Tes International Tes
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- Education
The Tes international podcast brings you the latest insights from international educators across the globe, on everything from the latest teaching and learning strategies, to leadership, CPD, recruitment, and that je ne sais quoi of the international school market.
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Arrivals, departures and the stayers: Helping manage pupil transitions
We chat with Claire Holmes, head of School Counselling at Tanglin Trust School in Singapore to hear about the school's approach to managing pupil transitions - both on arrival and departure - and why including parents in this work is vital.
She also explains why it is important international schools give due focus to 'stayers' - those pupils that remain in a school throughout their education but see many of their friends, and teachers, leave on a regular basis - to ensure this consistent loss does not affect them unduly.
As part of this she also explains why she has written books designed to help schools and leaders do all this as best as possible to ensure wellbeing of pupils - and parents - remains a top priority. -
Staff retention and alumni networks:
In this episode of the Tes International College we head to China to chat with Garry Russell, Head of College at Dulwich College Shanghai (Pudong) and Lavinia Tong, head of Admissions & Marketing, to discus staff retention.
They explain why this is such an important focus for the school and through a mix of career opportunities and ambitious goal setting, coupled with a strong community ethos, they aim to keep staff with the school for as long as possible.
They also talk about how they are developing pupil alumni networks to help build their community feel and ensure past pupil success and life stories can be shared with current cohorts. -
Creating a bespoke leadership curriculum to develop future leaders
In this episode of the Tes International podcast we head to Saudi Arabia to chat with Dr Steffan Sommer, director general of Misk Schools to discuss the school's approach to teaching leadership as part of its standard curriculum.
He explains how the course was developed with links to the High Performance Learning framework, why there is a focus on both subtle, in-lesson ideas, and specific leadership classes, and the need to ensure this work develop leaders ready for the 21st-century.
He also outlines why the school has appointed an independent researcher to evaluate the work with the intention of releasing findings on best practice in this area to help other schools develop similar frameworks in the future - both in the country and around the world. -
Creating a bespoke high school diploma
In this episode of the Tes International podcast we head to Japan to chat with Mark Beales, the principal (MYP/DP) at Osaka YMCA International School, to hear about a bespoke assessment diploma pathway the school created to sit alongside its IB programmes.
He explains why this was formed and how it was created, the importance of having it accredited by WASC, and the work done to make parents, pupils and teachers aware of its purpose within the school's offering. -
Cross-school wellbeing and staff CPD
We chat with Lizzie Varley, an education advisor with Cognita Schools based in the Middle East, to discover how a cross-school focus on student wellbeing encompasses everything from staff development and helping pupils develop a positive mindset to considering how artificial intelligence will change the world children will inhabit and preparing them for this.
She also talks about the importance of senior leadership buy-in towards wellbeing initiatives and how to balance this with pressure to deliver high academic outcomes at scale. -
Rethinking EAL: How to create a whole-school approach
In this episode of the Tes International podcast we chat with Chris Woodhams, assistant principal (Academic) at St. Joseph’s Institution International School in Malaysia about how the school revamped its focus on students with English as an Additional Language (EAL).
He explains how this involved bringing in outside consultants to help identify areas of strength and improvement, doubling its EAL department staff cohort and embedding a whole school approach to EAL including boosting training for staff to do this - and why all of this requires trial and error and giving staff time to develop these skills.