Canadian International School - (Private)
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One important finding from current research is that problem solving remains a challenge to students who are accustomed to learning in isolation – focusing on one subject at a time without seeing real life or cross-disciplinary application.
At CIS, the Alberta Program of Study provides the internationally renowned standards and curriculum framework to support Inquiry-Based Learning (IBL), a student-centered educational philosophy that has proven to increase students’ abilities to problem-solve. Students are presented a guiding question, and then must use their prior knowledge and skills to build direct and meaningful correlations to solve the problem. Math, English, Social Studies, Science, Information and Communication Technology, Fine Arts fuse as they are explored in real life contexts that demand and allow for multiple intelligences to shine.
The more involved students are in the process of learning, the greater the depth and scope of understanding. Engaging students’ minds in the whole process means they are learning how to learn and how they learn. They are learning more about themselves and their world, and ultimately developing a sense of security and belonging.
Facilities
The school is designed to accommodate KG - Grade 12 students with separate wings and play grounds for each division: ECE, Elementary School, Middle School and High School.To meet the Daily Physical Activity and Fine Arts components of the Alberta Program of Studies, a large gym complex includes a 25m swimming pool, gym and activity rooms for music and drama.
CIS has a large science laboratory for the Elementary grades and another two separate chemistry/biology and physics laboratories for the Middle and Senior High students. The labs are equipped with bollards set for gas, sinks, and electrical outlets.
Libraries are places to encourage reading and the love of learning. Age and level appropriate reading material is divided into the KG library, the Elementary library, and the Middle School and High School library.
Curriculum / Programs
Canada is a vast country of ten provinces and three territories, each of which governs its own elementary, secondary and post-secondary education programs. Although students can transfer easily throughout the provinces, there is no national or federal Education Ministry rather, each provincial government’s educational system reflects the diversity of its region while exposing the similarities with the rest of Canada and the world.In the province of Alberta, all Alberta Education accredited schools follow a common and rigorous curriculum for grades 1 to 12. The strength of the Alberta Program is due in part to the continuous evaluation and controlled parameters of its rich curriculum, which specifies learner outcomes for each subject area. Students in grades 3, 6, and 9 take provincial achievement tests to evaluate grade-level standards and expectations, and Grade 12 students write provincial examinations in core subject areas to qualify for an Alberta High School Diploma. This internationally recognized diploma permits students’ entry into university programs throughout North America and the world.
Academically, Canada consistently ranks high in the international student achievement tests in Reading, Math and Science, and Alberta students rank significantly above the Canadian average see Program for International Student Assessment 2003 results. But standardized testing does not tell the whole story. Increasingly, schools are implementing strategies to increase students’ critical thinking and problem solving skills to prepare them for life after high school.
Student-centered learning is an international educational initiative developing in response to our 21st Century global demands for highly skilled and self-directed thinkers. Training students to be problem solvers means providing them with situations that incorporate cross-curricular competencies which is why Alberta Education promotes Inquiry-Based Learning (IBL), a “process where students are involved in their learning, formulate questions, investigate widely and then build new understandings, meanings and knowledge” (Focus on Inquiry, 2004, p.1). IBL is not a textbook or curriculum: IBL is an educational approach that involves administrators, teachers, students and parents in a culture of inquiry – a component of all Alberta Education curricula.
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