One North May/June 2012

Vol 9 May/June 2012

The Alumni Magazine of UWC South East Asia

From Ojek to GO-JEK

Caroline’s charity shop

Alumni profiles

Reunions

UK

1578

Singapore

1145

US

1067

Australia

901

Malaysia

331

Netherlands

272

Canada

238

India

237

Indonesia

204

Japan

157

New Zealand

131

Germany

126

Hong Kong

100

South Korea

90

Norway

76

Switzerland

75

Thailand

70

France

67

Italy

67

Sweden

59

China

47

UAE

47

Belgium

37

South Africa

34

Denmark

28

Spain

24

Ireland

22

Brunei

19

Israel

18

Mexico

15

Bangladesh

15

Philippines

15

Poland

15

Austria

14

Finland

14

Pakistan

13

Taiwan

13

Myanmar

12

Vietnam

11

Egypt

10

Cambodia

Argentina

Kenya

Sri Lanka

Venezuela

Greece

Qatar

Swaziland

Luxembourg

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 UWC 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

informed 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, 25, 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

three times during the academic year,

containing College news and reports of

events and activities.

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 Southeast 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, 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, Bahamas, Bahrain, Barbados, Benin, Bermuda, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Chile,

Colombia, Costa Rica, Cyprus, Czech Rep, East Timor, Ethiopia, Fiji, Ghana, Guam, Guatemala, Guyana, Hungary, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan,

Laos, Lebanon, Macau, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Monaco, Mongolia, Morocco, Nepal, New Caledonia, Northern Ireland, Oman, Panama,

Papua New Guinea, Peru, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, Sudan, Tanzania, Timor Leste,

Trinidad and Tobago, Turkey, Turks and Caicos, Uruguay, Zambia, Zimbabwe

OUR ONLINE COMMUNITY

Alumni services

OneºNorth May/June 2012 3

Returning to Chiang Mai

The continuing

commitment of four

former UWCSEA teachers ...................... 22

An educational experience

in Northern Thailand ................................24

Dale Fisher gives back to UWCSEA ...... 25

Civil Unrest

Rahul Sriskanthan

plans filming of

documentary............................................. 26

A week in Timor-Leste ............................ 28

Former Olympian

takes on new challenge ...........................30

UWCSEA takes a leading role

The launch of the

Royal Geographical Society’s

Singapore branch...................................... 32

UWCSEA Foundation

Alumni giving.............................................34

UWCSEA Global Concern

Using the iLearn intiative

to raise funds to build

a school in Cambodia............................... 36

In Memoriam

Jim Heal, Matron Ho Siew Han...............37

Current students help out

Wedding raises awareness

and funds for Global Concern................38

More alumni weddings ............................38

Upcoming reunions ..................inside back

Letter from the Head of College ..............4

Note from the Alumni Office ...................5

Dover and East Campus update ...............5

Cover story

From Ojek

to GO-JEK

Two UWCSEA

alumni turn a

traditional service

into a professional

business ..................................6

All systems go!

Akihiko Hoshide heads to

the ISS for the second time........................9

Give a little

Caroline Watson-O’Duffy

runs a charity shop in London

to help people in need.............................. 11

Alumni vignettes

From Mallika Ramdas’

Gap-Year-for-Grown-Ups ........................12

Another polar expedition for Tim Jarvis .14

Gautam Banerjee

Business leader

continues practice

of UWC values ...........................................15

Reunion 2011 ..............................................16

Reunions .....................................................18

Events and activities at UWCSEA ......... 20

Editor

Brenda Whately

Layout

Gregory Parker

MICA (P) 051/11/2010

OneºNorth is published by UWC 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 alumnimagazine@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: GO-JEK motorcycle taxis (see article, From Ojek to GO-JEK)

Photo courtesy of Michaelangelo Moran

Contents

4 OneºNorth May/June 2012

Letter from the Head of College

The dawning of a new era at the College

was marked on 15 August 2011 as the

new East Campus opened its doors in

Tampines to 1,500 students from K1–

G10. It is remarkable to reflect upon the

events of the last five years and how

this project has evolved. It says much

about the vision of the Board, the quality

and professionalism of the staff and the

health and resilience of the community

that we have been able to steer our way

so successfully through an extraordinary

process of change.

The challenge for James Dalziel, the Head

of East Campus, and his staff is to create

not just ‘another international school’

but one that is readily identifiable as a

UWC and exhibits all the characteristics

that you will recall from your time at the

College. It is early days yet but as you

wander round the campus and engage in

conversation with students of all ages,

you sense that the culture is developing.

They talk animatedly about why the

College exists and its purpose; they have

a deep understanding of the College

ethos, and they know what is expected of

them in terms of their responsibilities as

global citizens.

The official opening of the East Campus

took place on 8 December and was a

particularly poignant occasion, not least

because it was 40 years to the week that

former Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew, had

officially opened the Dover Campus. Our

Guest of Honour on this occasion was the

Minister of Education, Heng Swee Keat.

In his speech, he commented upon the

government’s commitment to creating a

world-class education hub in Singapore.

Whilst the East Campus is establishing

itself, the staff at the Dover Campus are

not resting on their laurels. In November,

we hosted the College’s first accreditation

visit by an external body, conducted

under the auspices of the Council for

International Schools and the Western

Association of Schools and Colleges. The

visit, by a team of 16 senior educators

from other schools, was the culmination

of a 12-month review and reflection

by committees, consisting of staff,

students, parents and Board members.

They covered all aspects of our provision:

admissions, university counselling, the

curriculum from K1 to Grade 12, service,

outdoor education, staff development,

facilities, finance, governance and

management, etc.

In their verbal report at the end of the

week, the visiting team commended us,

amongst other things, on the strength

of the ethos, the quality of our service

and outdoor education programme,

the exceptional IB results, the ‘ethos of

caring’ that permeated the College and

the relationships between the Board and

management. As you would expect, they

made a number of recommendations that

broadly reflected the conclusions of the

self-study committees. Chief amongst

these was the need to ensure that the

curriculum was properly articulated

from K1 through to G12 (i.e., that there

was a logical progression from year

to year and equality of access for all

students in a grade).

