CULTURE Teaser text goes here. Page X Teetotalism: A look at the club promoting students’ Mark Hoppus: An interview with the Blink-182 singer and abstention from alcohol. Page 15 bassist. Pages 16-17 FEATURES
standard.asl.org standard.asl.org
THE STANDARD
The American American School School in in London London || 11 Waverley Waverley Place Place || London London NW8 NW8 0NP 0NP U.K. U.K. The
December 2011 2012 || Volume Volume XXXVII, XXXVIII Issue Issue IIIIII November-December
Principal to depart Thomas Risinger NEWS EDITOR Principal Paul Richards will move to Saudi Arabia at the end of this school year after accepting a job as the Superintendent of the International Schools Group – Saudi Arabia. A letter was sent to all ASL parents on December 10 to inform them of Richards’ decision to move on after four years at the school.
“We are very happy here, but there are opportunities out there and you have to decide when it is the right time” Paul Richards, Principal
In his new position, Richards will lead a district of seven schools. These schools vary between the American; international and British curriculums. “I will be overseeing all seven schools and working closely with the principals of each of them to ensure that they are the best that they can be,” he said. “There are almost 4,000 students in the schools, some being American and some being truly international.” The seven schools are not all within close proximity of one another. For example, Richards will have to travel by airplane to visit one of his schools that is approximately 900 miles from where he and his family will be living in Yanbu. Due to the cumbersome travel requirements and the fact that his new job involves working at seven different schools, Richards said that his contact with his new, larger student body will be different from how it is now at ASL. “It will be more administrative work, although I do hope to teach a class. However, I do not believe I will be able to coach like I do here,” he said.
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Creativity The Standard explores creativity at ASL and takes a look at several artistic students in the community
CLAYTON MARSH LEAD FEATURES EDITOR | HAMISH STEPHENSON ONLINE EDITOR Pablo Picasso once said, “All children are born artists. The problem is to remain an artist as we grow up.” Everyone is creative, but perhaps we get educated out of our artistic capabilities. Our education system is predicated on the idea of academic ability, and this academic ability has come to dominate our perception of intelligence. Mistakes, in our current education system, are perceived as the worst thing one can make. Educationalist and creativity expert Ken Robinson defines creativity as the process of having original ideas that have value. He believes that, “If you aren’t prepared to be wrong, then
you will never come up with anything original.” Singer Billy Bragg has warned that the U.K. government’s education reforms risk stifling creativity. “At a time of cuts to the education budget, the pressure is on schools to dump subjects like music and drama,” Bragg said. Bragg, delivering the second annual John Peel Lecture at the Radio Festival in November, said, “Under the English baccalaureate, with its reliance on a single end-of-course exam, the child with the creative imagination will always lose out to the child with the ability to recall knowledge learned by rote.”
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