Friday, June 3, 2011

the beginning of the end

Approximately one week ago, the school suddenly became very quiet.
Everyone (well, almost everyone) was gone.

However, before the inevitable end arrived, we had a few events.
Namely, our 'leavers dinner'.
It is not formal by most standards, but it was wonderful. All of the second years yanks a dress or shirt out of their semi-paced suitcases, tames their hair and makes themselves presentable. Then we all gather outside the castle and take about a million photos before we have a lovely dinner in the dining hall.
Speeches are made, staff is thanked and the clapping seems to be endless. Our smiles and laughs echo together around the beautiful hall for one last time. It was a wonderful dinner full of wonderful people.
But it was bittersweet. Beneath all of our smiles we were tears. We all knew that in just over 12 hours we would all be gone.

Nevertheless, the sun was out and so we captured our friends faces in photographs so that we can look back on them and remember how much we love them.


All the girls in my house


Bubo and I


Sarah and I



(this photo is out of order)
This is two days earlier when a group of us went to the nearby lighthouse:






Another event is the 'leaver assembly'. This happens a day before the leavers dinner, while the first years are still on campus. We have a few more speeches, some music and then we all ate lunch outside in the sun.


Most of the Canadians:




Some of my physics class:




the group I went to prom with
Christian and Val, Tuka and I

and
My doormmates!


I miss them all

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

My co-years:




We are at the final hurrah.
I am sad.

Friday, May 20, 2011

This is a little late due to technical difficulties and a lack of Internet access...

I AM DONE WITH EXAMS!!!!!!!!

No more past papers,
no more sitting at my desk for obscene hours of the day,
no more guilty feeling when I do something other than study,
no more cramming of knowledge into my saturated brain,
no more panic about the things I have forgotten,
no more terror of looking at a question I can't answer,
no more stress-induced-grumpiness,
no more exams!

It is a very liberating and strange feeling. I have been working towards the ambiguous 'end of high school' for a long time and now that it is here, I am not completely sure what to do with myself. And my journey with the IB started almost 3 years ago.... so much has happen, so much has changed.

Unfortunately the happy end to exams means the very unhappy end to AC.
I will write more about that later, but for now I am going to lie on the grass and sign yearbooks and soak in the castle by the sea.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Trinity One

Yesterday I was accepted into the Margaret MacMillan Trinity One Program at U of T!!


This means that I will have two seminar classes a week in a class of only 25 learning about international relations.
The classes are based on research and discussion and we get to learn from some of the best professors and speakers at U of T.
http://www.trinity.utoronto.ca/Prospective_Students/trinity_one.htm

I can't wait!!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

the countdown continues

Peace and Conflicts - done!

Math - done!

English - 1/2 done !




Seven days left

Friday, April 29, 2011

ONE DOWN

This morning I had my first IB exam (if you ignore the two french exams I have already done...)
I am officially finished Peace and Conflicts.
It feels wonderful!

But as exciting as it is to have finished one of my five exams, I still have four to go.
The real work begins now.
It will be two weeks of intense work.



Thirteen days left!!!!!!!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Last day of codes!

Today was my last day of highschool classes ever!

hopefully.


And in approximately 21 days I will be done my exams and finished with highschool!!!

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Study time!

The IB exams are frighteningly close and the 2nd years have fallen into study hibernation. It has suddenly become either very easy to find people (because they are always working in their carrel unit) or impossible (they are always working in a hidden carrel unit). I have made a new home in the carrel unit S-14 (aka the 'brit carrel unit' - because 7/8 of the people in it are british) It is (in my humble opinion) the best carrel unit: we have a heater, a window seat with cushions, a kettle, tea, a biscuit jar, recyling shelves and amazing study diagrams all over the walls and ceilings. This is my desk: All my study charts:


Now that these vocab words and equations adorn my walls, I am hoping I will learn them.


A week and a half to the ib!!!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Fire!

