2 minute read
SPIRIT OF SERVICE
Sitting at the core of the IB Diploma Programme, CAS (Creativity, Activity, Service) is the counterbalance to a demanding course of study. It guides students by helping them to avoid focusing solely on grades, encouraging them to maintain a healthy life balance.
The students here at Southbank International are incredibly imaginative and creative, and with strong social consciences. They’re ambitious when it comes to choosing how they can get involved in all of the CAS strands, including how to give back through service. After the restrictions of recent years, it is great to see a revival of connections with the local area, and the authentic and positive impact of our students’ work.
We aim to centre CAS service around what is going on in the world currently. On a local level, we have found ways to support the homeless – important to us as an innercity school in London. Recently, students fundraised for St Mungo’s and Centrepoint. The latter charity specifically caters for young people on the streets (something that particularly resonated with our students).
Our students have volunteered in nearby soup kitchens and charity stores, and learnt how to cook healthy and transportable meals, delivering them to unhoused people in the local area. They have worked in community gardens, collected rubbish around Regent’s Park and organised clothes and coat drives. They have also spent time at The Children’s Book Project, sorting and sending o books.
In a recent CAS workshop on the cost-of-living crisis, I collaborated with an economics teacher who helped students to understand inflation. In the follow-up session, we noted the increased impact of rising inflation. Students decided they were able to take action themselves through the service element of advocacy by writing letters and marketing via their own social media channels. This meant, for instance, they could lend their support to nurses on strike. As a group, we also identified The Trussell Trust and FoodCycle as valuable organisations to work with to help make a di erence for those a ected by food poverty in the area.
My colleagues and I see time and time again just how beneficial the service strand of CAS is for our students at Southbank. It helps them to develop relationships, both at school and within the wider community.
CAS encourages them to understand the challenges and needs of others, and to feel good about helping – even in small ways. It is part of the ethos of the school to develop that social conscience and to trigger connection and purpose.
Many of our students are international, and some are very recent arrivals in London. By connecting them with the local community in the very meaningful ways that CAS o ers, we can also help them familiarise themselves with their city by making a positive impact – and feel a sense of belonging.
Through the CAS programme we want to plant seeds of interests, passions, habits and routines that might continue for many years after our students graduate, so that as they grow and enter the world of work, they can carry these forward.