Strange though it may seem, whilst

governments, states and provinces

have created K–12 curricula for their

students, nobody has ever written such a

curriculum for international schools. Our

situation is, therefore, no different from

other international schools. However, the

Board has had the foresight to provide the

resources for us to develop one rooted in

the UWC ethos and reflecting the holistic

nature of the education we provide. This

is an exciting and innovative project and,

once completed, will further differentiate

us from other schools.

Towards the end of last term, the new

High School students on the East Campus

were asked to sum up their experience

since they had joined the College. One

of them, who I suspect has a future as a

copywriter, wrote,

“Something new, something fun,

something mysterious gathered together

to create uniqueness.”

There is no doubt in our minds that the

College is unique; it is wonderful when

the students appreciate it as well.

Julian Whiteley

OneºNorth May/June 2012 5

It’s hard to

believe that I have

been with the

Alumni Relations

Department for

more than five years

now, since August

2006. It seems like

yesterday that I

joined UWCSEA and started getting

to know such an inspiring group of

former students.

There have been a few changes at the

College over those years. UWCSEA now

has two campuses. The new East Campus

opened its doors in 2011, and this year is

educating students from K1 up to Grade 10.

In August 2012, the East Campus will

see its first group of IB students. The

Dover Campus, on the other hand, this

year graduates its largest group of students

to date; 316 students are heading off

to university, National Service or a Gap

Year experience.

We have a full reunion schedule this year,

including several cities throughout the

world as well as Singapore, and we hope

to see as many alumni as possible at those

events. We will also be celebrating the

classes of 1972, 1982, 1987, 1992 and 2002

in Singapore in August 2012. Each year, we

get about 300 alumni returning to celebrate

their 10, 20, 25 and 30 year anniversaries.

Now we are able to add 35 and 40 year

anniversary groups as well. Join your former

classmates for your anniversary celebration!

We plan to start up some informal regional

groups in various locations, and we also

plan to launch a regular schedule of events

for those of you living in Singapore.

I hope you enjoy this issue of the alumni

magazine and its profiles and stories

about some of your fellow alumni. Please

let us have your stories and suggestions for

future issues.

Take care. All the best.

Regards,

Brenda Whately

Director of Alumni Relations

Note from the

Alumni Office

Dover Campus

Upgrades to the Dover Campus

continue to take place with a schedule

that will run over the next few years.

A covered linkway between Dover Road

and the guard house has been erected,

and it is now possible to remain under

shelter from the rain all the way in

from the main road and throughout

the campus.

A new five-story classroom block

has been constructed between the

Main Hall and the Physical Education

Building, providing more classroom and

student gathering space. It will house

the Middle School plus a few High

School classrooms and science labs, a

state-of-the art gymnasium and a new

performance hall along with plenty of

open space.

At the same time, a covered extension

to the Pavilion Canteen just outside

the Exam Hall is well underway and

a steel structure to support donated

solar panels is being installed by the

swimming pool.

The next stage of the upgrade

programme includes preparation

of the current Humanities block for

refurbishment followed by the other

classroom blocks.

East Campus

The East Campus was officially opened

in December 2011. The purpose-built

school is located in Tampines.

UWCSEA East is the first school in the

world to have installed a large solar

panel cooling system which will provide

for all of its hot water needs as well

as a large part of its air-conditioning

requirements.

In addition to the tremendous

environmental and cost savings, Head

of College, Julian Whiteley says it has

become a good lesson in sustainability

for students. “We’ve been able to

teach the students about how you can

genuinely achieve sustainability and not

just talk about it.”

The East Campus is now teaching K1 to

Grade 10, but will be taking in its first

group of IB students in August 2012.

Dover and East Campus update

6 OneºNorth May/June 2012

By Brenda Whately

Michaelangelo (Mikey) Moran

(Class of 1999)

UWCSEA 1992–1999

Nadiem Makarim

(Class of 2002)

UWCSEA 1998–2002

“I didn’t think I would ever see myself

doing anything CNN-worthy in my entire

lifetime!” Michaelangelo Moran (pictured

above left), known by his friends as

Mikey, declared as he related to me how

pleased and excited he felt when CNN

aired feature coverage of his and founder/

fellow-UWCSEA alumnus, Nadiem

Makarim’s new company GO-JEK, just

three months after its launch in Jakarta,

Indonesia, January 2011.

The company has since been covered in

a number of publications, videos, blogs

and websites, most recently by Time

Magazine and also by CNN, CCTV, ABC

Australia News, MNC TV and Reuters

Report, as well as the two largest English

newspapers in Jakarta—the Jakarta Globe

and Jakarta Post, to name just a few.

When Time Magazine’s video of the

company and its drivers was featured

December 2011, on their global website

www.time.com, Mikey says, “It was

probably as big for us as hitting CNN or

having Eric Schmidt and Hilary Clinton

recognise us.” He was referring to the

Global Entrepreneur Program Indonesia

(GEPI) awards in Bali in July 2011 at which

they took first place in the non-tech

category. One of the highlights was being

acknowledged for their innovation by

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt and US

Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton. Mikey

says, “This was the award that put GO-

JEK on the map—after this, we definitely

shot up in demand.”

The idea for GO-JEK came to Nadiem

Makarim upon his return to Jakarta in

2010 from the United States where he

received an MBA from Harvard Business

School. Nadiem had grown up in Jakarta

aside from the four years he boarded at

UWCSEA, and had always used ojeks

as the cheapest, quickest and most

efficient way to travel through the

heavy and chaotic traffic there. An ojek

is a motorcycle taxi, and there are over

35,000 of them in Jakarta. The service

has always been available but there

has never been an official or organised

business structure around it.

In one of his first ojek rides upon his

arrival back to Jakarta in 2010, Nadiem

began chatting with the driver about

the ojek situation. He was told that the

system was very territorial—drivers were

not allowed to pick up a fare anywhere

but at their own station and then upon

returning to their station, the drivers had

to queue up behind all the other ojeks

ahead of them.

