North
One
Vol 8 July 2011
The Alumni Magazine of the United World College of South East Asia
Alumni Profiles
Graduation 2011
Reunions
Class Notes
Tim Jarvis
Polar Explorer and
Environmental Scientist
Every student who leaves UWCSEA,
regardless of how long they were here, is
automatically a member of the UWCSEA
alumni community. Some of the services
that we offer alumni include:
OneºNorth
The Alumni Magazine of the United World
College of South East Asia, first published
in December 2007, is published twice per
year. Please send your contributions and/or
suggestions to: alumnimagazine@uwcsea.
edu.sg.
UWCSEA alumni online community
Our password-protected alumni website
located at http://alumni.uwcsea.edu.sg
allows you to maintain your own profile,
search for and contact other registered
members, post photos and blogs, stay in-
formed about news and events, etc.
Friends of UWCSEA online community
The ‘Friends of UWCSEA’ password-
protected website located at http://
friends.uwcsea.edu.sg allows parents of
former students to stay in touch with each
other and with the College.
Reunions and get-togethers
A reunion of the 40, 30, 20 and 10 year
anniversary classes will be held each
August in Singapore. Other alumni are also
welcome. Additional class reunions and
alumni gatherings take place in various
locations throughout the year, planned by
both UWCSEA and its alumni. Watch the
alumni website for updates and details,
and let us advertise your events!
Alumni eBrief
The Alumni eBrief is a newsletter emailed
to alumni throughout the year, containing
brief news and information to keep you
updated and informed.
Dunia
The College magazine is published four
times during the academic year, containing
College news and reports of events and
activities, as well as a brief alumni section.
Mentor opportunities
Volunteer to be listed in the mentor section
of the alumni site if you are willing to be
contacted by current students or other
alumni for information or advice regarding
your university or career; or visit the pages
if you have questions of your own.
Career services
Check this section of the site for career
opportunities or candidates, or post your
own job opening or resumé. You can even
set up alerts to be notified of new postings.
Gap Year-type opportunities for alumni
Check the Volunteer page of the website
for short to long term volunteer work
opportunities in South East Asia working
with organisations supported by UWCSEA.
Old Interscols
Order your old interscol in soft copy format
via the store on the website.
Visits, tours and other requests
We are always happy to help in any way we
can. Send your requests to us at alumni@
uwcsea.edu.sg. If you are in Singapore and
would like to drop in for a visit or a tour of
the campus, we would be more than happy
to show you around anytime.
Please keep in touch!
Number of registered members on the UWCSEA Alumni website (by country of residence)
Other countries represented Albania, Argentina, Bahrain, Barbados, Belize, Benin, Bermuda, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil,
Bulgaria, Cameroon, Cayman Islands, Chile, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Fiji,
Ghana, Guatemala, Guyana, Hungary, Iceland, Isle of Man, Jersey, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lebanon, Luxembourg,
Mauritius, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands Antilles, New Caledonia, Oman, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Portugal, Qatar,
Romania, Russia, Saint Helena, Saint Martin, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Slovenia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Swaziland, Timor-Leste,
Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Turks and Caicos Islands, Uruguay, Zambia, Zimbabwe
OUR ONLINE COMMUNITY
Alumni services
2 Alumni services
Helping you to stay connected to
UWCSEA and to each other.
4 Letter from the Head
Read about UWCSEA today.
5 Note from the Alumni office
Prapti says good bye
6 Life is an Adventure ...
Tim Jarvis (Class of 1984)
10 Awards Day 2011 Photos
12 Graduation 2011 Photos
14 Entrepreneur and Volunteer
Jorge Vizcaino (Class of 1987)
16 Cheering up children with books
Kimiko Fujioka Matsui (Class of 1985)
18 Paddleboarding for the Mentawais
by Greg Town (Class of 1990)
21 Serendipity
by Ivan Moore (Class of 1981)
22 A Kaleidoscope of College Events
24 Past Mini Reunions
26 UWCSEA, UBC, Rhodes Scholar
Aneil Jaswal (Class of 2007)
28 Accountant to Mobile Apps
Entrepreneur
Luke Janssen (Class of 1994)
30 UWCSEA to me
Aashna Aggarwal (Class of 2012)
31 Two UWCSEA Alumni Give Back
Anita Kapoor (Class of 1989)
Paul Foster (Class of 1999)
32 A Model United Nations Experience
Shipra Khanna (Class of 2012)
34 In Pursuit of Health and Wellness
Mubina Jiwa (Class of 1996)
36 Nine Days to Knowing
by Iain Ewing (Parent of alumnus)
38 Junior Round Square
by Julia Matheson (Teacher)
39 UWCSEA Foundation Update
40 A Post in the Tropics
Mike Gibby (Biology Teacher)
41 Class Notes
42 Teacher Leavers
43 Upcoming Reunions
Editor
Brenda Whately
Assistant Editor
Prapti Sherchan
Layout
Lenca Yew, Gregory Parker
OneºNorth is published by United World College of South East Asia twice per year for alumni,
staff and friends of UWCSEA. Reproduction in any manner is prohibited without written consent.
Send your address change to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg and/or update your profile on the
UWCSEA alumni website. We welcome your feedback. Send your comments to alumnimaga-
zine@uwcsea.edu.sg.
Please send your articles and/or suggestions for articles, as well as your class notes, for the next
issue, to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.
Cover photo: Tim Jarvis, Class of 1984, walking unsupported across the Antarctic.
Photo supplied by: Tim Jarvis. Photo credit: Malcolm McDonald.
Contents
Printed by
Interprint Communications Pte Ltd
MICA (P) 051/11/2010
4 OneºNorth July 2011
Letter from the Head of College
“I regard it as the foremost task of education to insure the survival of these
qualities: an enterprising curiosity, an undefeatable spirit, tenacity in pursuit,
readiness for sensible self denial, and above all, compassion.”
Kurt Hahn
Life at the College moves on apace as we continue to develop the educational experience
for the students. However much the physical environment of the Dover Campus has
changed over the years, the deep underlying philosophy of the College is still firmly
based in the Hahnian philosophy.
