Building a learning environment

Is your child 2 or 3 years old? Are you considering bringing your child to the Nursery this autumn? Learn more about what the important aspects to be taken into consideration are when starting Nursery. Our Nursery Educational Coordinator, Tania Răduță, explains in an open letter to parents how the environment built by our team helps every child to learn and develop. 

Dear Parents,

Creating an Enabling Environment in which each child feels safe, plays, explores, and learns is a key aspect in the Early Years Curriculum. This, together with a carefully prepared induction period for each child, according to own interests and needs, smoothens the first days of nursery for children and also for parents who are sometimes more excited than their toddlers.

Our curriculum which provides activities taught in English, are engaging, meaningful, fun, and is built around four major principles. They can be ‘felt’ immediately one enters our setting.

An Enabling Environment supports a child’s development in all of the seven areas of learning. It is child-centred and has three major parts: the emotional environment meaning the atmosphere of the setting, the indoor environment with its available resources which promotes activities initiated by children and teachers, and the outdoor environment which stimulates movement, creativity and exploration.

Providing an enabling environment for each unique child might be challenging but at the same time rewarding for teachers and for children as they benefit from differentiated activities designed or initiated in accordance to their own interests. It needs rigorous background planning and a lot of attention to detail.

We make sure that each child feels welcomed into the setting and we give them time to form an emotional bond with their teachers.

We welcome and value the uniqueness of each child in the Nursery. We understand and we respect what each child brings into the setting in terms of own culture, language, type of family, or beliefs. We also see that each child learns in different ways every day. We see different schemas in their play and what we do is provide opportunities for them to engage in active learning through hands on experiences. We also transform mistakes into opportunities for learning, we encourage them to recognise their own unique qualities, and we support them to make friends, to form and to maintain Positive Relationships.

Only through positive relationships do children learn to be strong and independent. We make sure that each child feels welcomed into the setting and we give them time to form an emotional bond with their teachers. At the same time, the teachers build positive relationships with parents through feedback and effective communication. We listen to parents and children, we take into consideration their feedback and this is what helps all of us become motivated to constantly improve and become better learners.

Learning and Development is what we know that each child is entitled to. This will only result from the interaction of the other three principles described above. In Avenor Nursery, the teaching and non-teaching teams learn from each other and work hard and with great passion to ensure children’s wellbeing and progress. We have the prime areas of learning in mind when planning for toddlers (Personal Social & Emotional Development, Communication & Language, and Physical Development) in order to lay the foundation for the specific areas of learning (Literacy, Mathematics, Understanding the World, and Expressive Arts and Design) for pre-schoolers.

It is not hard to follow or adapt a curriculum; what is the most important thing is to be committed to creating a culture of learning in which the principles are embedded. Then, children, parents and teachers can celebrate the success and continue the learning journey.”

Kind regards,

Tania RĂDUȚĂ, Avenor Nursery Educational Coordinator


The Avenor graduate profile

Dana Papadima, our Educational Director, talks about the bilingual profile of our school and about celebrating the national identity, an essential element in the profile of the Avenor College graduate.

The bilingual profile of Avenor College makes elements of British language and civilisation coexist harmoniously and balanced with those of Romanian language and culture. Speaking of the Romanian language, the cultural knowledge and skills are not only found within the classes established by the national curriculum of Romanian language and literature for primary and middle school, but at the level of most of the activities and events carried out in and outside the school.

We refer thus to elements of Romanian heritage, cultural, geographical, written or unwritten, to knowledge about Bucharest’s heritage and the surroundings of the Capital, to the feeling of belonging to a socio-cultural community. The Romanian language classes, lessons of geography, history, leadership, arts, trips, cultural events, and school competitions are multiple opportunities to awaken our students’ identity awareness and pride.

The knowledge of Romanian heritage is taken further during the high school Romanian language classes, for which we built a specific programme, based on the national curriculum. The Romanian language course for high school is finalised at the end of each year of study with a graduation activity in front of the public: group project, debate, essay and, in Grade 12, a speech on a given topic.

