Quan Cais



Quan Cai is the IB CAS (Creativity, Action and Service) program at Li Po Chun United World College.

In the academic year 2009 – 2010 there are four ‘official’ activity groupings. Students select one activity from each group as a term/yearly commitment:

(Community) Service


(Campus) Service


Creativity

Action

Any additional activities undertaken by the students are ‘unofficial’.  Teachers should record such activities in testimonials and College reports where appropriate, particularly to acknowledge outstanding work by the student. It is the student’s responsibility to inform the tutor of unofficial progress/achievements.

The Aims of CAS 2010:

Learning outcomes:

“All 8 learning outcomes must be present for completion of CAS.” “Some evidence for every outcome.” CAS Guide 2010 p. 5 – 6 Evidence will be saved on ManageBac, a web based application used as a tool for communicating, recording and reflecting on CAS activities. Not all outcomes need to be achieved for each activity, but that there is evidence of all 8 by the end of the program. It is important to note that the IB requires evidence of experiences/reflections (but only, “some”). It cannot be over emphasized that evidence of learning outcomes will determine completion of Quan Cai, not hours completed[1].

Also note that learning outcomes are, “…differentiated from assessment objectives because they are not rated on a scale. A decision on completion of Quan Cai is simply, “Have these outcomes been achieved.” CAS Guide 2010 p. 5

The 8 learning outcomes for the students are:

Forms of evidence:

Quan Cai (CAS) journals are required to show evidence of the 8 learning outcomes. This may take the form of word documents, blogs, photo journals, videos etc (all saved on ManageBac).

CAS Advisers:

CAS Advisers – “provide personal advice and support to individual students.” CAS Guide 2010 p.6.  At LPC, CAS Advisers are tutors. The CAS Guide 2010 describes a CAS Adviser as a mentor who:

CAS Advisers are required to meet with the students twice in Year 1 and once in Year 2. This can easily be covered in tutor meetings and the proposed end of year ‘Quan Cai Day’.

Note that the CAS Guide 2010 distinguishes between CAS Advisers and Activity supervisors (who might not be teachers) whose role is outlined as monitoring attendance, completing College reports on student performance in activities as well as providing general support and guidance to the student.

Steve Reynolds
Head of Quan Cai/CAS Coordinator

List of Quan Cai activities

Links to different Quan Cais

Global Concerns Action Team

Initiative for Peace

Sino-Japan Youth Conference


[1] “While such learning and reflection were implicit in the previous guide, it had become clear that too much emphasis had fallen on counting hours and ‘completing’ CAS rather than on viewing CAS as a continual complement to the student’s academic experience throughout the Diploma Programme.” IB CAS Sampling Report for LPCUWC 2009 page 3.


This page was last updated on February 19, 2010.