Keystone Prospectus Chinese Version English Version | Page 18

learning trips have included: Grade 5 traveling outside Mainland China to Taiwan, where students explored ancient history and culture. Grade 8’s History, Literature and Math curricula has included students traveling to the Great Wall while learning the history of the Silk Road. To delve deeper into Keystone’s ethos that draws on Confucianism and better understand several approaches to learning, grade 7 students traveled to Shandong province to explore the home of Confucius, climb Mount Tai and visit Qingdao. Grade 9 shared their learning and skills with students at a local school in Hunan. Grade 10 recently traveled to Yunnan and hiked the Tiger Leaping Gorge. Learning by doing is one of the penultimate forms of learning, only to be surpassed by a learning that is an act in response to another’s need. This is the highest form of learning and exactly the education we want for Keystone students. Recent service learning immersive lessons included groups of students, teachers and staff traveling to Chengdu in China, to Nepal, and to Thailand. One group worked in an elephant village. Another helped with restoration efforts in an earthquake-torn village in Nepal. And the third group built homes in Chengdu for those affected by the 2008 earthquake. Closer to home, service initiatives are student led, and always hands-on from working at animal shelters to raising awareness about world hunger. Picking tea leaves in Fujian province. 18 Grade 4 students perform with shadow puppets on their first Experiential Learning trip to the ancient town of Pinyao. Students elect to spend their spring vacation rebuilding homes for families affected by the 2008 earthquake in Chengdu.