While we are thinking about street names, you might be interested in this post I wrote a while back proposing that schools do something similar—especially since DCSZ is opening a new Senior School campus in the coming months.
|
||||
“Turn your school into Paris”by Mr. MacKnight, on March 30th, 2012
While we are thinking about street names, you might be interested in this post I wrote a while back proposing that schools do something similar—especially since DCSZ is opening a new Senior School campus in the coming months. March 30th, 2012 | Category: History
You must be logged in to post a comment. |
Important DatesY12 Orals: May 22, May 31, June 5, June 7. June 11: Y12 TOK Day ----------------------- "The arts, ideas, natural beauty, and good conversation provide lasting pleasure."----------------------- Recent Posts
"The less people know, the more stubbornly they know it."—Werner Vogels Top Commenters
Authors & Posts
IB TOK DocumentsTOK Links to Other SubjectsUseful Links
Comments . . .. . . are open only to students of the class, but if you are a non-student and would like to comment you can email Mr. MacKnight at ericmacknight AT mac DOT com.
CategoriesArchivesSearch this blog’s contentIs TOK a Philosophy Course?YES, in the sense that the name of the course itself is in any dictionary effectively synonymous with "epistemology." NO, in the sense that IB-specific ToK has many philosophical elements, but is not just philosophy. ToK is at root an interdiscipinary course that allows students to become aware of how the six subject-groups on the corners on the Diploma hexagon overlap and integrate. The interdisciplinary aspect is the crucial thing . . . . —Bruce Bartlett ----------------------------- "A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking."—Steven Wright Webs & ChainsNatura in reticulum sua genera connexit,
non in catenam: homines non possunt nisi catenam sequi, cum non plura simul possint sermone exponere. Nature knits up her kinds in a network, not in a chain; but men can follow only by chains because their language can’t handle several things at once. —Albrecht von Haller (tr. Howard Nemerov) [Epigraph to Nemerov's poem, "The Dependencies"] About This BlogUntil June 2011, this TOK blog was managed solely by Eric MacKnight. Beginning in the fall of 2011, its name changed to "DCSZ TOK Class Blog", and since then it has been used by all TOK students at Dulwich College Suzhou. The lead teacher is Julie Connah, assisted by Alan Connah and Eric MacKnight. Content posted before August 2011 was written by Eric MacKnight and his students at Suzhou Singapore International School. In August 2012 John Fitzgerald replaced Alan Connah in the DCSZ TOK team.
|
|||
|
Copyright © 2013 DCSZ TOK Class Blog - All Rights Reserved |
||||

Recent Comments