of the offerings

from the Activities

programme.

G7

G8

K1

K2

G1

G2

G3

G4

G5

G6

G9

G10

G11

G12

Average number of activities

Dover Campus

G7

G8

K1

K2

G1

G2

10

G3

G4

G5

G6

G9

G10

G11

G12

Average number of activities

East Campus

Leadership 125

Music

ensembles 80

Enrichment 94

Sports and

fitness 1,028

281

Clubs

71

Visual and

performing arts

40

Academic

extension

438

Sports teams

Australia – 12.3%

Canada – 8.9%

India – 1.5%

Others – 5.3%

(14 nationalities)

Netherlands – 1%

USA – 7.9%

New Zealand –

7.9%

Ireland – 2.1%

Spain – 1.9%

China – 1.5%

UK – 49.7%

25

Nationalities

among full-time

teaching staff

Human resources

3,410

Applications received

60

Teaching jobs

advertised

16

in Singapore. Green Mark Platinum

buildings must be able to demonstrate at

least 30% savings in electrical and water

consumption when measured against

normal building codes and standards.

This is a significant achievement

particularly on Dover Campus where

25,000m2 has been added since 2009,

but total energy costs have been reduced.

Dunia sat down with Simon to discuss

environmental stewardship at UWCSEA.

Dunia: Can you give us some insight

into the UWCSEA facilities and

buildings?

Simon: The UWCSEA buildings are

unique in the region and last year we

had over 9,000 visitors from external

companies from all across the world

come to visit our campuses to learn

more about our energy and water

efficient building systems. What we do is

so much more than putting solar panels

on the roof—it is a system of looking

at the entire design of the building in

relation to the environment, with the

goal of firstly lowering resource need and

secondly, resource use. We think very

carefully about what contributes to the

best possible building environment for

learning. For instance, minimising east

and west facing facades not only reduces

the cooling load but also allows us to

maximise daylight which has a proven

link to occupant wellbeing.

ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP AT UWCSEA:

Buildings are responsible for 38% of

energy usage in Singapore. Making a

design change that allows us to reduce

the need for air conditioning and thus

the overall usage offers substantial

environmental benefits and also utility

savings. All of the savings that we are able

to make are reinvested into the school,

and thus benefit the entire community.

Dunia: How are the facilities being

used by students?

Simon: What’s unusual about our

buildings is that they function as a living

laboratory for modelling environmental

stewardship. Not only do we share with

many outside organisations how we have

made significant savings and maximised

environmental benefits through

technology and design, but we teach

students about the innovations within the

College curriculum. Recently, I gave talks

to East Campus Grade 3 and 5 students

about water usage, and about how their

behaviours on campus can impact energy

use. As part of the Grade 5 unit of study,

Energy, students visited the chiller plant

facility to see the technology in action.

Our electronic dashboard displays and

meters make it easy for students to

make the connections between lighting,

electricity and water consumption and

environmental impact, and how they

can take direct action to reduce their

collective and individual impacts and

Inspired by the UWC mission toward a

‘sustainable future,’ and the College’s

commitment to ‘environmental

stewardship,’ the UWCSEA leadership

saw the development of both the

East Campus and the Dover Campus

redevelopment as opportunities to

embed principles of sustainability

within the building designs to ensure

the campuses would be as ‘green’ as

possible. As one of the cornerstones

of a UWCSEA education is raising

consciousness of an individual’s impact

on the environment and awareness of

how to minimise harmful impacts, so too

would the developments be consistent

with these values. These ambitions were

pursued throughout the building process

and continue to be maintained today.

Simon Thomas, Director of Operations

and Facilities, was Project Director for

the building of East Campus and the

redevelopment of Dover Campus, each of

which have a footprint of approximately

one million square feet. The resources

required to run these facilities in tropical

Southeast Asia are substantial, and

Simon and his team have worked hard

to reduce the environmental impact.

Both Dover and East Campus have

been awarded the prestigious Green

Mark Platinum certification by the

Building and Construction Authority

(BCA) of Singapore, the highest level

of award given to sustainable buildings

17

MORE THAN GREEN BUILDINGS

make positive changes. Students can also

use the buildings to learn about other

topics such as physics and engineering,

and I’m looking forward to developing

more units about this in Term 1 next

year. Overall, this has been done in a very

deliberate and forward looking manner,

which is probably very UWC!

kW/RT to <0.60 kW/RT). I was really

pleased that the government recognised

the improvements that we made and

awarded the entire campus, not just

the new High School block, Green Mark

Platinum status. In the future, Green

Mark Platinum will be a benchmark for

other buildings to meet, rather than a

special award, and so we will need to

work hard to continue our position of

leadership in this field and have many

more interesting projects in the pipeline.