Celebrating national identity is an essential component of building a reflective, confident, informed high school graduate profile. Linguistic-cultural identity represents the essential and necessary ferment to help create beautiful characters, governed by a system of values and perennial moral principles. The fact that our first generation of graduates found their way to remarkable universities, both from abroad and from Romania, that they “easily” move and develop in and between different systems, different cultures are also due to the school’s care to grow in them and protect their identity culture. Conscious and honoured to have Romanian roots, our students, our graduates naturally become European citizens, citizens of the contemporary world.

The power of learning

Tania Răduță, Avenor Nursery Educational Coordinator, talks about the emotion and challenges of new beginnings and also about the “power of learning” guiding children, parents and the nursery team on their educational journey.

“New beginnings in the nursery school always come with intense emotion and challenges for all the co-creators of our early years learning journey: children, parents and teachers.

Little ‘big minds’ will step into our settings for the first time, some of them feeling more ready than others to meet new colleagues, to trust new adults and to actually live in a new environment that will sooner or later turn into their ‘second home’. We will learn from parents about each individual’s particularities, in order to carefully prepare a flexible adjustment period for each unique child. There are, of course, the inquisitive children who will be happy to continue their learning journey, share their new thoughts, interests and experiences with their friends, and form new friendships with colleagues; they will be ready to ‘have a go’.

And so, parents and teachers will continue their partnership in order to plan authentic activities and relevant experiences for each child. All these moments will enable them to show what they already know and to continue expressing initiative and developing new ideas.

The Avenor Nursery team who work with and for children is ready to take on the upcoming challenges, driven by passion and with a great willingness to learn from each other and to co-create meaningful experiences together with the children.

We keep on growing and changing just like the children and one of the things we believe in the most is ‘the power of learning’.

We benefit from a safe learning environment that plays an important role in developing children’s confidence, self-esteem, autonomy, and stimulates their sense of wonder.
The indoor spaces have been refreshed and the outdoor area is in the process of being improved, in order to better support child-initiated learning.
The daily timetable for Reception and Year 1 groups has been adjusted to enable more outdoor learning and more opportunities for children to play.

Looking forward to feeling ‘the vibe’, as people who visit our nursery like to say, of our 2019 – 2020 journey together!”

Transition to school life

Mirela Voicu, Upper Primary Coordinator, explains the role of the game in the process the children go through when they make the transition from nursery to school in the Pregatitoare grade.

To ensure a good start for the students from Pregatitoare, we, the teachers, adhere to Edouard Claparède’s statement – “The game is the best introduction to the art of working”. Thus, the full development of the young school-age student requires an integrated way of approaching teaching-learning-assessment activities through play.

Through play, the child discovers the world, manipulates objects, and acquires knowledge and self-confidence. The game provides children with a pleasant environment in which to express their curiosity and spontaneity, in which creativity and personal experience are the main element. The child’s development depends on the opportunities offered by the daily routine in school, the interaction with others, the organisation of the school environment or the specially designed learning activities and situations.

Pregatitoare grade removes the brutal transition from nursery to school, having the role of getting the children used to socialising in an organised environment, which contributes to the development of their personality. This will ensure the gradual transition from the interactive nursery programme to the school environment, with a fixed schedule representing for the 6-year-old a universe of stories, learning through play, and not a rigid space of knowledge, of constraint. The child learns by playing and at the same time becomes familiar with the atmosphere in school.

Children have a new, age-appropriate curriculum, and the classroom is tailored to their age, so that it allows them to learn through play and to prepare for Grade 1 using modern learning resources. Children will develop their ability to communicate, strengthen contacts with the world of numbers and letters, learn to observe the environment and interact with other children and adults through teaching games, team activities, discovery activities, drawing or music.”

Preparing for change

Ramona Mucenic, Upper Primary Coordinator at Avenor College, talks about preparing students for the transition between school cycles, about school themes and Project-Based Learning (PBL).