As part of the process for seeking accreditation with the Council of International Schools,
we reviewed our guiding statements, in itself an interesting exercise, but made more
meaningful by the fact that we are in the process of writing the next College strategic
plan. In rewriting the guiding statements we believe we have encapsulated the spirit of
Hahn’s intent when he established Salem School back in the 1920s.
As a College we aim to develop high achieving, socially confident and morally
responsible individuals who will embrace challenge and make a positive impact upon
the world.
In order to achieve this we are revisiting the UWCSEA Learning Programme which
contains five key elements: academics, service, pastoral care, outdoor education and
activities. As I write, we are about to commence an ambitious project that will clearly
articulate our curriculum from K1 through to G12. The purpose of this is to specify
the knowledge and understanding we wish the students to learn, not only within their
academic programme but also through the other four elements. In addition, we will
be identifying how we can develop the skills and dispositions the students will need in
order to be meaningful contributors to life in the 21st Century: these will be developed
in a progressive way across all five elements. Yes, service and expeditions have always
been part of the College curriculum but we have never made it explicit what it is we
are trying to achieve: the work we have done so far has made us realise how much
more the students could gain from these elements of their education. The nature of
the project is such that it will further differentiate us from other schools and Colleges.
We continue to actively encourage students to use their initiative, embrace challenge by
extending the boundaries of their experience, embark upon journeys of self-discovery
without fear of failure and develop the ability to cope with the spectre of ambiguity.
A good school will ensure that all students experience success in order to develop
their self-confidence: exceptional schools allow students to experience failure in a
supportive and caring environment so that they learn to persevere and turn such events
into opportunities.
As the students progress through the College we are providing them with greater
autonomy, giving them increased opportunity for negotiation and self-determination.
In so doing, we aim to create an environment in which the students develop a positive
attitude to learning which enables them to indulge their curiosity and develop their
creativity. Hahn was using the phrase ‘life-long learners’ back in the 1970s long before
it became a cliché in the world of education.
As I presented the Class of 2011 with their Diplomas at the Graduation Ceremony in
May, there was much to celebrate, not the least of which was the knowledge that another
group of UWCSEA graduates would continue to make a positive difference in the world.
OneºNorth July 2011 5
It has been a busy and eventful few months
since the last issue.
First, some alumni team news. Although
I am extremely sorry to see a very valued
member of the team leave the alumni de-
partment this month, it is for an exciting
reason. Prapti Sherchan will be heading off
soon to begin her Master’s Degree studies
in the US. She will be greatly missed. I am
sure that those of you who have gotten
to know her over the past four years will
join me in wishing her all the very best in
everything she goes on to do.
In addition to the new Alumni Relations
Manager who will be joining the team in
the near future, I would like to introduce
Siti Aminah who has joined the team in
an administrative role. We welcome Siti
to the alumni team.
Another academic year has ended and we
have another cohort of more than three
hundred new alumni. In this issue we have
included a few pages of awards day and
graduation day photos.
Congratulations to the Class of 2011!
For the first time, we held reunion events
in five cities across the United States in
Note
from the Alumni Office
Good bye ...
It feels like it was just yesterday that I was excited about joining UWCSEA as a staff and immersing
once again in the UWC culture, fondly remembered from my student days in Swaziland. And now it’s
time for me to leave UWCSEA and Singapore to embark on yet another adventure in the United States.
I have thoroughly enjoyed the last four years of my time at UWCSEA. I immensely enjoyed organising
alumni events and having been part of the alumni team. But most of all, I enjoyed meeting, mingling
and getting to know many alumni and it has been my privilege to have been able to work with
many of you. The UWC movement has always been my source of inspiration, and to be able to see
so many alumni go on to make a difference after their UWC years has strengthened my belief and
inspired me even further.
As I move on to the next phase of my life, I would like to thank you for being my inspiration. Please
do keep in touch. I can be contacted via the UWCSEA Alumni website or via email (psherchan@
hotmail.com).
Thank you for the great memories.
Best Regards,
Prapti Sherchan
Alumni Relations Manager (2007 - 2011)
addition to the annual reunions in London,
Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta between Janu-
ary and June this year. It was great to see
so many alumni at these events. We are
looking forward to seeing many of those
celebrating their 10, 20, 25, 30 and 35 year
anniversaries at the big annual reunion in
Singapore again this August. Subsequent
to that there will be reunions in Australia
at the beginning of October and of course
the annual December event in Singapore
in late December. Please remember to visit
the alumni site’s event calendar if you wish
to see photos of any of these events.
Working on the alumni magazine con-
tinues to be a highlight for me and I look
forward to it with each issue. Again I have
thoroughly enjoyed the chance to read
and hear so many interesting stories by
and about our alumni in this eighth issue.
I hope you will enjoy them as much as I
have.
Take care. Keep in touch.
Regards,
Brenda
Brenda Whately
Director of Alumni Relations
Prapti Sherchan, Siti Aminah and Brenda Whately.
6 OneºNorth July 2011
Life is an adventure.
Tim Jarvis, environmental
scientist and explorer
By Brenda Whately
ing into deeper areas of jungle. When most
of the students had become quite frightened,
Tim decided to take control of the situation
and told them that he knew, because of the
direction of the setting sun, where the beach
was that they could walk along to get back
to camp. He later admitted that he wasn’t at
all sure that he had chosen the direction cor-
rectly, but eventually, to his great relief, they
emerged on the beach and reached camp,
albeit hours late. Perhaps this was where the
first seeds of his future exploration adventures
and survival skills development were planted.