Today during fifth code, Sunley house caught fire. Luckily everyone is safe and no one was injured. However, three dorms have been completely and utterly destroyed - and the rest they are unsure about at the moment. However, they are guessing that 7 will suffer from sever water and smoke damage and three will only have minimal damage (relative to the rest of the house). The dorm of Hannah (one of my closest friends) has been completely destroyed - clothes, notes, photos, computer - everything is gone. It is has been a very intense day. But our school has reacted well so far. Sunley house is a bit on shock, but all the students have pitched in to help them out. We have collected piles of clothing, shoes and toiletries. The sunley students have been moved into the house and people are helping them fill their new corners with all of the essentials (including lots of chocolate and hugs). They aren't allowed into their house yet, but I have gone to see it, and it is pretty alarming. No roof. Smashed windows. Gaping holes. Exposed brick. It is the type of thing that you always hear about, but never think will happen. However, I am just proud of how we have been able to come together and support each other. We don't know what caused it, or what exactly will happen next, but I have complete faith in the administration and in my fellow students. I am proud to be an AC student. Two news articles: http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2011/04/12/blaze-outbreak-at-vale-college-91466-28507463/ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-13054490

Monday, April 11, 2011

John Walmsley

Today our school finally announced the new principal: John Walmsley He is currently head of a Quaker school called Sidcot in North Somerset and will assume his new position at this school in January 2012.
~~~
Stephen Cox, Chair of Governors of the College said: “I am delighted John has accepted our offer. His track record of running a successful IB school for over 14 years together with his very broad experience of education in a wide variety of environments makes him an ideal Principal for UWC Atlantic College at this stage of its development and I look forward to working closely with him to ensure we remain at the forefront of international sixth form education.” Paul Whitehouse, Chair of Governors of Sidcot said: “We are delighted that John's hard work at Sidcot has been recognised by another school which very much shares our vision and values. In the last 10 years as Head, John has been instrumental in building the school’s academic success leading Sidcot to be the best non-selective Independent school in Bristol and Somerset for GCSE, A Level and IB. It is now our responsibility to ensure that John’s legacy of ‘happy children learn’ will continue with his successor. We thank John for his commitment to Sidcot and wish him and his family well in their new venture.” On accepting the offer, John Walmsley said: "I am delighted to have been given the opportunity to join the UWC Atlantic College community as Principal from January 2012. UWC Atlantic College and the UWC movement is an educational idea that I have been interested in all my professional life and it will be an immense privilege to lead the college in the next stage of its development. The founding principles of the UWC movement have more relevance than ever in today's complex world. One of my main aims will be to confirm UWC Atlantic College as a world centre of excellence for truly international education that promotes peace and cultural understanding and that works to remove the roots of conflict. I very much look forward to moving to St. Donat's with my family in January of next year."
~~~
I personally think he was the best candidate of the three I saw, and so I am pleased with the decision. However, only time will tell if he will be able to move this school in a positive direction.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Japanese Fisherman Dance

Here are some students doing the Japanese fisherman Dance at our international show: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXTnD2kYC-8 It is the most physically intense dance I have ever seen!

Saturday, March 26, 2011

BBC

BBC Coast did a feature on AC's beautiful St. Donat's Castle.
It explains how William Randolph Hearst repaired the castle and indirectly made it suitable for generations of AC students to come and live in it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTvyz-WXco4

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Spring has come

The daffodiles have bloomed
The lambs are being born
The sun has shown it's face
Spring has come


So now, instead of studying for my exams all day in my room
I can study for my exams all day outside!

Life is beautiful

Thursday, March 10, 2011

U of T

I GOT INTO THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO!
(Trinity college)

Thursday, March 3, 2011

TRIAL EXAMS ARE OVER!

Time for spring break!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Happy St. David's Day

Today is the Welsh National Day.
Happy St. David's Day everyone!

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Ironclad

Last year they did some filming at our school.
We never really knew exactly what they were filming, and all we could really see was men dressed as soldiers walking around talking on cellphones (a very odd sight), lots of trucks with props, and a group of horses that would trot around campus.

However, the film is coming out this year and so there is now a fabulous trailer which depicts a group of dirty men defending my castle.
It is not the type of film that I would normally watch, but I think I will have to, just so that I can yell "I LIVE THERE".

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS43OEmPUB8

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Mock exams

The IB has this lovely time of the year where we pretend that we are taking our exams.
These are called mocks.
I supposed they are named this because they are not the real things - they are just mock-ups.
But to be honest I feel like they are mocking me.

They are taunting me with all of the knowledge I am supposed to have but don't.
It is rather annoying.

And what's worse is that instead of having them over a month (like the real exams), they are over a week.
Which means that today I had four exams papers (seven hours!).
My hand hurts.

On the up side, when this is over we have a five day weekend for spring break.

Wish me luck!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

I Don't Like Trees

My friend, Lindsay, wrote this article about climate change:

I don‘t like trees. Simple. I don‘t hug them, I don‘t particularly think they‘re beautiful and more to the point I don‘t really care about them. I don‘t have an issue with them, or the rest of the natural world for that matter, but I certainly would not give up my time to save them.

