International School Magazine - Summer 2018

Page 16

Features

International perspectives from personal experiences – how does that work? Shona McIntosh explores the impact on learners of the IB Diploma’s CAS programme

16

international outlook in IB Diploma students. Examples were not limited to one particular strand of CAS. For Creativity, for instance, one school’s Crochet Club made scarves to send to refugees. For Activity, beach clean-ups and mangrove planting combined physical exertion with global environmental concerns. Through Service, international perspectives were cultivated when students’ activities were linked to worldwide organisations, such as the Red Cross or Amnesty International, or by supporting local organisations tackling issues of global significance, such as homelessness, care of the elderly or animal welfare. The CAS project offers students the chance to develop a sustained response to an international issue. Sometimes this is organised through CAS trips; students return with memorable experiences, having met people – perhaps living in rural or impoverished conditions – they would never otherwise have encountered. However, it should be asked whether memorable experiences are enough, in themselves, to transform students’ personal experiences into international mindedness. Although experience has the potential to lead to learning (Hayden and McIntosh, 2018), the quality of follow-up reflections is a key part of turning any experience into something from which students can learn (Cannings et al, 2015). Our study also made clear that students need to perceive CAS activities as meaningful. An explicit intention to connect with international issues through CAS experiences has the potential to link the

CAS has the potential to do more than create great memories or develop individuals’ skill sets.

Summer |

Winter

Creativity, Activity, Service (CAS) is different from the rest of the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme (DP). It requires students to be creative, to be physically active and to engage in service or volunteering activities. In addition, students complete a project which combines two or more CAS strands. CAS, as part of the DP core which also includes Theory of Knowledge and the Extended Essay, ‘plays a central role’ (IB, 2009: 7) in fulfilling the DP’s aim of ‘developing internationally minded young people’ (ibid., p4). But how do students’ personal experiences of CAS activities help them develop the international perspectives which are fundamental to international mindedness? Evidence from recent academic research provides some examples which can address this question. A team of researchers at the University of Bath’s Department of Education were commissioned by the IB to study the impact of CAS (Hayden et al, 2017). Part of the research used online surveys to establish what activities students undertake to fulfil the CAS requirements (see the word cloud included here) and to report perceptions of its benefits and challenges. Amongst the respondents were almost 8,000 students, largely in the final year of the DP. They came from 89 IB World Schools, located in IB world regions Asia-Pacific (AP) and Africa-Europe-Middle East (AEM). Responses showed strong agreement amongst students that CAS contributes to the development of those attributes for learning enshrined in the IB Learner Profile and those outcomes for which the CAS programme aims, as well as to the development of individual skills such as communication and leadership. However, the connection between individual skills acquisition and developing international mindedness is not immediately clear. Some school-based CAS activities, such as Model United Nations, may encourage a global outlook but many common CAS activities – such as performance in school plays or with the school orchestra, playing for school sports teams, and helping teachers at school events – take place at a decidedly local level. This prompted a consideration of how CAS activities might contribute more intentionally to students’ development of international perspectives. There was evidence in our study that some CAS activities are designed to intentionally foster the development of an

| 2018


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Global Education Race, by Sam Sellar, Greg Thompson and David Rutkowski

5min
pages 65-68

Different experiences leading international schools in China, Barry Speirs

8min
pages 57-60

My first experience of an international school in Malaysia, Vahid Javadi

4min
pages 51-52

Creative adolescents: exploration, expression, entrepreneurship, Hala Makarem

11min
pages 53-56

Reflections on the international boarding school market in Asia

6min
pages 48-50

Science matters: Carbon: versatility exemplified, Richard Harwood

4min
pages 44-45

Navigating border crossings, Colleen Kawalilak and Sue Ledger

5min
pages 46-47

Fifth column: Why bother?, E T Ranger

4min
page 43

Bringing music and mathematics alive through interdisciplinary learning

5min
pages 41-42

No longer a case of ‘Do as I tell you to do’, Natalie Shaw

5min
pages 39-40

Head in the cloud? Saqib Awan

4min
page 36

Dyslexia – an EAL difficulty, a specific learning difficulty – or both?

5min
pages 34-35

Forthcoming conferences

1min
page 33

Journals – more than just a collection of entries, Caroline Montigny

3min
pages 37-38

Teaching and a growth mindset: do we really embrace failure?

5min
pages 25-26

Science is not scary, Briony Taylor Bringing Identity Language into our school

5min
pages 29-30

A space for creativity and innovation, Ruwan Batarseh

5min
pages 27-28

I’m a teenager; I don’t want to talk about myself, Catherine Artist

4min
pages 23-24

Leveraging lunch, Brett D McLeod

5min
pages 20-21

Staying behind – a challenge from the AIE conference

7min
pages 14-15

The Demo Effect Project, Matthew Baganz

5min
pages 18-19

International perspectives from personal experiences – how does that work?

4min
pages 16-17

Please don’t call them TCKs, Melodye Rooney

9min
pages 11-13

comment

4min
pages 5-6

Time for an IB mission review?, Carol Inugai-Dixon

3min
page 22
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.