Tim has a Bachelor’s degree in Geography
and Masters degrees in both Environmental
Science and Environmental Law. Between
degrees he spent a year in the mountains
of North Guatemala, helping with the re-
construction of the lives and communities
of the indigent people there after the army
had destroyed their homes. He worked on
gravity-fed water systems and gave crop ad-
vice in the minimal amount of local language
he managed to pick up. He also managed to
pick up a parasite, which he discovered, to
his great dismay (not to mention fear), living
under the skin of his stomach and chest on
the flight back to the UK, which took months
ALUMNI PROFILE
promote sustainability messages and to test
his own strengths. Tim was in Singapore re-
cently for meetings with the Singapore office
of Arup, where he works as environmental
consultant. He very nicely agreed to an inter-
view and a presentation to a group of Grade
8 students. Tim mentioned that the most
frequently asked question during his public
speaking engagements is, “How do you go
to the toilet at the South Pole?” Sure enough,
that was the first question asked by one of the
UWCSEA students. His answer: “Quickly!”
Tim was born in the United Kingdom but
moved to Kuala Lumpur (KL), Malaysia with
his family as a young child. Five years later
his family moved to Singapore and he began
to attend UWCSEA. In those days, the school
had a learning and adventure facility located
on the East coast of Malaysia, called Beluntu.
Tim remembers a particularly life defining
event there which he says taught him to trust
his instincts. A group of students were given
roles to play and sent into the jungle to collect
specimens. One of the roles was that of spy, a
person whose job it was to try to influence the
other members of the team away from their
goal. Tim recalls that the spy played the game
too well and they became very lost, wander-
Tim Jarvis
UWCSEA 1978 - 1982
Class of 1984
im Jarvis is a remarkable person; “a true
renaissance man whose interest in the
world and its environment is combined
with a powerful inner need to discover his
personal limits. He has walked solo to the
South Pole, and did it more quickly than
any man in history. Equally, he can be found
trekking in steaming jungles, on mountain as-
cents and working on development projects
in remote areas. He is an expert on Austra-
lia’s current drought. Tim now increasingly
is confronting what I think is an even more
challenging frontier: the boardrooms of big
business, where he educates influential lead-
ers about climate change.”
ABC filmmaker Alex West wrote these words
as the introduction to Tim Jarvis in Tim’s
second book, Mawson Life and Death in
Antarctica which, along with the award-
winning documentary of the same name,
depicted Tim’s successful 2007 re-creation of
Sir Douglas Mawson’s epic 1912 expedition
to the Antarctic.
Tim is an environmental scientist, polar
explorer, author and public speaker who
pursues expeditions to the polar regions and
other out-of-the-way places of this world to
OneºNorth July 2011 7
[Mother Teresa]
Please send your profile suggestions for the next edition of OneºNorth, to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.
of intense and unpleasant medical treatments
to be rid of.
After taking up rowing in his local gym as
part of a rehabilitation programme for a knee
injury, Tim was invited to compete in the UK
Nationals. Winning, with a time good enough
to beat some of the members of the Men’s
Olympic Squad, Tim started thinking about
ways to test himself and his abilities further.
His first polar expedition was an attempt to
cross the Arctic island of Spitsbergen. He
says, “Climbing friends of mine had said it
would be an ‘interesting’ place to cut our
polar teeth.” After one month in the vast, icy
North, they completed the journey.
In 1999 he decided to attempt crossing the
Antarctic unsupported. That meant no dogs,
airdrops, food caches or skis. He found
another explorer to accompany him, raised
the funds and set off from the tip of South
America. He thought his size, six foot five
and over 100 kg, would carry him through,
but he soon learned it was as much a mental
exercise as it was a physical one. When their
220 kg sleds were dropped onto the ice and
they strapped them on, Tim couldn’t budge
his. Eventually he told himself that he only
had to pull it one kilometer at a time, and
through sheer determination, he moved the
sled. Although he ended up with a permanent
loss of most of the feeling in his right thumb
from frostbite, he reached the Pole after just
47 days, completing his full journey after
three months, with records for fastest unsup-
ported journey to the South Pole and longest
unsupported journey across Antarctica.
In 2001, while preparing for an attempt on the
North Pole, Tim completed the first unsup-
ported crossing of Australia’s largest desert,
the Great Victoria Desert, a trip of 1,100 km
in 29 days throughout which, once again he
pulled his own food and supplies behind him.
These expeditions were followed by another
journey to the Arctic to attempt to reach the
North Pole across a vast expanse of frozen
ocean, which Tim warns is melting at a rapid
rate. Alexandra Shackleton, the granddaugh-
ter of the explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton,
whose epic journey Tim is yet to re-create,
became a joint patron of the North Pole
expedition along with Australia’s then Prime
Minster John Howard who had again agreed
to be Tim’s patron, having been the patron
for his previous record breaking expedition
to the South Pole. After 400 km, due to frost-
bite resulting in permanent nerve damage to
Tim’s expedition partner’s toes however, the
attempt on the North Pole came to a disap-
pointing end for Tim.
With his experience and success in prior
unsupported journeys across deserts, snow
and ice in hand however, the idea of under-
taking the re-creation of Mawson’s journey
had gelled in Tim’s mind. The reasons for
wanting to take on this dangerous 500 km
journey across Antarctica, which had claimed
the lives of both of Mawson’s expedition part-
ners, included among other things, a desire to
test that more resourceful part of himself, the
alter-ego that he says comes out in difficult
situations. He found someone to accompany
him up to the same point that Mawson’s
companion had died. He sought a film team,
which included Malcolm McDonald who
had been second unit director on Master and
Commander and Wade Fairley, the camera-
man responsible for the emperor penguin
images in the BBC’s Planet Earth series. Tim
“… completing his full journey after three months, with records
for fastest unsupported journey to the South Pole and longest
unsupported journey across Antarctica.”
8 OneºNorth July 2011
and his expedition partner arranged to use
the same clothes, technology, equipment and
starvation rations as Mawson - sleeping bags
and boots made of reindeer skin, beaver-pelt
mitts, a tent with no floor, a wooden sled
and food consisting of congealed lard, small
amounts of sugar and a few dozen ‘sledge’
biscuits. Tim says in his book, “We were
here to deprive ourselves - deliberately - of
sufficient food, adequate shelter and modern
equipment in a bid to scrutinise events that
befell Mawson on the same trip.” Tim finished
the journey alone, within the same time frame
as Mawson, with a small amount of food left
over and a weight loss of about 20kg! It was
another journey of success as well as envi-
ronmental and personal discovery for Tim.