Nadiem, on seeing how inefficient

the system was, and recognising an

opportunity, asked a couple of them

what they would think of an organised,

professional system which allowed

customers to book a ride. That was the

seed from which the idea of GO-JEK

began to grow.

Nadiem invited Mikey and another friend

to join him in the enterprise. Their idea

was to form a company that would

provide this service on a more official

level with a brand image that people

would recognise and trust.

Mikey and Nadiem knew each other

before and during the time that they

were both boarders at UWCSEA. Mikey

had gone on to complete a business

degree at the Boston University School

From Ojek

to GO-JEK

Two UWCSEA alumni

turn a traditional

service into a

professional business.

OneºNorth May/June 2012 7

of Management in 2003. His plan was

to prepare himself to eventually take

over his parents’ fashion business in

Jakarta. After graduating, he did some

work in event management and retail,

subsequently running his own event

management company. Most of the

design work for those companies was

outsourced, and Mikey began to develop a

desire to become involved in design work

himself. He enrolled at the Academy of

Art in San Francisco and graduated with a

degree in Web Design and New Media.

Mikey has been involved in social and

environmental projects in the past,

including the Urban Forest Project (UFP)

in San Francisco for which he designed

posters relating to the concept of trees

and life. One of his posters was chosen

for display, after which the design was

sold for t-shirts and handbags and the

money used to fund the planting of trees

in the city. Another social project he was

involved with in Indonesia was DJ’ing for

the IBU Foundation which raises money

to build facilities and provide food and

shelter for some of Indonesia’s poor,

particularly in Nusa Tenggara Timur

(NTT). Recently he has been approached

by Volcom Indonesia to be involved in a

project to save orangutans in Kalimantan.

Mikey is a much in-demand DJ. At

UWCSEA, he played the piano, sax and

drums and was in a band in his senior

years. He attributes his love of music

for the reason he became a DJ. He has

worked at clubs across Indonesia as

well as Singapore, San Francisco, Los

Angeles and Mumbai, India. Currently

he still performs in Jakarta and Bali,

Indonesia and organises events for a local

DJ organisation that he also designed a

website for, called Trigger Production.

His personal website is located at www.

michaelangelomoran.com/djmikeyblog

and his music can be downloaded at

www.soundcloud.com/djmikeymoran.

Mikey worked on several different design

and marketing projects before becoming

involved with GO-JEK, but he says that

this is by far his most exciting endeavour.

As the brand director for GO-JEK, Mikey

designed everything that involves the

company’s image, including the company

name, logo, website and promotional

materials, right down to the drivers’

jackets and helmets. The company

colours he chose were green, grey, black

and white. The latter three colours,

he says, represent the road, while the

green is to represent the environment.

One of the goals of the business is to be

environmentally friendly, using less fuel

to pick up and deliver more customers,

and eventually to invest in electric

motorbikes.

By December of 2010, friends and family

members were testing the system to

find any potential issues, and by January

2011, 200 drivers had been recruited, the

website was finalised and the company

was launched.

Mikey says, “Our company is the first of

its kind in Jakarta. The management, the

drivers and the customers are all really

excited about this project because it is

definitely what Jakarta needs, and we are

growing at a greatly accelerated rate.”

The way the system works is that the

drivers send an SMS to the GO-JEK

system, identifying which of the 150

active stations they are located at. When

GO-JEK receives a customer order, they

call the driver closest to the pick-up

point and send the customer an SMS

confirming the order. GO-JEK takes a

“Our company is the first

of its kind in Jakarta.”

8 OneºNorth May/June 2012

commission from the total fare paid.

Each driver is provided with a drivers’ kit

containing a helmet, a jacket, an ID tag

and a cleaning kit. They receive some

vehicle insurance and financial assistance

to get a license if they don’t have one

(which some don’t!), and they receive

training on customer relations in order to

protect the company’s image.

Most of the drivers seem to take great

pride in being part of the business, as

evidenced by the interviews which have

appeared in the various articles and

videos done about the company.

The four current partners in the business

all have input into the formulation of

the company’s strategy. Right from

the beginning, they decided to offer

further services in addition to passenger

transportation. These initiatives include

courier service, document delivery,

corporate services and even restaurant

and grocery shopping and delivery.

They have recently launched a monthly

newsletter, a fare calculator and

programmes including ‘Driver of the

Month,’ ‘Customer of the Month’ and a

photo project called ‘GO-JEK Spotted.’

Future plans include adding GPS systems

and developing smartphone apps for

their services.

Not only is the company newsworthy,

it’s also worthy of the UWC mission and

values. Their business plan has a social

component—to improve the lives of

others. Mikey states, “We believe that by

professionalising ojeks in Jakarta, we can

improve the welfare and status of ojek

drivers, while providing Jarkartans with a

practical and fast convenience service. It’s

great to be able to help people.” Nadiem

has said, “By giving ojek drivers access

to orders they would not otherwise get,

we provide them with additional income

through a profit-sharing arrangement.”

Ojek drivers who have joined GO-JEK

have been reported to claim that their

earnings have risen by 50%.

GO-JEK has been in operation now

for just over a year and has grown

dramatically in that time to 450 drivers,

more than 35 corporate accounts, 4,000

unique customers, more than 5,000

followers on Facebook and over 3,700

on Twitter and has won three national

awards. They have been approached

by potential business partners in other

countries but their concentration is

currently on perfecting and growing the

business in Jakarta for now. All indications

are that they are on the road to success.

For further information about the

company, please visit the website at URL:

www.go-jek.com

Mikey and Nadiem can both be reached

through the alumni website.

UWC turns 50

In September 2012, UWC celebrates

its 50th anniversary.

The first UWC college,

UWC Atlantic

College, opened

in 1962 in South

Wales. By offering

an educational

experience based on

shared learning, collaboration and

understanding, it was intended that

the students would act as champions

of peace.

Today, there are 13 UWCs across 5

continents. UWCSEA is the second

UWC, having opened its doors in

1971, originally called Singapore

International School until it gained

full membership in the UWC

movement in 1975. More than

40,000 students from more than

180 countries have studied at UWC

schools and colleges and there are

more than 140 national committees.

