GEMS Cambridge International School
The classroom looks like a computer lab. Only that it is eight-year-olds busy on the laptops and iPads as the teacher introduces today’s lesson. It is history for Year 4 pupils.
The classroom looks like a computer lab. Only that it is eight-year-olds busy on the laptops and iPads as the teacher introduces today’s lesson. It is history for Year 4 pupils.
In an ordinary Kenyan school, one would find them
crowding their heads on a dog-eared book that has seen better days. The
lesson would probably be about the origins of “our” people, phenomena
and what to find in the school’s environment.
Not in this school in Nairobi’s Karen
neighbourhood. Here, each of the pupils is glued to a laptop or iPad
with Wi-Fi connection.
Their teacher, Ms Rachel Cain, is also working on a
laptop. Everyone is tech-savvy at Kenya’s trendiest and most expensive
school, the GEMS Cambridge International School. It is arguably
Nairobi’s newest school, being only three months old.
In the history class, Ms Cain is teaching her
pupils how to create historical timelines. She asks each of them to
choose a favourite musician. They are then to search on the Internet and
create a timeline of events that define the musician’s career.
“As you can see,” Ms Cain explains, pointing at
one of the pupils, “this one is dealing with Michael Jackson. The idea
is for them to get creative.”
The pupils trawl the web collecting details and arranging them in a chronological order. No fuss. Everything goes on seamlessly.
The scenario is similar in a separate classroom,
where another “social studies” lesson is on-going. Each of the pupils
has been assigned a topic such as murder, rape and drug abuse to
research on. They are using iPads to obtain information from the
Internet on the topics of their choice.
When the information is gathered each will create a
PowerPoint document on their laptops and use the projector available in
the classroom to make a presentation to the rest of the class.
“They are using the iPads to get pictures and
videos on these topics and transfer them to the laptop for final
presentation,” explains Hannington Mauka, the subject teacher.
This is the trend at the GEMS Cambridge
International School, which opened its doors in September this year. The
British-system school offers the Cambridge school examinations.
Sitting on 17 acres off Magadi Road in the Karen
suburbs, it cost the management Sh3 billion ($35 million) to put up the
campus and install all the learning facilities.
The construction lasted just six months between February and August this year.
In its three months of operation, the school, which has a capacity of 1,080, has admitted 70 pupils of 15 nationalities.
A look at the school and the amenities shows not only quality but also affluence.
One of the managers aptly describes it as a home away from home for the pupils.
It is not a school for the children of the average
wage earner. It would cost a cool Sh22 million to take a child through
the school from the foundation stage (FS) 1 to Year 13. And you won’t
even be done with the secondary education.
Under the British system, one needs to study up to Year 18 before going to university.
Mr Raminder Vig, the director of GEMS Africa and the chief
academic officer at the school, says they will introduce the remaining
five classes from next year.
In Years 12 and 13, the annual fees is Sh1.9 million, tuition being Sh1.2 million and boarding fees Sh700,000.
Between Year 7 and 11, the annual fees is Sh1.7 million, tuition accounting for Sh1.1 million.
The annual fees for Years 3 to 6 is Sh1.6 million, Sh1 million being tuition fees.
Boarding services are not provided to pupils in
Year 2 and below, meaning the charges are lower: Sh882,700 for Year 2,
Sh646,100 for Year 1 and Sh509,600 and Sh464,100 for FS 2 and FS 1
respectively.
But, even before paying the fees, a parent parts
with a non-refundable fee of Sh8,595 ($100) for registration and another
Sh42,975 ($500) as non-refundable admission fee.
Registration is done online and, according to the school’s website, “registration does not guarantee your child a place”.
A tour of the school compound and inside the facilities gives one a feel of quality and finesse.
Even with high temperatures, one is welcomed by a
cool breeze at a spacious reception with glass doors that opens into an
open field.
The imported seats and tables dotting the area underline the ambience at the front office.
Walking along the corridors, you are treated to brightly coloured paintings and murals. Most of these are done by the pupils.
In the classrooms, pupils as young as three years
learn using tablets, laptops and projectors. An iPad costs between
Sh67,000 (16GB) and Sh87,000 (64GB) while a new laptop costs an average
of Sh50,000. The pupils do not share these gadgets during class time.
There are enough to go round.