Yet, I have a reputation for all of the above. I get questioned when I say that I don‘t appreciate the beauty of the natural world. People don‘t understand why I don‘t like being called an environmentalist. I‘m asked why I want to save the trees when I don‘t care about them. The answer is simple; because my passion is people.

When I was growing up I wanted to eradicate poverty; I read Marx and believed that it was the Gospel. I was convinced that my aim in life was to achieve global equality. Yet because of the people I was surrounded by I got drawn into climate change campaigning. I was forced to learn about it and it didn‘t take long until I realised that it was not worth caring about anything else; because what was the point in creating equality if it got destroyed by the climate. Why campaign on the rights of a certain peoples if those peoples are simply going to be wiped out in a century?

And the more I learn the more convinced I am of this. Every African leader who I saw speak in Cancun said the same thing; they‘re number one priority was poverty eradication, but to achieve that they needed to fight climate change; therefore their number one priority was climate change. Climate change currently looks to only exacerbate the gap between rich and poor, to lessen the rights of underrepresented peoples, and to further the tensions in the war hotspots of the world.

Yet at the same time my revolutionary ideas were squashed. I felt we simply did not have the time to have a revolution to deal with climate change; we had to use the channels already open. Yet the more I think about it the more I feel that this isn‘t quite true. Yes; we need to use the channels open to us. But no, we cannot continue with capitalism as we know it. To this end climate change and its impacts present a unique opportunity to reform our economic system to a more equal one. It demonstrates clearly that we cannot work on a system of exponential growth when we are living on a finite planet; finally our leaders know that something needs to change.

The more meetings I sit in on, the more faith I lose that we are going to curb the affects of climate change. To me it is unlikely that we shall ever avoid at least a 2 degree rise in our global temperatures. But nonetheless we must strive for 'climate justice‘. We must use this as an opportunity to re-invent our economic model to fit our finite resources, and our depleting oil. We must adapt the world we live in; not because of the trees but in order to sustain the human race. If we continue to live the way we are living as climate change gets worse we will self-destruct. Everyone in the world who believes in economic development must realise the necessity to adapt to changing circumstances.

I appreciate that some of this may be controversial; and I do not belittle those who still work towards mitigation. But I strongly believe that this fight is no longer about switching of lights or recycling. It is about the necessity to completely change the way we think in order to sustain the human race in a global situation totally different to the one we see today. If you like polar bears and trees, and trying to save them will motivate you; then that‘s fine. But if you‘re passion is development, or equality, or poverty eradication; then we need you in this fight. For it is, at the end of the day, new economic and political thinkers who will enable the survival of the human race in the 'post-apocalyptic‘ world

Friday, February 18, 2011

Photography

Every term I have to officially join two activities (and can do as many as I want unofficially).
This term I am working in the library and - more excitingly - doing photography.

So far, I am loving photography. A woman from outside the college comes and for two hours we do a mixture of theoretical and practical learning. Usually, we do some theory at the beginning and then are given a small task and are set loose to do it.
We have been looking at the basics like: aperture, shutter speed and ISO.
And then working on how to adjust them depending on what type of photo we are taking: moving object, portrait, lights in a dark room etc.

Here are a few of the photos I have taken so far:
Light streaks

Long shutter speed, with a flash every 5 seconds

Light graffiti

abstract

working on depth of field

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Have you got talent?

Last night was our school's annual talent show:
'AC's Got Talent'.

There are three teachers who are the judges, and then there are about 12 acts.
This year was very well done and was a great mix of good talent and comedy.

The three runner-ups were:
- A group of First year boys dancing
- A Russian girl doing cultural dancing
- Drumming (I didn't know one drum could make so many different sounds)

and the winners were:
-'Billiaume' a dance routine by Bill and Aliaume based off of this video. It was so good! I couldn't stop laughing.

It was a good night and reminded me how amazing some of the people at my school are.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Ceilidh!

I wrote and article about our Ceilidh (traditional Scottish dance) for my school's website.
They have started putting up little blog posts by different students.
Most of them are basically about the author's day (so that prospective students know what to expect), but because I have been sick my days have been rather boring and so I opted to write about the last big event we had:
http://www.atlanticcollege.org/student-diary-blogs/

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Weekend Part 2

This update is terrible late. sorry!
But in my defense I have been quite ill for the past week and so I haven't had much access to the Internet.
Anyways, this is the second half of my weekend (which is now from two weeks ago) and is about the Peace and Conflict Conference that we had:

The second part of my weekend was even better than the first because on Monday and Tuesday we had no classes, but instead we had a Peace and Conflicts conference.
It was a great success.
I think it went so well because it was a good mix between student and staff organization. My peace and Conflicts teacher, along with some other teachers and my vise principal, was very involved, but students also had a large role in the organization and execution of the conference.
I think it was good for the students to have a say, but I think that the teacher involvement allowed it to be more professional, and we were able to have some amazing speakers come.

