United World Colleges

In an age when many major issues require global solutions, the United World Colleges (UWC), http://www.uwc.org, movement aims to promote, through education and exchange, a greater understanding between the peoples of the world. The UWC network includes 13 schools around the world, which are coordinated by the International Board of United World Colleges.

The United World College movement was born through bitter experience in world conflict. Two military leaders, Air Marshal Lawrence Darvall and Rear-Admiral Desmond Hoare, joined with Kurt Hahn, a noted educator who was forced to flee Germany during World War II. Hahn believed that much could be done to overcome hostility and conflict if young people from different nations, races and religions could be brought together to learn from each other. Together they established a new concept of education that would become a powerful force for peace. The first United World College, the College of the Atlantic, was founded in Wales in 1962 and was followed by the Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific in 1974.

Each college reflects the particular milieu in which it is located. The schools are not identical, but they do have many common characteristics. Students, faculty and staff from many different nationalities and a wide variety of backgrounds form vibrant and enthusiastic communities as they live and work together. Student entry is based upon promise and potential alone and many students enter with full scholarships provided by the United World Colleges and the UWC National Committees, which have been established in over 130 countries throughout the world.

Over the years the UWC has played a major role in helping develop the International Baccalaureate, which provides both the academic program for the colleges and the international university entry examinations taken by graduating students. UWC places strong emphasis to community service activities, in the belief that understanding between peoples cannot be created in the classroom alone.