PRINCIPALLY SPEAKING

Simon Brooks, Principal

“Slow Looking is taking the time to notice more than meets the eye at first glance, and drawing information from your own unfolding impressions”

- Shari Tishman


STEM Week

It’s STEM Week here at AISM! Just a reminder for those who don’t know, the acronym STEM stands for ‘Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics’, which is of course a field of crucial importance in today’s rapidly evolving world.

This week, our students have taken part in a whole smorgasbord of different activities and learning experiences, fostering their enthusiasm for STEM subjects and helping them unpack and explore the secrets of the world in which we live.

Just today our students have been involved in fabric dying; gelato tasting; heat, sound and light experiments; liquid nitrogen demonstrations; microscope investigations; ‘top of the pops’; and robotics.  More details on what our students have been learning will follow, but for the moment I would like to extend my immense thanks to Mr. Simon Matheson and all of the teachers in the STEM team for your tireless efforts in bringing STEM alive for our students!

Slow Looking

One of the advantages of an AISM education is that every one of our teachers is trained in pedagogy and practice from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, one of the many things that makes us unique amongst all other Malaysian schools.

Over the last month, AISM teachers have been honoured to experience a series of professional learning experiences with Shari Tishman, Lecturer at Harvard Graduate School of Education and a Senior Research Associate at Harvard Project Zero, where she formerly served as Director. Shari’s research focuses on the development and teaching of thinking, the role of close observation in learning, and learning in and through the arts.



In a nutshell, our teachers are now upskilled to teach for slow looking - helping our students hone their observation skills, looking closely and more attentively at visual detail and drawing information from their unfolding impressions.

Developing this disposition helps our students to deepen their understanding and engagement in all learning areas. For example, with STEM week in mind, slow looking is fundamental to effective scientific thinking, which involves close and careful observation of phenomena in order to be able to formulate hypotheses, and design experiments or studies.

Here are just some of the benefits of this approach for our students:

Slow Looking…
  • Reveals complexity in several ways
  • Sparks curiosity, sketching a rich possibility space of inquiry
  • Helps us see that out own and others’ perceptions and impressions are a valuable source of knowledge
  • Encourages the habit of deferring judgement
  • Teaches us about things, ourselves, and others.

I am so pleased that AISM continues to be on the cutting edge of learning and teaching practices, and delighted for our students that they get to experience learning in this way.

To conclude, I suggest that you take a slow look yourselves at the article towards the end of today’s newsletter, ‘Slow Looking at AISM Micro Ecosystems’. As part of their professional learning with Shari Tishman, teachers were encouraged to ‘walk the everyday’, looking afresh at our natural environment and taking photos of things that caught their attention. I do hope you enjoy reading some of our teachers’ thoughtful reflections.