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The Aga Khan Approach & School History |
Achievements |
School Facts |
Facilities |
Education Service |
International Partnerships |
FAQs
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The School is part of several
unique partnerships and associations that have
been formed with leading academic institutions,
including institutions in North America, Europe,
Africa and Asia. These partnerships contribute
to the quality of the curriculum and to the
professional development programmes. They also
ensure that the Academies maintain and enhance
their international standing.
Of particular note is the International Academic
Partnership (IAP), which includes Phillips Academy
in the United States, the Schule Schloss Salem
in Germany, the Aga Khan University’s Institute
for Educational Development in Pakistan and Aga
Khan Education Services schools in a number of
countries. IAP’s objectives are to promote
global education and student-centred teaching,
with a particular focus on professional development
for teachers and curricular innovation.
Find
out more on the International Academic Partnership
Since its founding in 1993, the IAP has linked
over 400 schools in Bangladesh, India, Kenya,
Pakistan, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Uganda and the
United States. Sixty-four Phillips Academy faculty
and 500 AKES teachers have been involved in the
programme. In addition, teachers from school districts
in United States are participating in the programme
through an affiliation with the University of
Texas at Austin.
Programmes include Islamic Cultural Studies, a
multidisciplinary curriculum for the study of
Islam and Muslim civilisations in a non-doctrinal,
comparative and historical context. Another course
is Global Economics, which aims to develop skills
in this field by drawing on examples from the
international economy.
Professional Development Teacher workshops facilitated
by Phillips Academy, AKU-IED and AKES offer up
to two weeks of full-time study in content and
pedagogy for teachers in AKES, government and
community schools. New initiatives include workshops
on teaching about HIV/AIDS, integration of technology
into the classroom and the teaching of English
through theatre arts.
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