Pearson College in Canada was the

third UWC, opened in 1974, followed

by Waterford Kamhlaba in 1981. Then

came UWC-USA in New Mexico, USA

and UWC Adriatic in Italy in 1982.

Simón Bolivar UWC was established

in Venezuela in 1988 and Li Po Chun

UWC of Hong Kong opened in 1992.

This was followed by Red Cross Nordic

in Norway in 1995, Mahindra College

in Pune India in 1997, UWC Costa

Rica and UWC Mostar, Bosnia and

Herzegovina in 2006. Maastricht UWC

in the Netherlands became the most

recent UWC in 2009.

This year, in September 2012, the

UWC movement celebrates 50 years.

For more information about UWC and

its 50th anniversary, please see the

UWC website at www.uwc.org and

www.50.uwc.org.

OneºNorth May/June 2012 9

By Brenda Whately

Former UWCSEA

student, Astronaut

Akihiko Hoshide

of JAXA (Japan

Aerospace Exploration

Agency) dreamed

of travelling into

space from the time

he was about four years of age. In July

of this year, he is about to embark on his

second trip to the International Space

Station (ISS). He will be travelling there

on board the Soyuz spacecraft for a long-

duration mission.

In June 2008, Aki made his first trip to the

ISS on board the space shuttle Discovery.

The main purpose of that mission was

to deliver and install the Japanese ‘Kibo’

(meaning ‘hope’) laboratory to the ISS.

An article appeared in the December

2008 issue of One°North, the Alumni

Magazine of UWCSEA, about Aki and his

first mission to the ISS. A PDF version of

the magazine can be found on the alumni

site under Publications.

For Aki’s second mission to the ISS,

currently scheduled for 15 July 2012,

JAXA reports that he will be engaging

in scientific experiments coordinated

by Japanese scientists and international

partners, as well as robotic arm and

system operations in the Japanese

Experiment Module, Kibo, as an ISS

Flight Engineer.

We are hoping that Aki will eventually

make it back to UWCSEA for a visit at

some point after he returns to Earth.

Unfortunately for his classmates, he

won’t be able to join them during the

25th anniversary celebrations of the Class

of 1987 in Singapore this August, but I

think we would all agree that he has a

good reason!

For more information about Aki and

his mission, please visit the JAXA website

and search ‘Mission 32/33’ or the NASA

website and search ‘Expedition 32.’

You can also follow Aki on Twitter at:

http://twitter.com/#!/Aki_Hoshide.

Akihiko Hoshide, UWCSEA Class of 1987 heads to

the International Space Station for the second time.

Photos supplied by JAXA and NASA

All systems go!

10 OneºNorth May/June 2012

By Brenda Whately

Caroline Watson-O’Duffy

UWCSEA 1974–1977

Class of 1981

The desire to help others runs in the

family. Caroline runs a charity shop in

London following a social work career,

working with people in need. She is the

sister of Fiona Watson Ambrosi, featured

in an earlier issue of the alumni magazine,

the founder of the NGO Todos Juntos,

which funds free dental clinics and a

community centre in the slums

of Buenos Aires. Elder sister Nathalie

is also involved in charitable work,

soliciting and delivering donations for

Caroline’s charity shop.

Caroline and her sisters lived in Singapore

for 10 years of their young lives, and all

three attended UWCSEA.

After leaving Singapore and finishing her

International Baccalaureate in France,

Caroline attended Boston College,

majoring in Psychology with a minor in

Spanish. Although at first she thought she

might be a teacher, after completing her

Bachelor’s degree and living in Paris for a

year, she gave in to her calling and moved

to Canada to attend McGill University in

Montreal, for a degree in Social Work.

Caroline says, “I always knew I wanted

to work with those who needed help.

That may have been influenced by

my experiences at UWCSEA. I used to

fund raise for various causes—we were

encouraged to do so. I remember roller-

skating to raise money. I knew I wanted to

continue to help others.”

Caroline moved to London after

graduating from McGill and has remained

there since. She worked for four years

with Vietnamese child asylum seekers

until the refugee homes were closed after

the children were reunited with their

families. Her inspiration for this work

included her memories of going to Rawa

and Tioman with her family in the ’70s

and seeing Vietnamese refugees coming

in to Malaysia. She remembered the

impact that it had had on her at the time.

She then worked with homeless men for

a while until 1993 when she had her first

child and took a year off. When she went

back to work, she did so part-time, for

supported housing for 16 to 21 year olds.

By 1997 she was working part-time as

a panel advisor for the Refugee Council

where she worked with newly arrived,

unaccompanied children to the UK. She

was one of the first panel advisors and

worked to ensure that these children were

given the same rights as British children.

She says, “After all, they were children

before they were refugees.”

Caroline has always worked in the

charitable side of social work and says she

never wanted to work on the statutory

side. Eventually she became a full-time

manager with the Refugee Council, until

2009. She organised a drop-in centre in

London in 1999 and pulled together a

team for the children to see when they

arrived. It was very successful, and the

team, which grew to 15 people, began

to see up to 100 children a day. They

did case work, made regional visits and

worked at the drop-in centre in London.

Over the years, the countries from which

the children were arriving changed as

the major areas of conflict changed,

from Africa (DRC, Rwanda, Uganda) in

1997, to Kosovo, Albania, Serbia and Sri

Lanka, also in the late 1990s and early

2000s and then more recently, Iraq and

Afghanistan. The numbers have dropped

these days she says, because it’s so much

harder to get into the UK as an asylum

seeker. She says just before she left that

Give a little

OneºNorth May/June 2012 11

work, she was constantly met with the

situation in which she had to try to prove

to the statutory social services staff that

children they were calling adult asylum

seekers were indeed still just children.

She says, “We had a great track record

of winning. Having lived abroad, I had

perhaps more of an understanding of

different cultures. We were able to get

the best lawyers on our side. The work

was really hard, but so satisfying.” She

says even now, some of the children who

have grown up since she helped them,

come to see her or talk to her by email or

on Facebook. Some even call her ‘Mum.’

In 2009, Caroline decided to try

something completely different and

opened a shop. She runs the business

as not-for-profit by donating the profits

to charity. Although the shop is not

registered as a charity, it is recognised

by HM Revenue as Non Profit. To start

the business, she collected donated

goods which she kept in her garage.