Dunia: Thank you, Simon, for talking

with us. UWCSEA continues to

strive for more sustainable

campuses—and for a

sustainable future for all.

“I learned that I can use water

in many ways and not just

once; such as washing dishes

and collecting the water in a

tub and then I can reuse it for

watering plants.”

Giles Flint, Grade 3

“If you take water from a

cooler or tap, you should only

take the amount you need, so

you don’t waste any.”

Milana Hill, Grade 3

“When they built East

Campus, they didn’t just strive

for perfection, they strived

for a sustainable school,

promoting the green society,

inspiring change.”

Maya Sagnak, Grade 5

Dunia: The size of Dover Campus

was substantially increased, but

the environmental impact was

decreased. How did your team

manage this?

Simon: A really important part of the

Master Plan was retrofitting our older

buildings that were from the 1950s and

also upgrading and relocating the ‘heart

and lungs’ of Dover, the chiller plant. This

was a complicated project but the move

and a retrofit, a step clearly in keeping

with the overall principle of reduce,

reuse, recycle, has brought about an

efficiency improvement of 40% (for the

engineers out there, improving from 1.05

GREEN DESIGN FEATURES

ON EAST CAMPUS

The East Campus has been

recognised for both sustainable and

universal design, receiving BCA’s

Green Mark Platinum status as well

as their Gold award for universal

design and accessibility.

The buildings on East Campus were

designed to consume around 40%

less electricity than conventional

buildings of similar size and

function without any compromise

in functionality.

Opened in 2011, the campus

also has a solar-powered air

conditioning and hot water system,

the first of its kind in Singapore and

one of the world’s most energy-

efficient air conditioning systems.

The buildings were also designed

with measures to increase

water efficiency and to reduce

consumption through special

fixtures and fittings. In addition, a

rainwater capture system passes

rainwater from a football field

sized section of one roof through

a special student garden which

serves as a natural filter before

recycling the water for non-

potable use.

18

The Professional

J.David Neidel, parent volunteer

We are fortunate to have a professional expert in our community and even luckier

that he generously gives of his expertise and time to the College. David is the Asia

Programme Coordinator for Yale University’s Environmental Leadership & Training

Initiative and a Senior Research Fellow at Yale NUS College; the majority of his work

supports reforestation partnerships throughout Southeast Asia. A UWC-USA alum

and East parent, David has provided invaluable assistance to both campuses through

his involvement with the Rainforest Restoration Project. From preparing soil mix with

students in our tree nurseries, to refining our research experiment with Yale-NUS, to giving

guest lectures as part of our student training programme, David’s knowledge and guidance has

been invaluable.

The Upcycler

Andy Tan, Head Gardener, Dover Campus

Despite the considerable upheaval created by the Master Plan building works in the last

few years, the campus remains an oasis of greenery and floral colour largely thanks to the

work of Andy Tan and his team.

Andy says the most enjoyable part of his job is supporting the student gardeners but

his skills are not limited to the caring of plants; he is also a talented carpenter and has

redefined the attribute ‘green-fingered’ by creating innovative uses for waste timber.

Andy’s upcycled pallet-planters are in great demand by the many gardening groups at

Dover. Not only do they increase valuable growing space on the campus, but they serve as

an excellent example of the creativity that is necessary to reduce waste—one of our major

environmental stewardship goals at the College.

ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP AT UWCSEA:

By Nathan Hunt

Director of Sustainability

UWCSEA

Central to the aims and values of a

UWCSEA education is a commitment

to environmental stewardship, not

only to reduce our negative impacts

but also to help restore and enhance

our natural environments whether

at a local or wider scale. In rapidly

growing Southeast Asia and especially

in affluent Singapore, this is a major

challenge for us—one where we

often feel our ambition to be leaders

in the field is way ahead of our

current practices.

However members of our community

are showing that we can work towards

these ideals through their efforts on

our campuses. Those featured are just a

small selection of the many involved, as

virtually every student, parent, teacher

and support staff has played a role in

their daily work or in special events,

with many making considerable, often

unrecognised contributions.

Environmental stewardship can be a

misleading term, implying somehow

that we as human stewards stand above

and separate from nature like caring

parents of a precious child. In truth,

all of us are intimately connected to

all parts of the ecosystems around us

from the air we breathe to the waste

we create. Thus the work carried out by

these stewards encapsulates what we

mean by a commitment to care as this

is as much a care for ourselves and for

others as for the environment.

