Fall/Winter 2011
The Newsletter of Atlanta International School
Globetrotter
In This Issue 4
AIS Technology Highlights
8
Eagle Athletics Report
9
Worldfest
15
Legacy Scholarship
19
Christmas Market
Atlanta International School (AIS) offers the International Baccalaureate (IB) to all its students from four-year-old kindergarten through grade 12. By delivering a rigorous academic program combined with world-class standards in language acquisition within an open-minded, intercultural environment, AIS prepares its students to succeed in a globally connected world. For more information, please contact us at 404.841.3840 or visit us online at www.aischool.org.
Seated, Alex Horsley, Founding Headmaster of AIS with, from left, Olga Plaut, Founder of AIS, Deb Sudbury, Board of Trustees Chair, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, Kevin Glass, Headmaster, Roy Plaut, Founder of AIS
AIS Honors Founding Headmaster at Groundbreaking for New Early Learning Center By Gordana Goudie, Globetrotter Guest Editor A close-knit group of friends gathered on a patch of land on Peachtree Avenue under a leaden sky this November to honor a man who made a dream come true. Alex Horsley, founding headmaster of Atlanta International School (AIS), answered a job posting in 1984 to lead an international school in Atlanta that had no students and no building. Unperturbed, he took on the challenge. Today, AIS is considered to be one of the top ten international schools in the world. At the November 15 groundbreaking ceremony of the AIS Early Learning Center, the school community recognized the immense contribution of their first leader and named the new building after him. The latest addition to the AIS campus, which is set to open in August 2012, will house the school’s youngest learners, three- and four-year-old students, in full immersion programs in French, German or Spanish. The Alex Horsley Building is located on Peachtree Avenue across the road from the Adair Art, Science and Design Center (ASD). The purpose-built, residential-scale facility will include eight classrooms with retractable walls, a large multi-purpose room, offices, a conference room, and a small warming kitchen. Indoor classroom space will be enhanced by immediate access to an outdoor play and educational area to which all classrooms open. With the opening of the new Early Learning Center next fall, AIS will have entry points to the school at 3K, 4K and 5K. The full immersion program for three- and four-year-olds in Spanish, French and German will enable these students to better prepare for their entrance to the International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) in the primary school. “You have no idea of the emotion and the love that is swirling around this moment, this school…” said Kevin Glass, AIS headmaster, as he opened the ceremony. The dedication of the new facility to Horsley who, at the time of the ceremony was in hospice with cancer, is particularly poignant since the idea to provide the Atlanta community with full immersion programs for early learners was born when AIS first opened, and had been one of Horsley’s dreams for the school. With the groundbreaking event and the naming of the building after Horsley, AIS came full circle. continued