Tim insists that, “The environmental sustain-
ability message is key and is always behind
the journeys.” He includes the message in
his books and in his public speaking engage-
ments ‘by stealth’ as he describes it, along
with his personal messages about testing
oneself and pursuing one’s dreams - by weav-
ing them into the stories about his adventures.
What’s next on Tim’s adventure schedule?
He plans to travel to Greenland to view the
snow-and ice-melt, a direct impact of climate
change, and perhaps to undertake an envi-
ronmental trip to Papua New Guinea. He is
considering a journey by dog sled through the
Canadian Arctic in search of the Lost Patrol,
a group of Canadian Mounties who went
missing on a routine patrol in 1910. Deep
in the planning stages is a 2012 recreation
of Shackleton’s amazing journey of survival
in the Antarctic after the crushing of his ship
Endurance, by the ice in 1914.
Not only is Tim a remarkable person, he is
also one of the most interesting and likeable
people I have met. He has great stories to
tell and tells them very well. He was made
a Fellow of the Yale World Fellows Program
2009 for environmental and expedition
leadership and was made a Member of the
Order of Australia in 2010 for services to en-
vironment, community and exploration. Tim
volunteers as advisor for the Royal Institution
Australia, whose goals are to popularise sci-
ence and promote scientific learning in the
general public. He is a Member of Friends
of PLAN Committee and Ambassador for
the PLAN Corporate Challenge program,
an international child welfare group with a
presence in 50 developing countries. Tim is
the National Ambassador for the Leukaemia
Foundation, Australia, where he participates
in raising awareness and funds, including
These pages and previous two pages: Tim Jarvis and photos from his expedition to recreate Sir Douglas Mawson’s journey across the Antarctic. Photos supplied by
Tim Jarvis.
OneºNorth July 2011 9
personally donating some of the proceeds
from his Mawson expedition book sales.
Like most of the rest of Tim’s life, even meet-
ing his wife was an interesting adventure.
About six years ago, while in South America
on a climbing expedition, Tim followed a
suggestion from his mother, and looked
up a friend from his childhood days in KL,
Malaysia who was now living in Santiago,
Chile. The two old friends arranged to meet
for dinner and whilst talking about friends and
family, ended up on the subject of Patrick’s
sister Elizabeth. Tim’s childhood impression
of her as the sometimes annoying little sister
was soon changed, and he and Elizabeth are
now married with a two and a half year old
son, Will, and a very recently-arrived addition
to the family, Jack.
We hope that Tim will come back and speak
at the school again and we look forward to
hearing about the further adventures and
environmental protection that he continues
to be involved in.
For more information about Tim, his amaz-
ing expeditions and his environmental work,
please see his books, including bestseller The
Unforgiving Minute (Bantam) and Mawson
Life and Death in Antarctica (ABC Books),
the film Mawson Life and Death in Antarctica
(Film Australia) and his URL www.timjarvis.
org. Tim can be reached at tim@timjarvis.org
“The environmental sustainability message is key and is always
behind the journeys.”
10 OneºNorth July 2011
AWARDS DAY
Stephen Khalek
Wallace Cuthbertson
Mansi Gupta
Frances Mayo
James Spencer
Atasi Bhattacharjee
Maria Martins Da Silva
Chihiro Isozaki
Jung Wook Jae (Richard)
Dalma Foldesi
Rufus Raghunath
Manavi Sachdeva
Tim Seeger
Alf Shen Lim
Papa Moda Loum
Maithreyi Raman
Da Ah Gloria Jung
Ana Sofia Guerra Rodriguez
Vivek Jain
Vaishali Iyer
Bhargavi Thakker
Sanaya Khaneja
Charlotte Thomas
Chung Dong Wook
Nicholas Hanley-Steemers
Rafael EliasManyari Velazco
Chetan Singhal
Tanay Jalan
Maymay Liu
Giovanna Bettoli
Anna Bradshaw
David Bowyer
Lodewijk Vriens
Ross Robertson
Nishad More
Nicolas Carter
Jonathan Rose
Oliver Mangham
Frances Mayo
Michelle Yaw
Dalma Foldesi
Maymay Liu
Tim Seeger
Justin Lutian
Suh Seung Hyun
Rufus Raghunath
Choe Sue Jung (Claire)
Shrey Shetye
Srikripa Krishnan
Raquel Otarola Flores
Benjamin Howitt
Anna Bradshaw
Sanaya Khaneja
Kalen White
Chihiro Isozaki
Dipro Bhowmik
Wesley Jyh-Wei Fuh
Zoe Petard
Nicolette Meyer
Chung Dong Wook
Wu Yu Jie
Yuri Hirayama
Anna Bradshaw
Joaquin Gonzalez Milburn
Alumni
Outstanding volunteer work in the Gap Year Programme
Outstanding volunteer work in the Gap Year Programme
Grade 12
English Award
English Award
Chinese Award
Hindi Award
Indonesian Award
Japanese Award
Korean Award
French Award
German Award
Spanish Award
Dutch Award
Bilingual A1/A2 Award
Bilingual A1/B Award
Biology Award
The Shaun Hanley Award for Chemistry
The Shaun Hanley Award for Chemistry
Physics Award
Design and Technology Award
Environmental Systems and Societies Award
Science, Technology and Society Award
Sports Exercise and Health Science Award
Mathematics Award
Computer Science Award
Geography Award
History Award
Economics Award
Business and Management Award
Psychology Award
Philosophy Award
IT Global Society Award
Theory of Knowledge Award
David Watson Prize for Performing Arts Award
Diana Greenwood Prize for Senior Drama Award
Outstanding Technical Support for the Performing Arts Award
Outstanding Realisation of a Character in a Drama Production
Film Studies Award
Photographer of the Year Award
Lance Huet Prize for Art Award
Gavin Waddell Prize for Art Award
Windplayer of the Year Award
Strings Player of the Year Award
Vocalist of the Year Award
Senior Pianist of the Year Award
Robert Lutton Creative Writing Award
Public Speaking Award
Publications Award
Publications Award
Contribution to Senior School Boarding Life Award
Contribution to NYAA Award
Student Initiative Award
Student Initiative Award
Student Initiative Award
Student Initiative Award
Environmental Award
Environmental Award
Outstanding Contribution to the Expedition Programme Award
Outstanding Contribution to the Expedition Programme Award
Overall Academic Attainment Award
Overall Academic Attainment Award
Overall Academic Attainment Award
Outstanding Service Award
Outstanding Service Award
Outstanding Service Award
Outstanding Service Award
Outstanding Service Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Staff and Student Nominated UWCSEA Award
Chihiro Isozaki
Georgia Gray
Andrea Tan
Gabriella Santosa
Lodewijk Vriens
Raquel Otarola Flores
Maithreyi Raman
Allen Navasero
Nikhil Sambamurthy
Alf Shen Lim
Frances Mayo
Dalma Foldesi
Constanza Vidal Bustamante
Anna Sofia Guerra Rodriguez
Awards Day 2011
OneºNorth July 2011 11
12 OneºNorth July 2011
GRADUATION
n Thursday, 26 May, we recognised and celebrated the
achievements of the class of 2011. Three hundred and
eight students graduated from UWCSEA this year, with
53 different nationalities represented - testimony to the wonderful
diversity within our student body. With well over 1,000 guests at the
ceremony and a further 600 alumni and friends of UWCSEA watching
from 37 different countries worldwide, there was a wonderful feeling
of community celebration. Many parents and guests had travelled
thousands of miles to attend the ceremony and it was good to see
siblings and grandparents there to help mark the occasion.