When she had enough to fill a shop, she

signed a lease for what she considered

a great location in London and in April

2010 opened the shop, which is called

Give a Little. All proceeds, after costs,

are donated to support grass roots

charities that help children. She says her

shop opened with a bang and has been

very successful since. “People like the

idea,” she says. Last year she donated

to four different charities, choosing one

approximately every three months. She

started with her sister Fiona’s NGO.

She also donated to a youth group in

the Refugee Council where youngsters

can meet other young people and feel

safe, a day centre and a group providing

music therapy, a home for HIV orphans

in Uganda, a trauma centre for children

in Gaza, an educational trust in Ecuador

and an orphanage in India. The total

amount she donated in her first year

amounted to GBP 33,500. This financial

year looks to be about the same. She is

currently supporting a charity in Morocco

that helps give Berber children an

education, as they come from very poor

backgrounds. Her next charity donation

will be to an organisation that helps

street children in Brazil. Caroline also

gives a smaller amount to local charities

in her own country. Although she admits

that the work is hard, she still finds it

quite satisfying and has recently signed

the lease for another two years.

Having worked in the charity sector most

of her life, Caroline has a network of

friends and former colleagues from whom

she gets ideas and recommendations

for the grassroots charities that she

chooses to support. Her two main rules

for supporting an organisation is that it

food, a health check, some leisure

activities and then returns them to the

streets from which they were picked up.

She says she has been to Cambodia and

has witnessed the poverty that exists

there as well, and she wants to move

there to help.

When I asked her what she likes best

about her current work, she said, “I like

handing over the cheque, knowing that

the hard work has paid off.”

Caroline notes that she has been very

interested to see how the ethos and

values instilled in her friends and family

at UWCSEA have stayed with them even

though they were all fairly privileged

themselves. She says, “It makes me

humble.”

Caroline can be contacted through the

UWCSEA alumni website or through her

own website: givealittleshop.org. She

would love to be contacted by anyone

who remembers her.

She’d like to feel that she has

eventually supported a worthy

cause on every continent.

must be registered in the UK and 90%

of the funds she donates must go to the

children that she is supporting. She tries

to do one trip each year to visit one of

the organisations she supports or plans

to support.

Some future projects include supporting

a Tanzanian orphanage that she heard

about from a Canadian girl who walked

into her shop one day and told her about

the work that she was doing there. She

would like to do something for Burma

and Afghanistan and the Aborigines in

Australia. She’d like to feel that she has

eventually supported a worthy cause on

every continent.

Caroline’s future plans include ultimately

selling the shop and its name and

reputation in order to recoup her

investment and then setting up a project

in Cambodia. She would like to start a

project similar to the Happy Bus charity

in Salvador, Brazil, which picks up street

children, provides them with clothes,

12 OneºNorth May/June 2012

By Mallika Ramdas

UWCSEA University Counsellor

On a spectacularly beautiful, crisp

fall morning in late October 2011, my

‘Megabus’ from Boston deposited me

at its deserted Burlington, Vermont,

terminal. I breathed in the lovely cold air

while savouring the sight of sunshine on

yellow-red-gold leaves and soon ‘Mikey’

(Michael Ogutu, UWCSEA ’08) pulled

up in the Middlebury car he’d rented.

We talked non-stop on the drive over

to the picturesque campus where Mike

had started as a freshman four years

ago and from which he would soon be

graduating. It was hard to believe that

the earnest young Kenyan, who had left

Senior House and Singapore the night of

his UWC graduation, was talking now of

his Middlebury senior research project

and job search interviews in healthcare

research and consulting.

Later that day, I was part of a happy,

boisterous tea party with seven UWCSEA

alumni, all at various stages of their

undergrad lives at Middlebury. Between

us, we represented Germany, Hungary,

India, Kenya, Peru, the United States

and Uruguay. Rachel Ochako (UWCSEA

’06), recently graduated from and now

working at Middlebury as one of its

Residential Life directors, hosted the mini

UWCSEA-at-Middlebury reunion. Voices

and laughter criss-crossed over endless

cups of tea and a big platter of brownies

and cookies. We talked about courses and

majors; deadlines and procrastination;

the challenges of finding jobs for those

getting ready to graduate; the excitement

of ‘study abroad’ experiences—Helena’s

in Russia, Joaquin’s upcoming semester

in Brazil; the culture shock of US campus

social life for international students; Gap

Year experiences after High School and

in mid-life; our significant others and

families; music and food; and, of course,

memories of life at Dover Road.

These were just some of many

“conversations we only got to start,” as

Dana Miller (UWCSEA ’07) said in an

email to me soon after I’d visited her and

a few other UWC alumni at Yale, a few

days before I got to Middlebury. “Meeting

folks from previous parts of your life can

do that,” she added. Dana’s words strike

a deep chord in me during this year in

which I have the luxury of time, travel,

rest and reflection; a year in which I

have consciously sought out ‘folks from

previous parts’ of my life.

Being at Middlebury nine years after

my last visit brought many different

previous worlds together. I caught

up with Barbara Marlow, Associate

Director for International Admissions,

who has admitted generations of UWC

students from all the UWCs and seen

them grow into adults on her campus.

Barbara and I recalled our first meeting

on what was to be a very dramatic day,

11 September 2001, when she visited

Mahindra UWC where I was college

counsellor at the time. The Davis-UWC

Scholarship Program was only a little over

a year old then, but already generously

funded high-need UWC graduates to

pursue a college education at five US

Davis-UWC colleges: Colby, College of

the Atlantic, Middlebury, Princeton and

Wellesley. Ten years later, Shelby Davis’s

incredible scholarship opportunity for

Alumni vignettes from my

Gap-Year-for-Grown-Ups

Left: Rachel Ochako, Mallika Ramdas, Alhaji Jalloh

Opposite left: Abiy Fekadu Tasissa (UWCSEA ’08,

MIT ’12)

Opposite top right: Vaskar Pahari and Dana Miller

at Yale

Opposite bottom right: Middlebury ‘tea party’

(front row, l to r) Michael Ogutu, Joaquin Marandino

Peregalli, Krisztina Pjzecka, Anjali Merchant, Rafael

Manyari Velazco, Helena Treeck; (back row) Rachel

Amongina Ochako and Mallika Ramdas

OneºNorth May/June 2012 13

UWC graduates has grown to support

over 2,400 undergraduates from 146

countries at 94 participating Davis-

UWC colleges all over the United States

(www.davisuwcscholars.org). Over

delicious blueberry pancakes and locally

produced maple syrup, Jane Schoenfeld,

who administers the Davis-UWC

Scholars Program from its Middlebury

office, and I traded stories of the many

transformations that the programme

effects in both scholarship recipients and

their peers at the Davis institutions.