“Welcome back dear parents and students,

The school year that, with a little nostalgia, we left behind remains a memorable year for our entire community: intense and marked by pleasant moments, memorable events and exceptional results obtained by our students.
The evaluation of the fundamental competences at the end of Grades 2 and 4 by administering the specific tests of National Evaluation confirmed again the ability of the children to apply, analyse and interpret the accumulated knowledge. Moreover, we pride ourselves on the individual study skills that we develop early on, to grow independent, curious, open-minded students, able to work in collaboration with each other.
One of our constant concerns is to ensure a smooth transition between learning cycles. Regardless of whether you go to Pregatitoare grade, Upper Primary, Middle School or High School, the Avenor student is gradually prepared for change through carefully planned activities. During Grade 4, the children were acquainted throughout the year with the realities of the middle school and the 5th grade, in particular. They met some of the future teachers, participated in lessons of the older colleagues, carried out projects with them. In the second term, part of the grades specific to the primary cycle were doubled by grades/scores used in middle school, so that the future middle school students gradually got used to the new marking system. Teachers and form tutors meet regularly to monitor students’ progress and to think together about the most effective strategies to ensure their evolution, from an academic, emotional or behavioural point of view.

Since last year, the school’s themes have become more visible by transforming the weekly Assembly time into PBL (Project-Based Learning) module. The main objective is to extend the learning by planning, organising and carrying out group projects with an applied character, anchored in the day-to-day life. Through this multidisciplinary learning programme, we practice soft skills competences through which students naturally and authentically appeal to critical and creative thinking, demonstrating empathy and the ability to make group decisions.
This year we move to the second phase of the Project-Based Learning Programme – PBL, being guided by David Taylor, a specialist in cross-curricular approach to learning. The three hours of PBL will cover different curricular areas, including elements of Drama. We aim for our students to practice expressing their emotions, to better relate to each other, to develop their artistic side. We also expect them to be able to make more connections between school disciplines and to propose solutions to real life problems.

We like to look to the future, to prepare our children for scenarios, realities or jobs that do not exist yet. Therefore, it is important for them to acquire those qualities that will help them adapt to any situation. We want them to be confident, creative, involved, responsible, and innovative.

The role of Form Tutor at Avenor College

Georgiana Socoliu, Middle School Coordinator and Form Tutor at Avenor College talks about the key role of the Form Tutor in the learning process, about Form Time and the school day routine.

Dear students and parents,

Seven years ago, when I joined the Avenor community, I was impressed by the dynamics of the school, the shared values, and also by the desire to be the best. Avenor students are challenged to go beyond their limits, develop their intellectual curiosity and discover their own path.

In the 2019-2020 school year, we celebrate the achievement of excellent results both at the National Evaluation exam and at the Cambridge Checkpoint. We enjoyed the seriousness and responsibility with which the Avenor students and teachers have prepared for these exams and we congratulate them for their determination.

At Avenor College, the form tutor plays a key role in the learning process, as an intermediary in the teacher-student-parent relationship, being also the first person to whom students go when they need guidance and counselling.

In the schedule of the day, from 2 pm to 2.15 pm we have Form time or time spent with the form tutor. Depending on the day of the week, we discuss issues related to routine and behaviour, punctuality, we discuss how to set our goals and learning methods. During Form time, projects are presented that relate to the passions of the students, class problems, national and international news are discussed, or events are organised (charitable, sporting, artistic, trips).

I wish for us in the current school year to enjoy happy moments, to be fascinated by knowledge, to be inventive and authentic, enthusiastic and daring.

Passion for Learning

We continue the series dedicated to the beginning of the school year with Darren Hugill, Director of Learning at Avenor College, who talks about the family atmosphere, the passion for learning, the caring attitude of our teachers towards students, and the constant growth of our school.

”Dear Avenor family members,

It gives me great pleasure to welcome your all back to the Avenor family for the academic year 2019-2020. I am sure that this year will be an even better learning experience than the one before; I believe this because Avenor is College with Learning at its heart. We learn as an organisation, with each passing minute, how to get better and do things even better than they were.

For your children, this means that the learning experience that they will have this year is now the sum of 12 years of solid synergistic development. We believe that the experience and the individualisation of the learning journey for each and every child at Avenor College is what sets Avenor apart and makes it a very special place where your children will be co-nurtured with you into the young people that they truly want to become.

I would like to reflect on the last three years I have known the College, and I will start by saying that the main attraction for me to Avenor is still here, and still growing. That is the real family atmosphere, the caring attitude of our teachers towards the young people, the growth mind-set of the College and most significantly our Executive Director who provides a very clear role model and pathway into the future for Avenor College.

