The International Baccalaureate Diploma Program is designed as an academically challenging and balanced program of education with final examinations that prepare students for success at university and life beyond. The program, designed in the late 1960's, has gained recognition and respect from the world's leading universities.
The IB Diploma program:
At SKHS we are pleased to offer eleventh and twelfth grade students the IB program. Each student must present 1 subject from each group 1 through 5. Their sixth course can come from Group 6 or a second subject from groups 1-5. Three subjects are taken at the Higher Level (HL) and three subjects at the Standard Level (SL).
In addition to these courses, students will need complete a core that consists of taking the Theory of Knowledge course in which students reflect on the nature of knowledge and on how we know what we claim to know, complete the Extended Essay, and work on Creativity, Activity, and Service activities managed through an online service: Managebac.
Examinations form the basis of the assessment for most courses. This is because of their high levels of objectivity and reliability. These examinations will most likely be taken at the second year of the course that the student chooses to take in May, some courses may be taken in their Junior year depending on different circumstances.
They include:
Teacher assessment is also used for most courses. This includes:
As a thoughtful and purposeful inquiry into different ways of knowing, and into different kinds of knowledge, TOK is composed almost entirely of questions.
The most central of these is "How do we know?", while other questions include:
Through discussions of these and other questions, students gain greater awareness of their personal and ideological assumptions, as well as developing an appreciation of the diversity and richness of cultural perspectives.
The TOK course is assessed through an oral presentation and a 1600 word essay.
The presentation assesses the ability of the student to apply TOK thinking to a real-life situation, while the essay takes a more conceptual starting point.
For example, the essay may ask students to discuss the claim that the methodologies used to produce knowledge depend on the use to which that knowledge will be used.
TOK aims to make students aware of the interpretative nature of knowledge, including personal ideological biases – whether these biases are retained, revised or rejected.
It offers students and their teachers the opportunity to:
In addition, TOK prompts students to:
TOK also provides coherence for the student, by linking academic subject areas as well as transcending them.
It therefore demonstrates the ways in which the student can apply their knowledge with greater awareness and credibility.
The extended essay provides:
Through the research process for the extended essay, students develop skills in:
Participation in this process develops the capacity to analyse, synthesize and evaluate knowledge.
Students are supported throughout the process of researching and writing the extended essay, with advice and guidance from a supervisor who is usually a teacher at the school.
Students are required to have three mandatory reflection sessions with their supervisors. The final session, a concluding interview, is also known as viva voce.
The extended essay and reflection sessions can be a valuable stimulus for discussion in countries where interviews are required prior to acceptance for employment or for a place at university.
All extended essays are externally assessed by examiners appointed by the IB. They are marked on a scale from 0 to 34.
The score a student receives relates to a band. The bands are:
The three strands of CAS, which are often interwoven with particular activities, are characterized as follows:
In order to demonstrate these concepts, students are required to undertake a CAS Project. The project challenges students to:
CAS enables students to enhance their personal and interpersonal development by learning through experience.
It provides opportunities for self-determination and collaboration with others, fostering a sense of accomplishment and enjoyment from their work.
At the same time, CAS is an important counterbalance to the academic pressures of the DP.
A good CAS programme should be both challenging and enjoyable – a personal journey of self‑discovery.
Each student has a different starting point, and therefore different goals and needs, but for many their CAS activities include experiences that are profound and life‑changing.