UWC Mission and Movement
The UWC Mission: UWC makes education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a sustainable future.
At the heart of everything we do at UWCSEA is our universal mission, it guides every decision we make as we strive to educate individuals to embrace challenge and take responsibility for shaping a better world.
As part of the global UWC movement, at UWCSEA we believe that education is about more than just academic success, or securing a university place. Education is a means to inspire students in all aspects of their development, to discover what connects us all as humans, and to act as champions for a future world of peace, collaboration and understanding for all.
The UWC Movement
The UWC Movement was founded by Kurt Hahn, a German educator whose ideas on education were crystallised by the destruction he witnessed during the First and Second World Wars. In 1958 Hahn was inspired by the cooperation between former adversaries he witnessed at a NATO Staff Conference and became convinced that future conflicts could be prevented by educating young people from around the world together. He believed that education should prepare young people for a life with service, leadership and meaningful action at its heart. From this belief in the power of education to change the world, the UWC Movement was born, with a Mission to make education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a sustainable future.
Today there are 18 UWC schools and colleges around the world, with UWCSEA in Singapore the largest of these. All students are selected on the basis of their potential to have a positive impact on their local and global community. As well as providing an international education for young people living in Singapore, each year more than 100 students from all over the world attend UWCSEA on a scholarship.
These scholarship students are, for the most part, selected by each UWC National Committee, and not directly by the school or college. Operating in vastly different contexts and circumstances across over 130 countries, the unifying factor of the National Committees is their ability to seek out the most promising students in their communities who have potential to bring the UWC Mission to life. The individual committees manage their own annual selection process which they have designed to best suit their community, and the educational backgrounds of the applicants.
The world has changed since Hahn founded Atlantic College, the first UWC, in Wales, UK in 1962. But the UWC educational philosophy, with a focus on academic achievement, leadership and service to others continues to be as relevant today as it was when the Movement was founded.
About Educationalist, Kurt Hahn
"I regard it as the foremost task of education to insure the survival of these qualities: an enterprising curiosity, an undefeatable spirit, tenacity in pursuit, readiness for sensible self denial, and above all, compassion.”
Kurt Hahn, Founder of the UWC movement
Born in 1886, the son of a wealthy German industrialist, Kurt Hahn was educated in Germany and then in Oxford, before World War I brought him back to Germany. His early interest in education as a force for good was crystallised by the destruction he witnessed during the war, and in 1920 with the support of Prince Max von Baden, the last imperial chancellor in Germany, founded Salem School in Germany. The school was based on respect for the individual, responsibility to the community and an awareness of the importance of the democratic process in sustaining both.
In 1933, Hahn was exiled to the UK after speaking out against the Nazis, and shortly after founded Gordonstoun School in Scotland, based on the four pillars of internationalism, challenge, responsibility and service. Hahn believed that school should be a preparation for life, not just for university, and that education should help students to develop resilience and the ability to experience failure as well as success.
The ideals of Gordonstoun were partly manifested in an enormous emphasis on outdoor activities, particularly seamanship and mountaineering. In 1941, more and more convinced of the importance of learning outside the classroom, Hahn established Outward Bound, with a founding mission to give young people the ability to survive harsh conditions at sea by teaching confidence, tenacity and perseverance—some of the many skills and qualities we develop at UWCSEA through our Outdoor Education programme today. Fifteen years later, in 1956, Hahn founded the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award, which continues to encourage young people to challenge themselves through service, physical recreation and adventure. Today, students from both UWCSEA campuses continue to complete the requirements for the Duke of Edinburgh’s award, known in Singapore as the National Youth Achievement Award.
The founding of the UWC Movement in 1962 was the culmination of Hahn’s thinking about education. While attending the 1958 NATO Staff Conference, he was inspired by the cooperation he witnessed between former adversaries from World War II. He thought that if we could educate young people from around the world together, we could prevent future conflicts. From this belief in the power of education to change the world, the UWC Movement was born, with a Mission to make education a force to unite people, nations and cultures for peace and a sustainable future. In 1962, the first UWC, Atlantic, was opened in Wales. UWC South East Asia was opened in 1971 as the Singapore International School, and so the story of UWCSEA began.
Kurt Hahn went on to found the Round Square organisation in 1967, while in the same period Atlantic and the UWC Movement worked with the International School of Geneva and the United Nations School in New York to develop the International Baccalaureate curriculum. UWCSEA was the first school in Asia to offer the IB Diploma, which was introduced as an alternative to A Levels in 1977 on the Dover Campus. In 2014, the East Campus welcomed its first cohort of IB Diploma students who graduated in 2016. Both campuses have also been active members of Round Square for over 10 years.
Hahn died in Germany in 1974. The entry in Britain’s Dictionary of National Biography calls him “headmaster and citizen of humanity.”
There is no doubt that Hahn had an enormous impact on the world of education.
He championed the importance of developing the whole person, and based his thinking on the ideals of a holistic, experiential, values-based education. His lifelong belief was that education could help instill important qualities in the leaders of tomorrow, being “Confidence in effort, modesty in success, grace in defeat, fairness in anger, clear judgement even in the bitterness of wounded pride and readiness for service at all times.”
The world is a very different place since Hahn founded the UWC Movement in 1962. But his educational philosophy, with a focus on academic achievement, leadership, experiential learning and service to others has remained, and will continue to provide our students with a unique learning experience for many more years to come.