A Voice in the Wilderness Archive

< 2024

2024

  • May

    Creating Excellence

    Shawnigan Director of Athletics Mr. Tim Murdy knows a thing or two about achieving excellence. Over more than three decades of coaching, he has guided teams to championships in multiple sports at multiple schools, and recently received the Canadian Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association’s Dave Rozdeba Award for Athletic Director of the Year. Mr. Murdy has put together some thoughts about how to create excellence in yourself and in others.
     
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  • Earth Week at Shawnigan

    Each year, the Sustainability Council organizes a full slate of events over the week after Earth Day, to help reinforce the importance of everything from recycling to conservation. This year, Grade 12 student Bea Hoerle headed up the efforts of the Sustainability Council to mark Earth Week on campus.
     
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  • April

    ‘The light goes both ways’: reflections on autism

    April is World Autism Acceptance Month, and Shawnigan makes an effort to promote awareness, acceptance and appreciation for all people on the autism spectrum. This year, students on the JEDI (Equity, Diversity and Inclusion) Council put up displays in the Friesen Centre to help educate their peers about autism. Grace Zhuang ’24 is a long-time advocate for people on the autism spectrum, as reflected in her Soul Seeking and capstone projects, and in her work with the Clements Centre in nearby Duncan. In this post, Grace explains her personal connection to autism and why she is passionate about advocacy.
     
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  • The Summer Reading Challenge

    As important as it is to keep students reading over the summer months, it can also be a challenge. At Shawnigan, Librarian Mrs. Rayna Hyde-Lay curates the Summer Book SLAM, a program that gets education staff involved in encouraging students to read some of their favourite books during their time away from the School. This post also appeared on the blog of the Association of Independent School Librarians.
     
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  • Why do we celebrate Earth Day?

    Earth Day is celebrated around the world on April 22, and in many places, it has expanded into a full week of events designed to get people thinking about ecology and the future of the planet. Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist, Patricia Hanbidge, explains the history of Earth Day and why it is important to keep the lessons of Earth Day in our minds all year round.
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  • Well-Being on Campus: The Benefits of Acupuncture

    The health and wellness of students and staff is important at Shawnigan. With that in mind, the School offers many health and wellness services. This year, the School has brought an acupuncturist on board. School Counsellor Jennifer Tully and acupuncturist Brook Paulin explain the many benefits of this ancient practice.
     
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  • Why Vancouver Island?

    Shawnigan Lake School is honoured to be located on Vancouver Island, one of the most beautiful regions of Canada, with tremendous natural diversity, and culture and recreation for all interests. Read on for more about the magnificent part of the world that we inhabit.
     
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  • A Life-Changing Experience on the EDGE

    Over Spring Break 2024, Shawnigan fanned out across the globe. One of our many Spring Break programs was the annual EDGE (Engagement, Development, Gratitude and Experience) trip to Jamaica, where seven students and two staff members visited the SOS Children’s Village, a shelter for children who have been separated from their parents, and Hammersmith Preparatory School, a school for kids from preschool to Grade 6, doing some maintenance work at SOS and interacting with children at both locations. Grade 11 student Emma Hill writes here about the lasting impact the experience will have on her.
     
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  • The Journey of a Drop of Water

    Environmental lead and horticulturalist Patricia Hanbidge has created a unique program at Shawnigan designed to get students thinking about water on the School campus in its many functions – potable water, irrigation, wastewater – and how that relates to the issue of climate change. As the program launches, Ms. Hanbidge explains the motivation behind this program and what she hopes to accomplish.
     
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  • Financial Aid 101

    Here in the Admissions Office at Shawnigan, we always get asked about what financial aid and scholarship options the School has to offer. It is our team’s goal to help support the success of your child and help find the right fit for families, and with that can come the need for financial support to help your child kickstart or continue their Shawnigan Journey and education once they have been accepted into the School. The three main forms of financial aid come in the form of Founder’s Awards, Entrance Awards and Named Scholarships.
     
