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The concept of Round Square was conceived in 1966 and owes much to the heritage of [[Kurt_Hahn |Kurt Hahn]], who founded two of our original member schools, [[Schule Schloss Salem]] in Germany, with [[Prince Max of Baden]], and [[Gordonstoun]] in Scotland. Both schools were founded on a commitment to equip youth for leadership and service in a democracy by helping them to prepare for life despite hardships, dangers, and challenges of the moment.
The concept of Round Square was conceived in 1966 and owes much to the heritage of [[Kurt_Hahn |Kurt Hahn]], who founded two of our original member schools, [[Schule Schloss Salem]] in Germany, with [[Prince Max of Baden]], and [[Gordonstoun]] in Scotland. Both schools were founded on a commitment to equip youth for leadership and service in a democracy by helping them to prepare for life despite hardships, dangers, and challenges of the moment.


In 1966, [[King Constantine]] of the Hellenes, a former pupil of [[Anavryta]] (later a founding Round Square Member School), Chaired a meeting of the Heads of seven schools and proposed an idea.
In 1966, [[[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_II_of_Greece|King Constantine]]]] of the Hellenes, a former pupil of [[Anavryta]] (later a founding Round Square Member School), Chaired a meeting of the Heads of seven schools and proposed an idea.


The idea, developed between Jocelin Winthrop-Young, a pupil of both schools and later the Headmaster of [[Anavryta]] school, the Markraf of Baden and His Majesty, was the creation of an international alliance of schools. Their binding principles would derive from Kurt Hahn‘s teachings, and whose students might be prepared to provide practical support to communities in need, as Salem’s pupils had done after the earthquake at Argostoli in the Ionian Islands in 1954. The association was later named after the Round Square building at Gordonstoun, where the first conference took place in 1967.
The idea, developed between Jocelin Winthrop-Young, a pupil of both schools and later the Headmaster of [[Anavryta]] school, the Markraf of Baden and His Majesty, was the creation of an international alliance of schools. Their binding principles would derive from Kurt Hahn‘s teachings, and whose students might be prepared to provide practical support to communities in need, as Salem’s pupils had done after the earthquake at Argostoli in the Ionian Islands in 1954. The association was later named after the Round Square building at Gordonstoun, where the first conference took place in 1967.

Revision as of 11:54, 2 February 2015

Round Square
TypeInternational Organization of Member Schools
Membership
New schools inducted by election of member schools
Official language
Working language is English
Websitewww.roundsquare.org

The Round Square is a not-for-profit network of schools in 40 countries on five continents that collaborate on a holistic approach to learning. The Round Square approach guides students into becoming well-rounded, informed, responsible, principled and confident global citizens. The Round Square schools build and benefit from a mutually supportive network that shares resources, ideas, methods, experience, opportunities, locally, regionally and internationally.

History

The concept of Round Square was conceived in 1966 and owes much to the heritage of Kurt Hahn, who founded two of our original member schools, Schule Schloss Salem in Germany, with Prince Max of Baden, and Gordonstoun in Scotland. Both schools were founded on a commitment to equip youth for leadership and service in a democracy by helping them to prepare for life despite hardships, dangers, and challenges of the moment.

In 1966, [[[Constantine]]] of the Hellenes, a former pupil of Anavryta (later a founding Round Square Member School), Chaired a meeting of the Heads of seven schools and proposed an idea.

The idea, developed between Jocelin Winthrop-Young, a pupil of both schools and later the Headmaster of Anavryta school, the Markraf of Baden and His Majesty, was the creation of an international alliance of schools. Their binding principles would derive from Kurt Hahn‘s teachings, and whose students might be prepared to provide practical support to communities in need, as Salem’s pupils had done after the earthquake at Argostoli in the Ionian Islands in 1954. The association was later named after the Round Square building at Gordonstoun, where the first conference took place in 1967.

Philosophy

Round Square schools are characterised by a shared belief in an approach to education based on six pillars, or IDEALS, drawn from the theories of education philosopher Kurt Hahn:

  • International understanding, empathy and tolerance for all cultures
  • Democratic governance and justice
  • Environmental stewardship
  • Adventure, motivating self-discovery and courage
  • Leadership, with courage and compassion
  • Service to others

The common goal is to develop every student into a whole person through academic, physical, cultural and spiritual experiences. The RS method recognises that learning is most effective when it is experiential, cross-cultural and collaborative, and when it is infused through a broad spectrum of inter-, extra- and intra-curricula activities.

There are more than 60 Round Square schools in Africa, Australia, Asia, Continental Europe, India, the Middle East, North America, South America, and the United Kingdom.

Activities

Student exchanges

Students at any Round Square schools may go on an exchange for a semester to any of the other schools. Thus both schools benefit from the experience of direct interaction with people from another part of the world.

Round Square International Service Projects

Round Square International Service (RSIS) Projects embody all six pillars through community service projects, such as raising a new building. Over a school break, students from Round Square schools converge on a single location, often one of the less privileged schools, where they work on a project. The materials required for these projects are raised through the Prince Alexander Fund and do not require funding from attending students.

Conferences

There are a conferences that allow student delegates to meet from around the world and progress Round Square.

Round Square International Conferences

Annually, an international conference is held at one or more member school(s). All Round Square schools are invited to attend and through the conference student delegations have the opportunity to meet and discuss issues related to the IDEALS principles with an international group of their peers. The 2014 conference was hosted in the South Asia and Gulf region of Round Square in India and Jordan. The 2015 conference will be hosted in Singapore at United World College of South East Asia, on both campuses (East and Dover).

References