I relish the chance to meet some of these

amazing young alumni and hear of their

journeys in person. While sharing injera,

doro wat and other Ethiopian delights,

Abiy Fekadu Tasissa (UWCSEA ’08)

looked back on his four years at MIT and

reflected on how much he has enjoyed

double majoring in his grand passion,

Mathematics, as well as Philosophy. I

smiled at my memory of the lanky youth

who came to Singapore from Addis barely

speaking English. We emerged from the

restaurant into Boston’s first, ‘unseasonal’

snowstorm; a chilly wind whipped at

Abiy’s light jacket, but he assured me

he was warm enough and continued

talking excitedly about his grad school

applications. A few weeks before this, I

spoke to another of my former advisees,

Lailul Ikram (UWCSEA ’08), now a senior

at Earlham College in Indiana. A 2004

Tsunami survivor himself, Ikram recently

started an NGO that supports a women’s

income-generation crafts project in his

native province of Aceh, Indonesia. His

start-up funding came from winning one

of the Kathryn Davis Projects for Peace

awards (www.davisprojectsforpeace.org)

as well as from local and state

governments. Ikram talked about

what a challenging experience this has

been and how he realised quickly that

he needed to learn a lot about business

and accounting!

‘Learn, Earn, Return’ is the motto that

Shelby Davis urges young people to

embrace. Meeting my former English

students or University Counselling

advisees convinces me that there are

many different ways to give back to

society. The UWC movement has seen an

ongoing debate about how to measure

how scholars, or indeed any UWC

students, live up to the movement’s

mission and values. ‘Returning home’

was often used, in the past, as a gauge

of whether scholars delivered on the

heavy investments made in them by the

UWC national committees and member

colleges. The notion of ‘home’ is an

increasingly complex one for most UWC

students, as also for many UWC teachers.

To quote Dana again, “I am increasingly

realising that soon, if not already, ‘home’

and ‘where my parents live’ won’t be the

same place.” So where Dana will choose

to pursue her dream of implementing new

water-resource management technologies

and practices after graduating with her

Yale engineering degree is still unclear,

but students with her drive and passion

will do so somewhere, and it will make a

difference to that community’s life.

Many of our alumni already belong to or

are being prepared to join that elite one

percent that the ‘Occupy Wall Street’

protestors have drawn our attention

to with their protests against growing

income inequality. Hopefully these

alumns will recall their relatively humble

beginnings and draw on their UWC

principles as they find ways to use their

positions of wealth, power and privilege

to ‘return’ in meaningful ways. Some

may return to the place where they

were born, or to the countries where

their parents live, or they may adopt a

different community that has become

‘theirs.’ Whichever it is, the accidents of

geography, career and personal lives that

place them somewhere do not preclude

them from doing their bit ‘to unite

people, nations and cultures for peace

and a sustainable future.’

A few weeks after returning from my

travels northeast, I was off again—

this time to meet up with my sister in

Washington, D.C. At a dinner gathering

to which we had invited my former Sierra

Leonean advisee, Alhaji Jalloh (UWCSEA

’07), I listened intently as Alhaji talked

about living in the US as a practising

Muslim and his efforts to educate himself

and his friends about each other’s

religions. One of my sister’s friends

turned to me and said: “You must be so

proud of him!” I grinned and said: “Yes.

Yes, I am. Of all of them.”

14 OneºNorth May/June 2012

By Brenda Whately

Tim Jarvis

UWCSEA 1978–1982

Class of 1984

Tim Jarvis has recently announced that

in January 2013, he will be leading the

official centenary re-enactment of

Sir Ernest Shackleton’s history-making

1916 Antarctic expedition.

An exact replica of Shackleton’s 22.5ft

(6.9m) boat, the James Caird, which

will be used in the expedition next year,

was launched in March 2012 at Dorset

in the United Kingdom. It is named

the Alexandra Shackleton, after the

expeditions’s patron, the Hon. Alexandra

Shackleton, granddaughter of Sir Ernest

Shackleton.

Technology, food and equipment used

in the expedition will also be the same

as that used in 1916, aside from some

modern emergency equipment, which

will be kept on board. A support vessel

will follow the voyage and the expedition

will be filmed for a documentary.

The expedition press release quotes the

Hon. Alexandra Shackleton, saying, “The

Shackleton Epic expedition is a fitting

tribute to my grandfather, Sir Ernest

Shackleton, as we celebrate the centenary

of his astonishing voyage (1914–1916).

Tim Jarvis is the ideal person to lead

this expedition as his determination,

along with the high caliber team he has

assembled will honour the leadership of

Ernest Shackleton.”

The press release goes on to say that

the Shackleton Epic also aims to

generate awareness of the importance

of preserving Antarctica’s marine

environment. The crew will film the ice

melt in the region, and Tim will compare

climactic conditions faced by his crew

with those that Shackleton and his men

experienced 100 years ago.

Tim says, “Whereas Shackleton’s goal was

to save his men from Antarctica, we now

find ourselves trying to save Antarctica

from man—a very unfortunate irony.”

Tim’s concern for the environment has

led him also to found what he calls a

Do-Tank aimed at doing rather than just

talking about doing. His aim is to turn

the best suggestions for environmentally

sustainable solutions into reality.