19

The Partner

Shoeb Syed, UWCSEA Site Manager, Sodexo

UWCSEA’s partnership with Sodexo is yielding many opportunities for developing campus

environmental projects, much of this due to the enthusiastic engagement of our Site

Manager Shoeb. Two of the College’s biggest stewardship success stories, Vegetarian

Wednesdays and kitchen waste composting have been the result of Shoeb’s work with

Student Councils and Environmental groups. More recent initiatives have included

partnering with the Junior School on both campuses for Sodexo’s global Wasteless

Week, offering discounts on drinks as part of the Bring-Your-Own (BYO) Mug initiative and

working with our gardening groups to use campus-grown fresh herbs in the canteen.

Sodexo are consistently recognised in global sustainability indexes for their commitment to

environmental stewardship. The sustainability of food systems is a huge global challenge, especially

in land-poor Singapore, but Shoeb and his dedicated team are proving valuable partners in putting our shared vision into

practice at UWCSEA.

A COMMUNITY AT WORK

The Supporters

Andy and Mei Budden, supporters of UWCSEA Foundation

Andy, a Trustee of the UWCSEA Foundation and his wife Mei, are long–standing

supporters of environmental stewardship at the College. They initially established the

Budden Environmental Initiative in 2012 to help finance student–led projects such as

composting on Dover Campus and have recently expanded their support to fund the

appointment of five teachers as Environmental Stewardship Coordinators over both

campuses. Andy and Mei’s vision is that practical engagement with environmental issues

should be part of every child’s education at UWCSEA. With this generous gift, their vision

is now being implemented as the teacher coordinators have dedicated time to support the

expansion of projects through the school.

The Activist

Samay Bansal, student leader, Dover Campus

For as long as anyone can remember, Samay’s has been the voice of the environmental

movement at Dover Campus. After 14 years at Dover Campus, Samay will graduate in a

few months, but he can be confident that his years of campaigning have made a lasting

difference to attitudes and behaviours at school. Samay is an ideal activist: outspoken

and committed, he nevertheless frames his campaigns around positive action and uses a

healthy dose of humour to engage students and staff. And these are not the popular or

more glamorous environmental campaigns such as saving endangered species; Samay has

been tackling our own bad habits around eating and waste. Even as mock exams loomed this

year, Samay was marshalling the VIP line he designed for the BYO Mug scheme. Samay’s ideas

come a mile a minute, but the success of this and his other campaigns (which have included No

Drive Day) has rested on the fact that his actions have spoken just as loudly as his words.

20

The Systems Thinker

Om Manghani, student leader, East Campus

Few students on East Campus are as involved in everything as Om Manghani. If there is

a Middle School environmental initiative happening, you can bet that he is somehow

connected to it. Om dives into every task with enthusiasm, loves a hands-on challenge

and will doggedly see the job through to completion, ignoring any and all distractions

including heat, humidity, biting insects and the voices of his teachers telling him that

it’s time for lunch. Om is also very skilled at thinking in systems: he sees important

connections even when they aren’t immediately obvious and is able to find creative ways

to achieve his groups’ objectives. Last year Om’s team directed a bumper crop of papayas

from the Middle School gardeners to the Fresh Fruit Fridays team, a Local Service that

provides fresh fruits and vegetables to a Bangladeshi migrant worker dormitory. During the

Haze Focus Week he designed a powerful audio-visual presentation using the Iceberg Model to

show the often hidden connections to our own values and mental models. This combination of hard

work and smart thinking are helping Om contribute to meaningful change at the campus, local and global levels.

The Expert Technician

Ramar Subbaih, Assistant Head of Facilities Services, Dover Campus

For many of us our main efforts towards energy conservation and reducing our carbon

footprint might revolve around changing our behaviours like remembering to turning

off lights or air-conditioning. However behind the scenes at Dover, Ramar and his team

have been quietly and painstakingly upgrading and retrofitting the electrical systems

across the campus to make energy consumption as efficient as possible. The constraints

of having a mix of old and new buildings, a campus in use 24/7 and the expectations

of students and staff to work in comfortable surroundings at all times of day and night

have been very challenging. However, Ramar has somehow managed to overcome these

challenges and it is his less publically celebrated efforts towards energy conservation that

have had the greatest impact on the goal to limit the carbon footprint of the Dover Campus.

The Organiser

Dena Lim, Head of Facilities Department, East Campus

Dena’s hard-working Facilities team is responsible for a wide range of services that

enhance the physical learning environment at East Campus. But it is Dena’s leadership

and personal enthusiasm that has really helped drive progress by engaging staff,

students and parents in her team’s work.

Dena leads the Campus Improvement Team (CIT), a weekly student activity that works

on projects such a promoting waste reduction. She has also recently facilitated a local

partnership with the Buddha Tzu Chi Foundation to make better use of the campuses’

recyclables by linking the process to their community development projects. Dena is also

responsible for designing and driving the Adopt-a-Tree Programme at East Campus.

A greener, shadier and more botanically diverse campus will be the legacy of her caring and

proactive environmental stewardship.