We have now our “Avenorian Graduates” and we are so proud of their results and the results of their younger colleagues, even if a school does not live and die by its results. It thrives when its young people are motivated, challenged, participatory, and develop those very special skills of intuition, insight, entrepreneurial ship, team working, leadership and critical thinking. I am proud to be the Director of Learning in a college which puts as much emphasis on the development of the holistic young person, as it does on the exam results.”

A new school year at Avenor College

At the beginning of the new school year, the 13th in our history, we invite you to learn more about 2019-2020 from members of our Leadership Team.

Our Executive Director, Diana Segărceanu, speaks with pride about our first high school graduates, about alumni and the excellent results of the students, and also about a new beginning.

This year I feel like I’m 18 again, I have the energy and the enthusiasm of a young student finishing high school. It is an extraordinary feeling to actually go through 12 years of school (from Pregatitoare to Grade 12). I am proud that I graduated (again) from high school – it’s the same excitement and fulfilment of feeling like a grown-up.

Avenor has reached maturity; we turned 12 in the same moment when the graduation diplomas were awarded to the first Avenor College graduates. They are the Class of 2019!

It was an intense summer, when we waited with excitement for the Cambridge exam results. I was very happy to see the best results so far and that the students received the passport to attend the desired universities, both abroad (UK, Holland) and in Romania.

We celebrated with our graduates – now Avenor Alumni – on August 27th, when they were invited to school together with our first Grade 8 graduates (Class of 2015) – back when we weren’t even thinking about continuing with a high school.

Our reunion was accompanied by tasty food in Avenor Living, our new modernised Cafeteria.

On September 2nd, 600 balloons were released by our students who started together a new school year, the 13th in our existence. This year, our balloons were biodegradable and carried with them to the sky the hopes and promises for the new year.

At the Nursery from Arcul de Triumf, an arcade of coloured balloons will greet the young Avenorians.

On behalf of more than 100 teachers, I wish you all the best from all my Avenor graduate heart: Welcome back to School!”

Science teacher Gareth is the new Grade 9 Form Tutor

Starting in September, our Science teacher Gareth will be the Grade 9 form tutor at Avenor International High School. He is very excited to make students feel part of a well-knit team and be like a third parent, demanding but also very supportive. He will continue to teach Science in a way that will allow students to understand the world they live in and how they can change it. He is also going back to school, to improve his Romanian.

You will be the Form Tutor for Grade 9 next year and many of the students who know you are very excited about that. What should they expect from you?

Form tutors are an important figure in the development of the student, they are like the third parent based at the school. They create links and harmony between the parents at home, the management of the school and the academic life of both the students and the subject teachers who deliver their education. The role of the tutor is to facilitate and support the students in their social and emotional development so that they are best equipped to deal with their job of learning. They are the ones that students turn to first when they need help, someone who they can trust and someone they know will support them. The form tutor must set very high expectations for the students both morally and academically.

I have a very close relationship with the students that finished Grade 8. I worked to prepare them for chemistry and physics in the Romanian system, as well as in applied science in the Cambridge system. I taught them more hours per week than other teachers and developed a mutual respect. They helped me and I helped them.

It is important that new students and existing students all feel a part of the Grade 9 team. This will not be difficult since the atmosphere at Avenor is very welcoming and community focused. I’ve always developed very close-knit tutor groups that can rely on each other as well as on me for support. I also have a lot of experience in helping students with the difficulties of growing up and finding their place in the world. It’s a challenging time in the student’s life and the expectations of today are very different. The world is changing so fast sometimes students are unsure of their place in it. There are also the same issues that all teenagers face regardless of school or country like boyfriends/girlfriends, what’s cool, how others perceive their image etc. I will be there for all students any time they need help. My door is always open.

Science is one of the classes Avenor students enjoy the most. How would you describe your Science classes to our new and prospective high school students?

The science programme for the students is fun and develops the key skills of scientific enquiry but also teaches areas that are fun and relevant to students. In addition to the topics covered in the Romanian system, students also learn about renewable energy for the future, drugs, alcohol, and health, as well as new materials that can be used to fabricate the technology of the future.

The science classes at Avenor are based on the Cambridge system of scientific enquiry and problem solving, whereas the Romanian system is based on memory recall. I’ve talked a lot in the past about the differences in the educational systems, but it boils down to a few main points.