Monday focused on global issues and was a mixture of lectures and workshops.
In the morning we had a man names Ray McGrath (who won a Noble Peace Prize for his involvement in the banning of land mines) give a lecture. He talked about war laws and the ways in which governments and the public view war. I found one quote that he had very interesting: “So long as weapons are not prohibited, states can use the weapons that are available to them” (British government). It was a very interesting beginning to the conference and I think it really made people think about the absurdities of war.
For the rest of the morning and for the afternoon, there were a bunch of different workshops. Students ran some of them and the speakers (such as Ray McGrath) ran other ones.

I was running one of the workshops. I did my ee on child soldiers and so I was asked to run a workshop in the topic of child soldiers, which I was very pleased to do, with the help of a 1st year in my house: Vincent (Kenya). I was bit nervous about how it would go, but in the end I think it was very successful. The workshop was completely full, which was awesome and extra people came to a few of them. The workshop was a mixture of videos, discussions and me talking. I gave a fair amount of information on what child soldiers are, where they are why they are used, and what is being done etc. I then showed a clip from the film War Dance of a boy recounting his experience as a child soldier in Uganda. Then at the end, I raised some questions about the topic such as: when is a child a child and when are they a soldier? And what should be done when a conflict is over?
It was really interesting to see what people thought and some of the discussions were quite good.

I was lucky enough to also be able to go to two different workshops, just to listen.
1) I went to one of Ray McGrath’s workshops and we talked about disproportionate retaliation and how to change public opinion on the way that governments fight their wars.
2) I went to a talk that was done by an Israeli and a Palestinian student about the conflict. It was really interesting to listen to them talk about the conflict from the two different points of view.


The second day of the conference was more focused on conflicts within the college. In the morning, we ate breakfast in our houses and had discussions about some of the broader issues at our school (such as: cultural differences, and communication issues). The day was ended with a peace flame that we lit.

So, overall it was a very successful and enjoyable conference.

I feel like I left satisfied with what I had done and with what I had learned. I was given new ideas about how to overcome difficulties on both global and personal levels. Although I did sometimes wonder if some of the simplifications of conflicts was accurate, I loved it.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Mcgill

I GOT ACCEPTED TO MCGILL!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Weekend 1.5

I wrote an article for the School's MUN newspaper from when I was the Admin for the General Assembly (see blog post below for explanation):

“Bang! Bang! Bang!”

The very serious and focused debate of the African delegates in the General Assemble stopped as everyone stopped and looked up at the window.

“Let me in!” mouthed a frantic and slightly wild-eyed student (who’s name shall not be disclosed for security reasons) from outside the classroom. He banged on the window again and one of the admins, who was sitting beside the window, swung it open wide. The next second the student had propelled himself through the window and landed on the desk. Unfortunately for him, he landed on a piece of paper, slide across the desk, and hit the floor, with a rather loud thud.

For a spilt second the room was silent – unsure of how to react to this completely barbaric intrusion of their civilized discussions.

But the silence was quickly filled with more yelling:
“I’ve got him” yelled one of the (slightly overzealous) members of the security.
The room barely had time to glance back at the window when a second person had flung themselves through the window and landed on the desk, barely missing the head of the Somali delegate. He, too, slid across the desk and practically landed on the un-named student. The security guard had grabbed the student and hauled him out of the room before anyone had drawn a breath.


There was another second of silence and then the debating begun where it had left off. It was just another day in AC, where nothing ridiculous ever happens.