    Here’s what you need to know, and how each of them are awarded:
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  • 'Being a woman has no rules'

    For International Women’s Day, Grade 12 student and Prefect Georgia B. took the initiative of organizing a special Chapel Gathering on March 6. Here, Georgia reflects on some of the challenges and rewards of doing that work, and on some of the important women in her life.
     
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  • March

    What is so amazing about the amaryllis?

    Beautiful, eye-catching and diverse, the amaryllis is endemic to several tropical areas, but it is possible to grow them elsewhere under the right conditions, and once they’ve been successfully cultivated once, it is easy to get them to bloom again for years. Shawnigan’s environmental lead and horticulturalist Patricia Hanbidge gives some background on the amaryllis and details how you can cultivate your own at home.
     
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  • Why should we preserve endangered languages?

    Human Geography 12 is the study of how humans interact with the earth and its environment. In short, it is a melting pot of globalization, history, current events, geopolitics, sociology and geography. As part of their unit on Global Culture, students have been exploring the intersectionality between folk and pop culture, religion, music, food, customs and language. Grade 11 student Charlene Chinglam Kwan's recent essay eloquently discusses the correlation between globalization and endangered languages. 
     
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  • Spring Break Book Recommendations

    There are certain times of the year when we all think about ways to unwind, relax, and find our balance (metaphorically speaking). For many this involves, exercise, dinners out and maybe a movie or series streamed to our couches in the quiet enclave of home. But every so often in our modern world we seek an opportunity to travel without a passport, to walk in someone else’s shoes, and look in the mirror at ourselves. Through books we can do all of these things – and have our comfy couch enclave. 
     
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  • Inspiring Inclusion in Afghanistan and Beyond

    As part of Shawnigan Lake School’s Chapel Gathering for International Women’s Day, Grade 12 student Marina Musleh spoke about how fortunate she has been to have opportunities that have not been given to other women around the world, including her own family and friends in Afghanistan, how that has allowed her to build a better future for herself, and how she wants to provide support to others.
     
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  • St. David’s Day, “Calon Lan” and Happiness

    Shawnigan marked St. David’s Day, the feast day of the patron saint of Wales, with a special Chapel service last Saturday. Students from our newly opened Samuel House sported daffodils and leeks (the national symbols of Wales), and the entire student body sang a joyous rendition of the Welsh hymn “Calon Lan.”
     
    Director of Alumni Relations Mr. Rhod Samuel – the namesake, along with his wife, Executive Director of Admissions Mrs. Gaynor Samuel, of Samuel House – shared the story of St. David and told tales of his youth in Wales, where March 1 is a national holiday: getting the afternoon off school, wearing traditional costumes, and eating traditional Welsh food. He told the students, as St. David said, “Be joyful, have faith, and do the little things.” Mr. Samuel also discussed the lyric “Give me a heart to make me happy,” and the gift of happiness.
     
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  • The Samuel Heritage

    In mid-February, Shawnigan opened Samuel House, a co-ed Grade 8 boarding house that is the first of its kind in Canada, with separate wings for boys and girls, and common areas they all share. While the House was carefully designed to nurture our youngest students, the name of the House was selected to pay tribute to two beloved staff members, and everything from the colours to the House hymn incorporates their Welsh heritage, as Admissions Assistant Ms. Kieran Ward explains.
     
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  • February

    Scars of Racism

    Throughout February, Shawnigan has been marking Black History Month in a number of ways. Grade 10 student Celeste Ciebien wrote the following essay, reflecting on the racism she experienced as a Black student in a mostly white elementary school before her time at Shawnigan, and how that has stayed with her to this day.
     
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  • What Black History Month means to me

    Throughout February, Shawnigan has been marking Black History Month in a number of ways, including a special Chapel service on February 3. Grade 12 student Khanya Mangena-Jellema delivered the following address in that Chapel service, speaking to her fellow students about her experience as a biracial student at Shawnigan.
     
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  • What is the difference between Wellness and Well-being?