He says, “I often go on about the

importance of ‘doing’ and ‘learning by

doing’—it is after all, the essence of what

my Do-Tank idea is all about. To clarify

my position, although my focus is on

‘doing,’ it is in no way meant to detract

from the importance of strategic planning

and all that that entails. In actual fact,

integrated design in the environmental

field—looking at problems and solutions

from multiple perspectives over time—

is becoming ever more important.”

He describes his ‘Do-Tank’ in the

following way: “Do-Tank is a clearing

house, receiving and considering ideas

with environmental worth and then

determining and assembling the resources

and project management skills needed

to make the best of them happen. Unlike

other web-based forums, it is a place

where we not only initiate and develop

ideas, but where we also commit to try

and fund and project manage them into

reality—the ‘doing’ bit. This is important

because the implementation phase is

where many of the real learnings about

the viability of an idea are discovered—

you only understand what the real issues

and opportunities are when actually

trying to implement an idea.”

Tim Jarvis has an MSc in Environmental

Science and another in Environmental

Law. He is an explorer, author and public

speaker as well. Tim was featured in an

article about his polar explorations and

environmental sustainability work in the

July 2011 issue of One°North, the Alumni

Magazine of UWC South East Asia. A PDF

version of the magazine can be found on

the alumni website under Publications.

For more information about Tim’s

‘Do-Tank’ or his upcoming Antarctic

expedition, please see his website at

www.timjarvis.org or write to him via

wwww.timjarvis.org/contact

Another polar expedition for Tim Jarvis

OneºNorth May/June 2012 15

By Brenda Whately

Gautam Banerjee

UWCSEA 1971–1973

Class of 1973

Gautam Banerjee celebrates his 30th

anniversary with PwC this year and

next year, his 40th anniversary since

graduating from UWCSEA.

Gautam is the Executive Chairman of

PwC Singapore and Chief Operating

Officer for PwC Eastern Cluster, which

includes most of Asia. He joined PwC

Singapore in 1982 after achieving his

B.Sc (Hons) in Accounting and Financial

Analysis at the University of Warwick. He

is a Chartered Accountant and a Fellow of

the Institute of Chartered Accountants,

England and Wales and the Institute of

Certified Public Accountants in Singapore.

He was made a partner at PwC Singapore

in 1989 and Executive Chairman in 2004.

Along with a heavy workload, in true

UWC fashion he has taken on several

additional challenges, working on the

Boards of a number of organisations,

largely in a voluntary capacity.

Gautam attended UWCSEA, then called

Singapore International School (SIS), from

its very first year of operation in 1971

until graduating in 1973 as part of one

of the first graduating classes. He recalls

that in those early days the school had

three or four Gap Year students from

UWC Atlantic, who brought some of the

UWC culture with them and worked as

teacher assistants for a term or so. He

also remembers the official opening of

the school, presided over by then Prime

Minister of Singapore, Mr Lee Kuan Yew,

and the impact it had on him.

Gautam had come to Singapore with

his family when his father transferred

from Mumbai. He was 16 years old at the

time. Having come from a city school in

Mumbai, he says that SIS was, “luxury

beyond imagination, with its nice setting,

greenery, low rise buildings and small

classes.” He says he has many happy

memories of his time here.

When asked if the school influenced

him and his future choices in any way,

he answers, “It opened my mind to

think outside of what was a very narrow

perspective I had had in Bombay. India

was very closed at that time. When I

arrived at SIS however, I was the only

person from India in my class. I studied

with German, Dutch, Australian,

British and Malaysian students. It was

my first exposure to an international

environment—meeting people from

different parts of the world. I had to keep

moving away from my comfort zones. It

made me embrace change and be more

adventurous. I developed an attitude of

go ahead and do it and then work it out.”

That attitude has remained with him

since. A nominated member of Parliament

for Singapore from 2007 to 2009,

Gautam says that when the position was

first proposed to him, his initial reaction

was that maybe this was not a good

time as he had a lot on his plate. But

he decided to go ahead and accept the

position and says that he is very glad he

did. “It was an incredible experience.”

now I see in my children that social

consciousness seems to have been

embedded into their DNA.”

SIS may or may not have been where

he picked up the UWC values of ‘giving

back,’ but Gautam certainly does give

back a significant amount of his time

and talent for his chosen country of

Singapore. He serves as Vice Chairman

of the Singapore Business Federation

and also serves on the Boards of the

Economic Development Board, the

APEC Business Advisory Council and the

Yale-NUS College. He is a member of

the Corporate Governance Council of

the Monetary Authority of Singapore

and the Companies Act Reform Steering

Committee, and since 2007 he has been a

Director of the Singapore Arts School Ltd.

In the past, he has served on the National

Heritage Board. He also participated in

the Singapore Promise Programme and

the Distinguished Speakers Series whose

goals were to attract and retain foreign

and Singaporean talent respectively.

In addition, he and his wife Bashobi have

self-published a couple of children’s books

about their pet dog which Bashobi, a

specialist English teacher, has written. The

book has helped to raise over $10,000 for

the SPCA.

Gautam can be reached through the

UWCSEA alumni website.

Gautam Banerjee

Business leader with UWC values

“It opened my mind to think

outside of what was a very

narrow perspective …”

Gautam and his wife have two children,

a son and a daughter, both of whom have

also now attended UWCSEA. Aside from

coming back to the school for his children,

Gautam came to speak at the 35th

anniversary celebration in 2006 at which

he commented on how the school had

not been good at keeping in touch with

its alumni to that point. Coincidentally,

a dedicated Alumni Relations office had

been established just a couple of months

before that anniversary celebration and

Gautam said he is happy to see that since

that time, the school is making a good

effort to engage the alumni community.

When comparing his experience with

his children’s experience at UWCSEA,

he says, “Social service was just in its

beginning stages in the early ’70s, but

16 OneºNorth May/June 2012

Reunion 2011, celebrated the classes

of 1981, 1986, 1991 and 2001 over the

weekend of 26–28 August 2011. Just

under 300 alumni and guests from over

29 different countries around the world

spent a weekend together in Singapore,

celebrating the 10, 20, 25 and 30 year

anniversaries of their class year groups.