We were delighted to welcome Ng’ang’a Muchiri as our Guest Speak-
er. Ng’ang’a, our Kenyan scholar in 2002, graduated from UWCSEA
in 2004. After graduating, Ng’ang’a took a Gap Year, representing
UWCSEA along with five fellow scholars from Mexico, Albania,
Canada, Colombia and Sierra Leone, to help set up an education
centre in Kigama, a small village in Kenya. In 2005, he began his
studies at Lafayette College and was awarded a Development Project
Management Certificate from the Monterey Institute of International
Studies. Ng’ang’a returned to Kenya to become involved in the
Kathryn Davis Peace Project, during which time he organised youth
leadership workshops for Ikutha secondary schools. After graduating
from Lafayette with a B.A. in Engineering Studies & English he began
his PhD Doctoral program in English Literature at the University of
Miami. In July 2010 he delivered a presentation to the African Theatre
Association in Kampala, Uganda, on contemporary African poetry
and political activism and in April 2011 he delivered a paper to the
International Society for African Philosophy and Studies on trauma,
recovery and Congolese literature. On completion of his doctorate,
Ng’ang’a hopes to have more time to spend on his writing.
Ng’ang’a was followed by our student speaker, Allen Navasero,
outgoing Chair of the Student Council. Allen, who will be studying
Environmental Sciences at Cornell University next year, described
what he had gained from his four years at the College and wished
his peers every success in the years ahead.
We hope our Graduates and their families thoroughly enjoyed the
ceremony and the evening celebration that followed and will have
fond memories of it in years to come.
Di Smart
High School Principal
Graduation 2011!
308 graduates, 53 nationalities
Photos by Henry Chang and Dav Rue Media Pte Ltd
14 OneºNorth July 2011
ALUMNI PROFILE
bout once a week for the past 14 years, Jorge,
a biologist, environmental conservationist and
entrepreneur, has donned a wetsuit and dived into
the waters of the Kelp Forest and Monterey Bay Habitat
Exhibits at the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California.
There, he swims with rockfish, garibaldi, leopard
sharks, and seven-gill sharks; all animals indigenous to
Monterey Bay. Although none are considered dangerous,
Jorge says, “It helps that all the fish are kept very well
fed!” Jorge’s volunteer work at the Aquarium involves
providing information and education about exhibits to
the visiting public along with maintenance, husbandry
and feeding activities. One of his favourite duties is to
conduct once a month, interactive, narrated feeding
shows for which he uses special dive gear that allows
him to communicate with the narrator, the dive tender
and the public.
His other diving activities are conducted with normal
SCUBA equipment. Jorge says that his interest in diving
and in volunteer work actually started at UWCSEA
where he gained his open-water PADI certification and
also became involved in the school’s social service
programme. He has continued to dive over the years
since that first introduction to the sport and currently
holds certification as a PADI Dive Master. He has also
never stopped donating his time and expertise in
volunteer work. Jorge says, “Not only do I love the work
at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, it’s a fun way to connect
with the marine environment and make a personal
contribution to the conservation of the oceans, while at
the same time, achieve great satisfaction from educating
and inspiring conservation in others.”
Jorge’s three higher IB subjects at UWCSEA were
Biology, Chemistry and Maths, the subjects which would
shape his university studies and career thereafter.
Jorge had arrived at UWCSEA in 1985 from Mexico on
a National Committee scholarship. In the true spirit of
multiculturalism at the College, he says, “The highlight
of my UWCSEA experience was being probably the only
Mexican ever in the history of Morris Dancing and then to
perform it in the annual Chinese New Year parade!” He
also recalls a Theory of Knowledge final paper in which
he had to describe the arguments for the existence or
non-existence of God, as well as a month-long graduation
trip to the Himalayas with John Page and Ann Mayer, as
Entrepreneur
and Volunteer Diver
By Brenda Whately
being particularly memorable. Jorge involved himself in
tennis, soccer, rugby and the scuba diving that he went
on to use in his future volunteer work, while pursuing his
IB studies at UWCSEA.
After completing the IB programme, Jorge went on to
study Biology and Chemistry at the University of Texas at
El Paso. The hard work may not have come as a surprise
but he says, “The shock of going directly from a tropical
environment to a desert environment, not to mention
the massive cultural differences, came as somewhat
of a challenge.” In 1993 Jorge pursued and achieved
a Master’s degree in Fisheries Science from Texas A&M
University and began a career in the field of fisheries
and aquaculture as a hatchery manager for two abalone
culture facilities in California. After a few years he
decided to ‘switch gears’ as he says, and he took a job in
the wine industry where he eventually worked his way up
to the position of assistant winemaker.