    The concepts of “wellness” and “well-being” are interconnected, but separate. While they both incorporate physical health and behaviours and habits that contribute to maintaining a healthy body and the pursuit of a healthy lifestyle, well-being extends beyond wellness to include a broader spectrum of factors that influence overall life satisfaction and fulfillment. In this post, Counselling Team Leader Mrs. Erica Plater illustrates the important distinctions between the two.
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  • What are lake stars?

    You’re looking out over a beautiful frozen lake when you spot a crooked shape with long, gnarled fingers stretching out from it. That’s a lake star. But what is it exactly, and how did it get there? Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead, Patricia Hanbidge explains the origins of these fascinating additions to our winter surroundings.
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  • Creating Creativity

    The first artists had a blank slate, literally and figuratively: no one had done what they were doing. The same thing goes for the first musicians, photographers and filmmakers. But how do you reinterpret something that has been seemingly done before, again and again? Mr. Elliot Logan ’10 has to ask and answer that question all the time as he films life at a School that has existed for more than 100 years.
     
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  • Experiential Education: In AWE of Itadakimasu

    Shawnigan Lake School staff members Mr. Galen Loiselle and Ms. Jessica Dick immersed themselves in experiential education at the 19th annual ISEEN (Independent Schools Experiential Education Network) Winter Institute hosted by the Athenian School in Dublin, California in January 2024. The conference’s theme, Rooted in Experiential Education: Finding our Places to Flourish, sought to engage participants in a week of authentic place-based learning.
     
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  • How to grow herbs indoors in winter

    Growing herbs indoors is one way to keep the winter blues away and provide yourself with delicious herbs for cooking, and it doesn’t have to be difficult. Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist, Patricia Hanbidge, shares some tips for growing your own herbs even when it is cold and dark outside, from which herbs can be grown from seed and which ones grow better from cuttings to the best soil and light options for your new project.
     
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  • January

    How to experience the world more fully

    When you take a photograph, do you just take a quick snapshot to capture proof of the moment, or do you experience the moment and take it all in? Rev. Jim Holland (“The Rev”) considers how focusing, looking and listening can help us experience the incredible world around us.
     
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  • When in Shawnigan – the international student experience

    If you’re thinking about sending a child to Shawnigan Lake School, or to a Canadian boarding school in general, there are a lot of things to consider. In this entry to A Voice in the Wilderness, Director of Admissions Mrs. Julia Pollock discusses some tips to help in the decision-making process and ways to help your child adjust to the boarding experience.
     
    Families often ask us about what the international student experience is like at Shawnigan. Why do families choose to come to Shawnigan and Canada to study abroad? What are some common challenges international students face? What are some helpful tips? What are the differences in the admissions process for international students compared to Canadian students?
     
    Shawnigan Lake School has international students from over 30 countries. The majority of these students come from Asia, Europe and Central America. There are a variety of reasons why an international family would look at education and a boarding experience in Canada. Canadian boarding schools offer a quality education that focuses on academics and experiential learning. Canada also has a welcoming culture, a safe environment, and beautiful natural scenery. Studying on Vancouver Island in British Columbia also offers a mild climate and clean air, and presents the opportunity to learn about Canada’s west coast.
     
    The Canadian boarding experience is a major reason that families choose to come to Shawnigan Lake School. A highlight for families in the decision-making process is the nurturing, supportive and enriching environment that is offered here, both within and outside of the classroom. Coupled with a quality education, our teachers truly care about the success and development of their students. The strong and positive relationships between teachers and their students is in the true interest of teachers to see them succeed.
     
    With the excitement that comes with the opportunity to come to Shawnigan often come nerves. Learning to live in a boarding house with other students can seem intimidating. With so many cultures and everyone learning to live away from home (often for the first time), students may feel nervous that their customs and way of living may be different than those around them. The magic of this is that students quickly realize that they are surrounded by so many others going through the same experience, as well as caring house staff, and by Canadian Thanksgiving (early October) students are settled in and have found the peer groups and staff members who quickly become their family away from home.
     