  • Very few students will actually use science knowledge directly in their future and it’s a waste of time to just remember endless pages of facts (although very good for winning a pub-quiz). It’s the scientific skills that are valued.
  • The scientific method of observing something that happened, deciding why it might have happened, researching and testing to see if you were correct and readjusting your ideas/theories based on observable evidence are very important in all areas of employment. For example, many of our students want to work in enterprise and business and the ability to analyse what products have sold, why they sold and develop strategies to increase sales are a form of the scientific method. In short, our science programme teaches students how to observe the world around them and what they can do to change it. This is a very powerful tool to have.
  • Finally, having practical experiments for students makes the learning more real and fun. It allows students to relate to content that might not always be clear from a book. As humans, we learn best by interacting with our environment. You could always teach a baby to walk by showing them a formula for balance and explaining where they need to generate force by pushing against the ground, but they will learn best by trying, failing, and trying again.

You are also going to school for Romanian classes. What made you decide to learn Romanian and how is that going so far?

From a practical perspective, it makes sense to learn Romanian to make life easier. However, for me it’s more than this. I am not an international teacher that just happened to come to Romania because there was a job here. I specifically chose to come here.  It’s my first international position. I had many Romanian friends at university and visited the country often, eight times in five years, before working here. In order to understand a culture, it’s important to get an understanding of the language. Culture and arts are what make life worth living. I want to be able to have a conversation with an old person about what life use to be like, to read some poetry, or express my views on current political trends or a piece of art. I know it’s said never make politics or religion a topic of conversation, but sometimes it’s nice to break the mould.

I’ve not developed as fast as I wanted to over the last year. I therefore made a decision to improve this over the summer holidays. I’ve attended a two-week intensive course for beginners. Studying in a classroom for three hours each day was quite enlightening since it’s been a few years since I was on the receiving end of education. I also have a better understanding of what people mean when they talk about the didactic teaching methods used in the Romanian state system. You really have to be at the top of the class or risk falling behind very quickly!

The course was aimed at beginners and had a strong focus on grammar, which is actually what I needed. I passed the A1 course with high in each section (speaking, listening, reading, and writing) and I am now looking to take the A2 course.

Avenor College Cafeteria becomes Stradale Avenor

Flavours Catering is the new partner providing the school meals for Avenor students. Starting in the academic year 2016-2017, Avenor College Cafeteria becomes Stradale Avenor, a place where the Flavours team will cook and serve lunch and snack for our students.

We have always been concerned with the children’s nutrition, over the years we have worked with several catering companies in search of better solutions. The feedback we constantly received from students and parents encouraged us to make an important change: having our own kitchen, in order to make sure that the meals are fresh and served at optimal temperature.

The dishes will be prepared with carefully selected ingredients from providers that are visited and verified by the Flavours team. The meals will be cooked according to recipes specially created for Stradale Avenor by Chef Foa, one of the creators of Flavours. Also, the new kitchen will have a dedicated staff, provided by our partners: head chef, pastry chef, assistants and cafeteria manager.

“We are always careful to keep a perfect balance between taste and health, so we can adapt our menus according to the needs of every child”, Stradale Avenor manager Daniel Obretin explains. “We are prepared to offer children and teenagers nutritional information and are open to suggestions regarding their favourite dishes. Chef Foa will also be present in the cafeteria, whenever possible, to speak to students about healthy eating and teach them how to enjoy tasty and healthy food cooked correctly.”

The daily menu for students will take into account the Avenor nutritional policy and will include:

Lunch

  • 2 types of soup (meat / vegetarian)
  • 3 main courses (white meat / red meat / vegetarian) with side dish and salad

Snack (sweet or salty) and a fruit

To be able to make all these changes, we needed to reorganise the space in the Cafeteria. We have also created a coffee shop for parents, a place where they can have snacks, coffee and tea.

The investment necessary for setting up the new kitchen stands at more than 130.000 euro, an amount covered in partnership by Flavours Catering and Avenor Foundation.

Flavours Food & Catering is a concept created in 2002, based on the following principles: a love for food, the authenticity of the recipes and the respect for high standards. You can find more details about the company here.

We are confident that the partnership with Flavours Catering, a company with excellent references, that also has a similar project at the American International School of Bucharest, will be successful.