Weekend Part 1

On Friday and Saturday (and part of Sunday) we had our annual Model United Nations conference.
This year was especially exciting because we had students from nearby schools come and participate in the conference.
Due to the fact that I had a lot of work to do for Monday (wait for part 2 to hear more about that), I didn’t plan on going to both days of the conference. Therefore I planned to be the ‘admin’ in one of the committees (this means that I would pass notes and communicate between the chair of the conference and the chairs of the committee etc.). However, my day did not go exactly as planned. I started out in the general assembly, but after one of the delegates was forcibly removed by some of the overzealous ‘security’, the chair of my committee requested that I go get him back. After finding him, I found out that the delegate of the United Kingdom for the Security Council hadn’t shown up and so they had taken our delegate to replace the missing one.
In the end I volunteered to become the delegate of the United Kingdom.
In the end, I had a fairly pleasant day. Unfortunately I hadn’t done any research and so I made up a lot of stuff, but as it turned out the topic was ‘cyber-terrorism’ and so lots of delegates had been unable to find their countries stance on the issue and were making it as they went too.
By the end of the day a few working papers had been written and were ready to be presented the next morning. However, just as we were about to leave, we were visited by the terrorists (who eluded capture by the security all weekend). They locked us in our room and refused to let us out until we passed a resolution meeting all of their demands. Although I thought it was funny, their demands were a bit on the impractical side instead of the amusing side (i.e. allow anyone to attend the Security council meetings, and for all governments to give up all of their government secrets), and so there wasn’t really any point in even pretending to write a resolution. In the end we sat around and told them that this was ridiculous while they sprayed us with water guns, and they eventually let us go to dinner.

Although I didn’t participate the second day (although I did attend a meeting with some of the terrorists and helped do a small amount of spying for them), I am glad that I was able to a little bit on the Friday.

Then on Saturday night we had a masquerade ball. I made a butterfly mask and borrowed some wings and danced the night away.

It was a great beginning of the weekend

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Surprise!

You know you have good friends when:
They surprise you with a birthday showering on your half birthday!

This past Thursday was my half-birthday, which is not something that I would normally celebrate or notice. However, because my birthday is in the summer, I have never celebrated it at school (I have never brought cupcakes for the class, or has the whole class sing for me, or {as is tradition at AC} been thrown ceremoniously into the shower)
However, I have some pretty amazing friends, and they didn't want me to miss out on this fabulous part of AC life.
And so, they began to scheme.

On Wednesday night (because it is a weird tradition to have the showering the day before some one's birthday... long story) I was sitting in Hannah's room chatting when her phone rang. She picked it up and then looked me and said "apparently Nora {who is my roommate} is having a mental breakdown". So I ran back to my house to see if she was okay.
When I arrived at my house I saw that Nora was sitting in the dayroom surrounded my a group of my friends. I ran inside and gave her a biiiig hug. She seemed to be fine.
I then looked around the room and realised that there were waaay more people than usual, which I though was strange. I began to think that it was someone's showering and started to rack my brains to remember who in my house had a birthday the next day.
Suddenly, people began to sing. I looked around trying to see who they were singing for, when I felt myself being picked up.
WHAT?!?
Turns out they were singing for me!!

They then carried me into the bathroom stuck me under the shower, and threw buckets of water on me (I would like to thank them for throwing water water and soap... not cold water and flour).

I have always wanted a surprise party and this was probably the best one I could have ever thought of. Despite the fact that I was freezing and soapy, I hugged everyone and stood beaming in the middle of my dayroom like an idiot.

I am so lucky to have such amazing (and stealthy) friends!

Saturday, January 15, 2011

UBC

This time of year universities are a particularly hot topic.

People who applied early to the US have already heard
And people in the UK are beginning to hear sporadically:
some are getting offers (grades they must meet in their exams to be accepted)
and
some are getting rejected.

I think all of the second years are a bit sick of the topic
and some people are getting very nervous because they haven't heard anything yet
but still
we still talk about it.

I, too, have been waiting.
I check my university accounts to see if anything has changed so often that it is a bit like a nervous tick.
I know I should probably chill out a little bit, but I am nervous that I have accidentally filled something out wrong and I am worried that my transcripts won't get there in time (which is actually justified because my transcripts for mcgill are due on the 21st and they should have arrived about 3 weeks ago... but they aren't there yet).

And yet, despite all of the chaos:
I got into UBC!!

and I quote:
"You were offered admission on January 12, 2011. A letter advising you of this decision, which includes registration information, has been mailed to you."

woooot!
to be perfectly honest, it is not my top choice (or even my second choice), but it feels good to know that I have gotten in somewhere (although I would like to know what I need in my final grades to stay accepted... or to know if it is an unconditional offer...)

University Here I Come!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The same.

So far life has been racing past - just as if I never left.

I have deadlines already.
I have ridiculous university essays to write.
It is raining.
The sheep are hanging out in the field.
Everyone looks familiar (despite the multitude of hair cuts).
My room is cozy.
The food is the same.
The corridors are still echo-y.
My weekend is already full.

I feel at home.


(If you are interested in reading an article about the fashion show that was done at my school at the end of the last term, go here.)

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Back to school

I HAVE RETURNED!

One term left.