    Another common challenge that students find difficult is the change in food. Food is a comfort for us all, so it can seem difficult (and can even give you an upset stomach) if you are trying foods and ways of cooking for the first time. This adjustment is made easier by our amazing kitchen and dining services team, who put in the extra effort to cook foods from different cultures to make students feel more at home. 
     
    Here are some quick tips to help with the transition to the international student experience at Shawnigan:
     
    • Send care packages or bring treats and snacks from home. Food is comfort!
    • Participate in Canadian summer camp programs a few years before studying abroad so you can develop an understanding of what it’s like and make connections.
    • Watch documentaries and videos about Canadian culture so you can know what to expect.
    • Stay updated with Shawnigan’s social media and YouTube page so you can learn more about the campus and programs offered.
    • For English language learners, watch movies with English subtitles.
    • Be open-minded.
    • Be yourself!
     
    A helpful last piece of knowledge to know is that the international student admissions process isn’t all that different from a student who is applying from Canada. If you aren’t already studying at an International School, we will require students to provide results from an English proficiency test (IELTS, TOEFL, DuoLingo, etc.). Additionally, a short English assessment will be completed during your admissions interview to determine perfect placement in support classes to ensure upon your arrival that you have the necessary English support needed. This is put in place so that by the time your child enters Grade 11 and 12, they are strong enough to take rigorous academic courses that will help with the university application process and provide the best post-secondary options possible. 
     
    Please click here for more information about admissions at Shawnigan Lake School.

    Julia Pollock is the Director of Admissions at Shawnigan Lake School. She has worked in the Admissions department since 2015, travelling to 28 different countries to represent the School. Originally from Nuremberg, Germany, Julia has a Masters in Linguistics from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
     
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  • My Hockey Day in Canada experience

    Once a year, the weekly Hockey Night in Canada broadcast turns into Hockey Day in Canada, with a full day of NHL games interspersed with stories from a selected community in Canada. For the 2024 edition, Victoria, BC was the lucky community, and Shawnigan was fortunate enough to be part of the festivities. First, Mr. Andrew Ference, who won the Stanley Cup with the Boston Bruins in 2011 and is now an ice hockey coach at the School, brought the Cup to Shawnigan. Then, Alex Nelson and Morgan Jackson from our U18 Prep girls’ team were invited to take part in the events in Victoria, which included a gala dinner, a game with NHL alumni, and, for Alex, a visit to the Songhees Wellness Centre. Here are some of Alex’s reflections on what the week meant to her.
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  • The ABCs of Shawnigan: D is for “Dress Rehearsal”

    In this ongoing series for A Voice in the Wilderness, longtime English teacher Mrs. Cari Bell is exploring several facets of Shawnigan Lake School by going through the alphabet, letter by letter.

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  • What is permaculture?

    Permaculture is an effort to use the patterns we can see in nature to create sustainable and self-sufficient agricultural systems. In this blog post, Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist, Patricia Hanbidge, explains the guidelines behind the philosophy of permaculture.
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  • What is yoga nidra, and how can it help me?

    Neural pathways are your brain’s superhighways, dealing with stress, emotions and thinking skills. Just like physical infrastructure, those superhighways need maintenance from time to time. Shawnigan counsellor Jennifer Tully explains here how yoga nidra is one way to give your brain a break and give yourself a boost.
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  • Cut & Dried? Thoughts about woodworking and nature

    How do we balance the use of our crucial natural resources with the benefits they provide to students? Head of Fine Arts and woodworking teacher Mr. Declan Bartlett gives some thought to both sides.
     
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  • Ode to the Poinsettia – Part III of III

    They’re everywhere this time of year – but why? What makes the poinsettia so special? Besides the beautiful red and green coloration, there is a lot more to the history of this remarkable plant, as Shawnigan’s Environmental Lead and Horticulturalist, Patricia Hanbidge, explains in this three-part series.
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We acknowledge with respect the Coast Salish Peoples on whose traditional lands and waterways we live, learn and play. We are grateful for the opportunity to share in this beautiful region, and we aspire to healthy and respectful relationships with those who have lived on and cared for these lands for millennia.