The pupils learn for 30 hours per week, or six hours per day.
There are no dusty blackboards, chalk and dusters.
The teachers use interactive whiteboards. By last year, 20 per cent of
schools in the UK did not have interactive whiteboards.
A projector beams the computer’s desktop onto the
board’s surface where pupils control the computer using a pen, finger,
stylus, or other devices.
They can also capture and save notes written on a
whiteboard to their personal computers. They also take notes written on a
graphics tablet to the whiteboard.
The pupils control their PCs from the whiteboard using “click and drag” markup.
The whiteboard also has an audience response
system, where pupils making a presentation can poll a classroom audience
or conduct quizzes, capturing feedback onto the whiteboard.
For the extra-curricular activities, the school has a half
Olympic-size, 25m swimming pool, a 400m all-weather running track,
cricket nets and playing fields which complement the indoor sports arena
and multi-purpose hall that includes a drama and dance studio.
The cricket nets are used by batsmen and bowlers.
They consist of a cricket pitch which is enclosed by nets on either
side, to the rear and optionally the roof. The bowling end of the net is
left open.
In addition, there is also a modern auditorium for
pupils to use in performances, plus a separate grass playing area for
pupils in FS 1 to Year 2.
The school further features a science block and five ICT laboratories with computer access also available in the libraries.
Besides the primary libraries, there are two others for the middle school and senior school.
There are also art studios and a design and
technology suite that provides pupils with a wide array of resources for
artistic expression, creativity, exploration and design.
A school nurse takes care of the sick at the
medical dispensary located within the school and there is a stand-by
vehicle to take serious cases to nearby hospitals.
The school’s registrar, Janine Buss, describes the
boarding facilities as a “home away from home” where the pupils’
laundry is done for them by the institution’s employees.
“Security is also top-notch, provided by Ultimate
Security with high walls, electric fences, CCTV on all exits and
egresses as well as day and night security guards patrolling the school
compound,” Buss says.
The lawn is well mowed and watered, rivalling the best golf courses in the country.
When Lifestyle toured the school earlier
in the week, a group of male and female pupils were playing football
with the assistance of two professional coaches.
The school is owned by GEMS Education, which has a global network of schools.
Besides Kenya, GEMS has 80 schools spread in the
United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, United Kingdom,
Switzerland, India, China and America.
Mr Vig says this was the first GEMS school in an
ambitious expansion programme in Africa. A second one will be opened in
Uganda in September next year and others will follow in Nigeria, Ghana
and Tanzania, he says.
GEMS Education is supported by a network of
eminent international advisers, including influential world leaders and
experts who are “game-changers” on the global stage.
The school has strategic partnerships with Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Bill Gates and the World Economic Forum.
Mr Vig said the school is hoping to tap into the
expanding African economies and, in Kenya, play a role in the
realisation of Vision 2030 by preparing young people to push that dream
into reality.
“I believe GEMS Cambridge International School
will create leaders of the future. The school embraces the Kenya 2030
Vision and will develop pupils who can make a real practical impact here
in Kenya as well as in the world,” Mr Vig says.
To achieve this, he says the school has embraced sports and
creative arts as evidenced by the investment in the 400m
international-standard running track as well as a modern auditorium.
“We are also offering vocational subjects to
include science, business studies, technology and sports as part of the
Edexcel BTEC programme,” he adds. “We are going to be creating children
who are confident and independent learners who can face the challenges
the world offers.”
The programme offers a wide range of career
opportunities, including networking, software development, project
management, programming and telematics.
Mr Vig defended the high fees saying there is no substitute for quality education.
“Our fee is justified because the quality of
teaching is exceptional and we guarantee that, with what we are offering
here, every child will succeed,” says the principal.
He says they plan to construct a second,
“affordable” institution possibly by September 2014 in Athi River, where
they have acquired some land.
“This will be a bit cheaper because the annual
fees will be in the region of $1,000 (Sh85,000), $2,000 (Sh170,000) and
$3,000 (Sh255,000),” Mr Vig says.
Neeltje Sherwin, a parent whose daughter Maya is
in FS 2, paying Sh509,600 per year, says she has been paying almost the
same amount in smaller schools that do not match GEMS Education.
She asserts that the quality of education is worth every dollar she is paying.
courtesy of: nation media group
courtesy of: nation media group