In the year 2000, a biologist friend presented him with
the opportunity of moving in a new direction once again
and he entered the field of environmental consulting,
working for the following couple of years in a large
corporation in Monterey as an environmental scientist.
The idea of starting his own company began to take
shape at that point, and in 2002, with the support of his
wife Leah, he launched his own environmental consulting
business, Aero-Environmental Consulting.
Through a lot of hard work, professional development
and sound business development, Jorge’s company has
grown considerably since then. He has successfully
pursued a number of certifications and in October 2010
he achieved his Industrial Hygienist certification. This
involved a long and arduous process requiring five years
of qualifying experience, a Bachelor of Science degree
which he fortunately already had, and an extensive
exam covering everything from ventilation to radiation,
noise, ergonomics, toxicology and bio-hazards, to name
but a few. He says, “I felt as if I was either re-taking
the IB exams or getting a PhD, both of which are pretty
tough.” Jorge maintains that, “Without the discipline
that I acquired at UWCSEA I would not have been able to
accomplish all of the goals that I set myself in building
my business.”
Jorge Vizcaino
UWCSEA 1985-1987
Class of 1987
OneºNorth July 2011 15
Please send your profile suggestions for the next edition of OneºNorth, to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.
His
consulting
business
performs
environmental
assessments
and
investigations
on
commercial,
residential and industrial properties. These include
checking for hazardous materials such as asbestos and
lead, biohazards like mold and bacteria, indoor air
quality, and environmental assessments of possible
petroleum hydrocarbon releases into the environment
by commercial properties. He says, “Our work and
actions have a direct impact in protecting workers
and community health, in developing appropriate risk
management strategies for residential and commercial
properties and in evaluating the impact of certain
chemicals in the environment.”
Aside from building his successful business, Jorge still
spends time scuba diving, volunteering at the Aquarium,
playing tennis, hiking, reading travel adventure books
and spending time with his wife Leah and his two five
year old twin sons, Emilio and Andres.
Jorge has managed to keep in touch with several of his
old classmates including Alex F, Erik T, Ravi R, Naramsiha
R, Daniel H, Haerul B, Sean G, Mark H, Francesca T, Aki
H, and Patrick J, to name a few, and he attended his 20
year reunion in Singapore in 2007 as well as the mini-
reunion held in San Francisco last year.
To contact Jorge, please visit the UWCSEA Alumni site
for his personal email address. For more information
about his company, Aero-Environmental Consulting, or
to contact Jorge through his company, please visit his
website at www.aero-enviro.com
Clockwise from top left: Jorge performing his volunteer duties at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Jorge and alumni friends, Jorge and his sons Emilio and
Andres. Jorge, Leah and their sons. Jorge with other volunteer divers from the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
16 OneºNorth July 2011
ALUMNI PROFILE
f t e r 1 5
years in
p u b l i s h -
ing, Kimiko es-
tablished her own
publishing com-
pany “Mighty-
book” in 2004. At
the time she had
just had her first
child and she was
noticing that many
Japanese children were preferring televi-
sion and the internet to reading books.
She felt the need to get children more
interested in reading.
She began to look into the Books of the
World for Children by Bookbird. She joined
the activities of IBBY (International Board
on Books for Young People), talked to the
editors and attended their World Congress
in Denmark in 2008.
In 2010 she started to publish their Jour-
nal of International Children’s Literature,
Bookbird in a Japanese version called
Bookbird Japan. She says that many librar-
ians and the Japanese Board on Books for
Young People (JBBY) are now promoting
Bookbird Japan.
On March 7th of this year, Kimiko held a
celebration to mark the first anniversary
of the Japanese version of the children’s
literature journal. Just four days later, on
March 11th at 2.46 pm she was in her
Tokyo office preparing for a book fair
launch when she felt the first tremors of
one of the largest earthquakes to hit Japan
in recorded history.
She says, “Suddenly I felt a shaking. The
shaking made an awful shuddering noise
and books were falling down from the
bookshelf. It came in two or three continu-
ous waves. I felt it was dangerous to stay in
the building. I could see the tall buildings
bending like rubber sticks from the outside.
All the public transportation in Tokyo was
stopped. After things quieted down, I
walked to my home, which took about
four hours, a distance that normally takes
40 minutes by train. I got there at 9.30 pm.
Some of my employees said I should not
leave my office and should stay in a safe
place. I had to go because my son, a sixth
grade student, had been at school when
the earthquake struck. Telephone lines
were down after the quake, so we really
did not know the real damage in each area.
Luckily my son was safe and waiting for
me alone at home. Broken glass and dishes
were spread all over the floor and my son
was wiping them up. I couldn’t stop my
tears. He said that he was at school after
the quake for a while, and then went to his
friend’s house to eat dinner but he thought
that I would not be able to find him, so he
returned to the house by himself. He was
also scared of losing mobile contact with
me. My husband walked home from his
office the next morning. I have never had
such an experience in my life in Japan; it
was too awful to think that I could have
lost my son or husband. But after that,
I had more shocks from the TV reports.
The tsunami had swept over the land in
the North and swamped cars and houses
- it was a nightmare. A lot of families lost
children or parents.”
Kimiko says she lost confidence in her
work at that point, wondering what books
could do for people in situations of tragedy.
One day one of the internet distributors,
Fujisan magazine services, and its direc-
Cheering up children with books
Kimiko helps out in quake-hit North Japan
Above: Kimiko (photo courtesy of IBBY
Spain.)
Below left: Refugees in Miyagi
prefecture with donated books, April
2011.
Opposite page, bottom: Ishinomaki,
April 2011. It was a pretty town in
Miyagi prefecture in North Japan.
(Photo courtesy of Mr.Atsushi Ishihara,
Mightybook partner photographer.)
