ADST with Grades 6 and 7

This year, students in Grade 6 and 7 are taking classes in Applied Design, Skills, and Technologies (ADST) as part of the new BC curriculum. Through ADST, students have the opportunity to design, build, and experiment with new technologies. They learn to test, reflect and modify their designs and then share their designs with an audience. Throughout the experience, students better understand the design making process through class discussions, design journals, and self-reflections.

Students experimenting with light and shadow

Students choose from six ADST modules and take three different modules over the year based upon their choices. The modules include Yearbook with Mr. Reimer; Shadow Puppets with Ms. Webb and Ms. Grundvig; Dream it, Design it, Build it with Mr. Camp and Ms. Ling; Clothing Conscious with Ms. Regan and Ms. Chevreau; and Tree-preneurship with Ms. Comeau.

Chinese shadow puppets

For the shadow puppets module, students played with traditional shadow leather puppets from China and Indonesia and learned more about the 2000-year-old history of this endangered art form. Using a large white screen and an overhead projector, students had fun exploring the properties of light with simple paper puppets and small objects. Over the next few weeks, they will work in small groups to design and build their own puppets, write a story based on a folk or fairy tale and then create a shadow puppet play for the primary grades using light, shadow, and music.

Chris Cropley Receives Outstanding Educator Award from the University of Chicago

Christopher Cropley

On October 16th, we were delighted to present Senior School History Teacher Chris Cropley with the University of Chicago’s Outstanding Educator Award.

This distinguished award has existed for more than three decades. Each year, the University invites first-year students to nominate an educator an educator who has influenced them, challenged them, or helped them along the path toward intellectual growth. They receive letters back from hundreds of students, inspired by teachers who have changed the course of their lives, who taught them to re-imagine texts, to delve deeper into problem-solving, and to think beyond the borders of the classroom in the pursuit of their own education.

Congratulations Mr. Cropley!