On Friday evening, each of the class

groups mingled at a cocktail reception

to break the ice before heading into the

ballroom for an Asian-themed buffet

dinner. After a lion dance and a couple of

brief speeches, everyone had the chance

to catch up with each other over dinner

and party far into the night.

On Saturday, the class year groups

participated in a number of events, meals

and late-night celebrations organised

by their own class year volunteers.

Some of the members of the Class of

1991 had planned a game of soccer on

the Ayer Rajah pitch Saturday morning,

but perhaps not surprisingly, fewer

players than originally planned, actually

showed up! The rest played valiantly on,

regardless. On Sunday, everyone was

invited back to UWCSEA for a barbecue

lunch and tours led by members of the

Alumni Council, made up of current

Grade 12 students.

The Class of ’91 gathered together after

lunch to relive some memories from the

contents of a time capsule, which had

Reunion 2011!

been buried 20 years ago, just before

their graduation. The time capsule had

been completely forgotten about until it

was dug up a few years ago during some

construction at the College! If you placed

an envelope in the time capsule and

didn’t pick it up at the reunion, it’s waiting

for you in the Alumni Office.

The weekend was a great success thanks

to all the alumni who attended and took

part in the celebrations, many having

traveled back to Singapore from afar.

Hundreds of photos of the weekend have

been loaded to the event calendar of the

alumni site. Feel free to have a look!

We look forward to seeing alumni from

the classes of 1972, ’82, ’87, ’92 and 2002

for Reunion 2012!

OneºNorth May/June 2012 17

18 OneºNorth May/June 2012

Fifth Annual Singapore

December Alumni Get-together,

22 December 2011

Reunions

December 2011 saw the largest

attendance yet at our holiday alumni

get-together in Singapore. Lots of young

alumni who had returned to Singapore

from university for the holidays took this

opportunity to come out and meet up

with other alumni, friends and teachers,

also here for the holidays. Joining us as

well were a good number of alumni who

are now working in Singapore. It was a

great mix of people from a wide range of

class year groups; a total of more than

245 alumni, teachers and guests. Next

year’s event will take place on the 21st.

Reserve the date now!

Perth, Melbourne and Sydney, Australia alumni gatherings,

October 2011

Events were held in Perth, Melbourne and Sydney in October, before and after

a conference which some of the Alumni Department staff were participating in.

Attendance in Perth and Sydney was unfortunately affected by some major sporting

events on at the same time, but Melbourne saw a packed venue. Thanks to those who

made it to any of these events. Hope to see you again next year.

OneºNorth May/June 2012 19

Sixth Annual London Alumni

Get-together, 27 January 2012

The sixth annual alumni gathering in

London took place on a bitterly cold

evening in January, but that didn’t

prevent almost 300 people from

coming along to meet and mingle with

other alumni and guests. This year, a

presentation was given about the history

and evolution of UWCSEA to update

former students on how the College has

maintained the ethos and values that it

has always sought to instill in its students,

while it continues to evolve its teaching

methods and programmes. We look

forward to 18 January 2013.

First Amsterdam Alumni Get-

together, 28 January 2012

The first ever alumni get-together held in

Amsterdam in The Netherlands attracted

a nice group of just under 20 alumni

from a variety of class year groups. It

was a cosy gathering of alumni living,

studying or working in Amsterdam and

the surrounding area. The gathering was

followed by a dinner that many of the

alumni stayed behind to enjoy. We had

several requests to hold another event

there in future, and we hope to be able to

do so next year. Stay tuned.

Hong Kong Alumni Get-together,

16 March 2012

The gathering in Hong Kong, which was

held at the culmination of a week-long

conference that some of the UWCSEA

Foundation and Alumni Relations staff

had attended, included a small but lively

gathering of alumni. A couple of alumni

had recently moved to Hong Kong and

said it was a great opportunity to meet up

with others who are also living there. We

heard that the event may have started

a little too early in the evening for some

of our hard-working alumni (although it

managed to last until quite late into the

evening!), and we’ll keep that in mind for

future events there. The evening was very

enjoyable, and it was great to see and

chat with those of our Hong Kong-based

alumni who were able to make it.

20 OneºNorth May/June 2012

Events and activities at UWCSEA

Just a sample of some of the things taking place at UWCSEA during the year. Thanks to Kengthsagn Louis, Grade 11 National

Committee student from Haiti and member of the Alumni Council, for pulling out some of the highlights from the College calendar.

Dover Campus

mathematician takes gold!

In November 2011, two groups of Grade 9

students participated in an international

school mathematics competition (SIMSC)

with a student from the Dover Campus

winning the gold!

Chinese Language

Department visits the

city of Hibiscus in China

A group of Chinese language students

travelled to Sichuan Province in China to

visit the city of Hibiscus and practise their

Chinese language skills.

A tiger at UWCSEA

A large, striped, furry tiger, the main

character from the story The Tiger Who

Came to Tea by Judith Kerr came in

November 2011 to the K1 classes at

Dover Campus.

Leadership training

for student leaders

UWCSEA High School students have the

opportunity to develop their leadership

skills through a programme of leadership

workshops organised by alumnus Dale

Fisher and teacher Susan Edwards.

Girls Touch Rugby team

wins SEASAC in Jakarta

On a weekend in early February 2012, the

UWCSEA Touch Rubgy girls team regained

the SEASAC championship trophy, winning

a hard-fought final against Tanglin Trust.

Current UWCSEA scholar from

Aceh speaks at East Campus

The UWCSEA scholar from Aceh, Indonesia

gave a memorable and heartwarming

speech during the recent masquerade

ball. He spoke about the opportunity he

has been given to study here and learn to

be a global citizen who can help others,

particularly the people and the country

he loves.

One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest

In October 2011, Grade 9 and 10 drama

students gave a fantastic performance of

the play One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

UN Night!

In October 2011, the annual evening of

cultural diversity took place once again

with a fusion of dance, music and food from

around the world.

The Sound of Music

In December 2011, an amazingly talented

cast of Grade 11 and 12 students gave a

breathtaking performance of The Sound

of Music.

Mother Language Day

In February 2012, students on both

campuses celebrated Mother Language

Day, greeting each other in their own

mother tongue, sharing their language with

others and celebrating their diversity.