OneºNorth July 2011 17
KIMIKO FUJIOKA MATSUI
UWCSEA 1979-1984
Class of 1985
tor Mr Nishino urged her to send books
to Northern Japan, indicating that they
had had a request from people in refugee
camps that they needed a sense of hope
and future that they could get through
reading. He had teamed up with a partner
publication house and another internet
distributor specialising in children’s book
sales and created a delivery network. This
magazine and picture book delivery proj-
ect become a large network and brought
more than 30,000 magazines and 15,000
children’s books to about 1,000 refugees
in April. Encouraged by Mr Nishino, Kim-
iko contributed Bookbird Japan and other
Mightybook art magazines worth a total
value of ¥2,600,000. After receiving the
first positive comments from a reader, Kim-
iko says, “Through this project, I was able
to believe in the power of books again.”
According to Kimiko, reports from the
National Police Agency and Ministry of
Land in July indicate that there are about
23,000 dead and missing people, more
than 5,000 injured, more than 220,000
houses destroyed, and about 68,000
refugees still in camps after four months.
She says, “Japan is still struggling to fix
the damage. We don’t know the exact
number of children who lost their family
or school friends; we just see many are
in deep sadness. What can books do for
them? When I open a story book, I feel a
positive power. Children’s books are not
only effective for children; the gentle words
that a child understands also ease the feel-
ings of adults. I hope these books become
a door for re-opening the dreams of those
in the northern part of Japan and go some
way to fostering world understanding.”
Kimiko says in addition, “Through this
experience, I also realised the power of
my friends all over the world; in Austra-
lia, Malaysia, India, England, the USA,
Spain, France, Italy, Korea and elsewhere.
I received many messages including those
from old UWCSEA friends. When I was
feeling sad, the short words “Kimiko! Are
you OK?” encouraged me a lot and filled
me with gratitude.”
To contact Kimiko, please visit the UWC-
SEA Alumni website.
“Through this experience, I also realised the power of my friends
all over the world...”
By Brenda Whately
About Bookbird Japan
“Bookbird Japan” is a comprehensive chil-
dren’s books information magazine which
has a license from “Bookbird,” the jour-
nal of International
Board on Books for
Young People (IBBY).
“Bookbird Japan”
provides complete
Japanese translations
from “Bookbird” and
original Japanese
editorial reports and
articles. It describes
what children’s books are being read in
Japan now and reports on groups involved
in children’s literature. For more details,
please e-mail bookbird@mightybook.net
in English or Japanese.
18 OneºNorth July 2011
ALUMNI ARTICLE
I recently arranged to meet with one of UWCSEA’s Grade 2
teachers, Jackson English, while working on a report for my
day job – a story about the innovative aid work underway in
the West Sumatra region.
“Come down to Sentosa on Saturday morning,” said Jackson.
“I’ll be paddling off Tanjong Beach. Go out to the rocks on
the right and you’ll see me come past. I’ll be done by about
seven.” Usually I schedule my meetings for more convenient
times, in the comfort of a preferred cafe somewhere in town.
However, I was very keen to see Jackson in action, on the
water, so as soon as the weekend rolled along, I headed down.
Jackson originates from the Central Coast region of New
South Wales, Australia. It was on this coast, renowned for its
beautiful beaches and big waves, that he developed a passion
for surfing, a sport which he says helped him to become one of
Australia’s top competitive surf lifesavers.
Several years ago, Jackson relocated to Singapore to pursue
a career as a teacher at UWCSEA. Despite being far away
from the open ocean he had been accustomed to, however,
he has somehow managed to maintain a strong attachment
for his sport and this year, at the end of July, he plans to once
again compete in the Molokai 2 Oahu Paddleboard World
Championships in Hawaii, a gruelling 32-mile race from
island to island.
This will be Jackson’s seventh time back to do this race and
once again he is looking to raise money for SurfAid, the only
international non-government organisation (NGO) dedicated
to providing health and community support, disaster relief
and emergency preparedness to the remote Mentawai Islands,
which are about 150 kilometres off the coast of West Sumatra.
By Greg Town
UWCSEA 1983-1986
Class of 1990
Training involves dawn paddles on a 10-foot plus paddleboard
back and forth along the southern beaches of Sentosa. Each
session takes about one to two hours and he does at least three
or four of those a week.
To balance his busy schedule, which includes school work and
spending time with his wife and three children, Jackson has to
get out on the water early to train, especially on week days.
“There’s nothing better than coming out here and paddling
early, as the sun’s coming out,” he said. “[Amid] the craziness
of Singapore, it’s a nice quiet kind of thing to do. I also love
doing the Molokai race. Every training session I do drives me
to that. It’s such a hard race. There are never ever guarantees
that I’m going to finish it, let alone do well. It’s incredibly
rewarding to get across that finish line and to know that I’ve
done the best that I can.”
“Life’s pretty full on,” he added. “I train in the mornings when
the kids are asleep. It’s just something that I’m used to. I wake
up at 4.30am every day. I’ve just got into the habit ... I love
being fit and active.”
Jackson, who first entered the Molokai 2 Oahu race in 1999,
describes the event as a huge personal challenge. “It’s not like
a marathon where you slug it out on the road … you’re fighting
against currents and the heat, being dehydrated.”
About halfway through that first race, Jackson vowed never to
do it again. “I got so sunburnt and was in an incredible amount
of pain. I had no idea how to train for an event like that.”
However, he did go back. In fact, he has now done it six times,
finishing in the top three in his category on four occasions,
including two second placings.
Paddleboarding
Mentawais
Jackson English
for the
OneºNorth July 2011 19
Please send your profile suggestions for the next edition of OneºNorth, to alumnimagazine@uwcsea.edu.sg.
“… through his paddleboarding and other UWSEA-
related events, Jackson has become the largest individual
fundraiser for SurfAid.”
“More than anything, I just love being there,’ he said. “You
go out and race and you are in the middle of the ocean, and
there are sharks and whales, dolphins and turtles. Beautiful
blue water and … sometimes you can paddle for 50 metres but
then ride an ocean swell for a hundred. That’s pretty amazing.”
What is equally amazing is that through his paddleboarding
and other UWCSEA-related events, Jackson has become the
largest individual fundraiser for SurfAid.
The organisation’s activities are aimed at raising awareness and
funds to help people on these islands who have suffered from a
combination of a poor quality of life and the devastating effects
of recent earthquakes and tsunamis, said Jackson. “We are just
trying to get the awareness out. We live so close geographically
to the Mentawais, yet Singapore and the Mentawais are just
worlds apart in terms of quality of life. So anything we can do
is a bonus. In the last six years, we’ve raised over US$300,000
for [SurfAid] through events at school and through things like
the Molokai,” he added “That’s one of the good things about
our school. It is so active in raising awareness and money for
people less fortunate.”
My interview with Jackson happened to be a week prior to the
massive earthquake and tsunami which wiped out large parts
of northern coastal Japan. A couple of weeks after that event,
I spoke by skype with Dr Dave Jenkins, founder and medical
director of SurfAid. Dave explained that, like Japan, West
Sumatra, including the Mentawai Islands, Nias Island, Padang,
and Aceh, are especially prone to earthquakes and tsunamis.
Here, the islands are located directly above a major fault line
– the Sunda Trench – where the Indo-Australian tectonic plate
slides beneath the Eurasian tectonic plate. Indeed, this mega
fault has created a string of major quakes since the December
2004 Boxing Day Tsunami – in 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2010.
A big earthquake is due in the area, said Dave. “The one that
occurred last year was a small one. We know there is a 200-
year cycle and statistically, it’s many years overdue.”
The last big earthquake caused a tsunami that killed more
than 500 people and destroyed homes and villages throughout
low lying coastal areas of the Mentawais. Since then, about
14,000 people from the islands have been forced into make-
shift camps in the hills; this out of a total population of about
74,000. The damage that was inflicted further confounded
existing health problems in the islands, where malnutrition
and child mortality was already high.
I asked Dave how SurfAid spends its money. He replied, “Our
community-based health program, which is based around
getting the highest return per dollar investment, [is] a business
model rather than a traditional aid model. When you teach a
woman to breast-feed correctly, she teaches her daughter, and
her grand-daughter, and that echoes on for generations. When
you crunch the returns per initial dollar investment, it’s much
higher than if you were running a clinic there.”
He went on to say that SurfAid has approximately 90 field staff
involved in several key programs over a wide area. Its major
programs are those involving malaria prevention, community-
based health, water and sanitation, emergency preparedness
and disaster response.
It is credited with distributing over 60,000 insecticide-treated
nets and provided malaria education in over 300 villages in
the Mentawais, Nias and Aceh. It also helps to provide clean
water to those internally displaced by the recent tsunami, and
it is planning to help communities build their own toilets and
better manage their sanitation and hygiene.
Previous page: Jackson English. This page from left: Jackson English paddling off of Sentosa Island; SurfAid engineer working with Mentawai villagers (Photo by Matt
King, SurfAid); Family in Masokut rebuilding with the support of SurfAid’s Shelter Project.
20 OneºNorth July 2011
Given the impact of recent natural disasters, SurfAid has had
to evolve. Crisis management, both in terms of preparing and
responding to emergencies, has become a crucial component
of its operational structure.
One of the more innovative programs SurfAid is implementing
involves the provision of psychosocial support for those with
post-traumatic stress disorder. This program is designed to
help local people and communities cope with the aftermath
of a disaster and to give them the necessary support to help
them become self-sufficient and motivated again. “The top
priority for SurfAid however, is to stop children dying,” said
Dave, adding that the most important advances in reducing
child mortality are coming from well-designed community
development processes. “This approach creates self-reliance
and behaviour change across whole communities. These
things are washing hands, building their own toilets, breast-
feeding, not delivering babies on a dirt floor – high impact,
low-cost behaviours.”
Jackson has travelled to the Mentawais regularly over the past
decade, to surf but also to observe and get involved in the
work that SurfAid is doing and he says, “They have made a
pretty significant difference. It’s nice to see that not only do
they have anecdotal evidence of improving quality of life, but
they’re also backing it up with lots of data now as well.”
he UWCSEA reunion held in Singapore last August was
a great opportunity to catch up with old friends and
reminisce about the good old days. One thing that we
all seemed to share was a sense of appreciation of our time,
however long, at the school. We recall with fondness, our
friends and teachers, as well as the unique UWCSEA events,
many of which were tied up with raising money for charity.
These days, UWCSEA continues to be a leader in philanthropy.
For more information
Molokai 2 Oahu race: http://www.molokai2oahu.com
SurfAid International: www.surfaidinternational.org
SurfAid Schools Program: www.surfaidschools.org
Greg Town
Greg attended UWCSEA from 1983 to 1986, after which he
returned to his home town, Auckland, New Zealand, where he
completed his schooling and university.
Since then, he has worked as a writer
specialising in health for various publishing
companies and communications agencies.
He enjoys traveling, particularly around
Asia and says that he was especially struck
by the awe and mystique of Sumatra on the
two occasions he visited - the first being an
unforgettable UWCSEA white-water rafting
trip and the second, a subsequent trip to
Nias Island, just north of the Mentawais.
A few years ago, Greg and his partner Brooke relocated from New
Zealand back to Singapore, both having managed to line up work
here. In 2009, they got married in Bali. Greg is the brother of Paul
(Class of 1992) and David (Class of 1996).
Simply visit the above URL and click ‘Register’ to become a member. Registering
with the alumni site allows you to maintain your own profile page, search for and
contact other alumni, post photos and notes, stay updated regarding UWCSEA
alumni and College events, etc. So go ahead and register today!
If you are registered, remember to keep your contact details updated so other
former students can get in touch. To reset your password and be automatically re-
minded of your user name, simply visit the ‘Sign in’ screen, click on the password
reset button near the bottom and enter your email address. It’s quick and easy!
Have you registered with the UWCSEA alumni website?
http://alumni.uwcsea.edu.sg
Dr Dave
Jenkins and
SurfAid
staff with a
mother and
child at
Betumonga
Village.
(Photo by
Bob Barker,
SurfAid).