Page not found | Aga Khan Academies

Error message

The page you requested does not exist. For your convenience, a search was performed using the query maputo aga khan academy maputo growing community.

Vehicle safety

Effective on Monday, 26 February 2024, the Aga Khan Academy Maputo will introduce new pick-up and drop-off guidelines on campus to ensure the safety of our school community. For more information, please contact Ms Marli Mendes.

Taxonomy family: 

Meet Our School Community

The students, faculty and parents of the Aga Khan Academy Maputo are a socially conscious group of people committed to the development of their communities, their nation and civil society in the world at large. They understand that knowledge is a lifelong process of inquiry that leads to intellectual and personal growth. In this section we offer vignettes of members of the Academy family who are driven by the common goal of making a positive contribution to their society.

AKA Maputo participates in football tournament

AKA Maputo playing football

Happy New Year from the Aga Khan Academies

Dear friends of the Aga Khan Academies,

Happy New Year to you and your families from all of us at the Aga Khan Academies.

As we look toward 2018, I’m pleased to share with you some of the exciting developments that the Academies are anticipating for the coming year.

Across the Aga Khan Development Network, we will be continuing to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of His Highness the Aga Khan, marking 60 years of his enlightened leadership as the Imam of the Ismaili Muslims and founder of the AKDN. The Jubilee commemorations began on 11 July 2017 and will continue until July 2018. The Aga Khan Academies have been running two social media initiatives in honour of the Diamond Jubilee – Academies ‘Journeys’ and ‘60 Stories for 60 Years’ – and these will continue through this July. I hope you are enjoying them.

The Jubilee year marks a time of increasing expansion of the Aga Khan Academies. Construction of the full campus for our third Academy in Maputo, Mozambique has proceeded rapidly, and our students and staff are looking forward to the opening of the beautiful new school buildings that will house students from grades 3–7 in the very near future. The Academy in Maputo also expanded their curricular offering this academic year, having introduced the International Baccalaureate (IB) Middle Years Programme, which has been received very well by our students and teachers.
 
I’m also very pleased to share that our fourth Aga Khan Academy in Dhaka, Bangladesh will begin construction in 2018. The design for the forthcoming Academy won the award for best ‘Future Education’ project at the World Architecture Festival 2017. We’re looking forward to seeing the vision behind the award-winning design come to life, to provide talented students from Bangladesh and the region with a world-class education, regardless of their socioeconomic background.
 
In 2018 we will also be celebrating 15 years of the Aga Khan Academies network, with our first Academy in Mombasa, Kenya having opened in 2003. During the past 15 years, the Academies have pioneered innovative approaches in a multitude of areas, including the cross-curricular Aga Khan Strands, approaches to leadership development and service learning, campus design for a well-rounded education, talent identification, and developing local teachers into IB practitioners, amongst others. As our network grows, we are continuing to see the power of becoming a global, closely integrated and pluralistic learning community that allows sharing of ideas, expertise and thinking across varied contexts and cultures.
 
We greatly value your support for the Aga Khan Academies and our collective effort towards creating a better future through education.
 
Wishing you and your families the very best for 2018.
 
Warm regards,
 
Salim A.L. Bhatia
Director of Academies

Video: Back to school at AKA Maputo

Commencement of Diploma Programme at AKA Maputo

Diploma Programme class

AKA Maputo hosts basketball camp

Students training in the MPH

Rebecca Nichols: Seeing Endless Possibilities for the Future of AKA Maputo

Engaging Students to Become Stake-Holders in the Future of the Academy

For the Middle Years Programme (MYP) Coordinator, Rebecca Nichols, the sky is the limit when envisaging the future of the Aga Khan Academy in Maputo, Mozambique. More importantly, in her eyes, how the Academy keeps growing, shaping and expanding its role in the country and beyond must lie in the hands of students.

“I would like to see our students take responsibility for what our school should become,” she states with excitement, squarely placing the emphasis on student-centred leadership. “I look forward to hearing their ideas for new initiatives, and I look forward to AKA Maputo becoming a school on the African continent from which leaders emerge,” she adds with resolute clarity.

Listening to the details of Rebecca’s background, education, and experience is highly entrancing. Born in the United Kingdom, she spent the early years of her life in Kenya before moving to the Ashanti Goldfields in Ghana for a few years and then back to Great Britain where she obtained her university-level education. 

Armed with Master’s Degree in Education from the University of Bath and a post-graduate certificate in Education from the University of Sheffield, Rebecca has taught schools in Portugal, Angola, Kenya, Sweden, Spain, Italy and Hong Kong. In addition, she has worked as an International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma examiner, an MYP workshop leader and an independent educational consultant for schools in various parts of the world. She is currently pursuing a Doctorate Degree in Education. A British citizen, Rebecca says of her background, I think of myself as a transcultural, rather than someone who identifies particularly with the UK.”  

The Academy’s IB Programme is rich in Curricular Strands of ethics, pluralism, economics for development, cultures, governance, and civil society. These play a vital role in Rebecca’s teaching as she incorporates them in her instruction.

“I teach English language and literature and am always able to explore texts and language through the lens of the IB Programme’s Curricular strands,” she notes. “Currently, some of my grade 6 and grade 7 students and are studying Shakespeare’s ‘The Tempest,” and we have explored the themes of governance and civil society in the play.”

Mutual respect and mutual trust between students and also between students and teachers are of paramount value for a thriving classroom. How does Rebecca ensure that this environment exists in her classroom? 

“By listening to one another. By supporting one another. By helping one another reach their potential.”

Recognising the importance the Academy attaches to incorporating pluralism and the one-family feeling in the school, Rebecca states of the teachers, “We do a lot of work on team- building activities and also try to engage our students in undertakings that will enable them to develop a sense of community, a sense of family.”

Students, too, participate in this responsibility of developing a sense of belonging. “Our students have set up an after-school programme called “Teen Talks” that enables them to discuss their feelings, experiences and, concerns,” Rebecca says. “Their openness to one another ensures that a climate of pluralism flourishes within the Academy.” 

Although Rebecca values her students and works hard to educate them, she feels an excellent education must involve parents. “Any outstanding education must involve three parties; the students, the parents/guardians and the teachers,” Rebecca is quick to note.  “I communicate a lot with parents through monthly coffee mornings, emails and events to which parents are invited.  I especially look forward to the parent-teacher conferences.”

Radiating ambition for her students to become independent thinkers, even while working in groups, Rebecca designs projects that foster independent thinking skills.

“I create exciting, relevant units of work that expose them to a range of language and literature from a variety of contexts,” she states.  I encourage them to be creative, to work independently, in pairs and as part of a group. I provide detailed feedback and expect students to be able to provide meaningful feedback to one another,” she pauses.  And then continues, “I encourage them to take risks, to read widely and to learn about the world beyond our campus fences. I encourage them to try things they have never done before.” 

Cherishing her time at the Academy, Rebecca feels the experience she is acquiring will continue to resonate with her throughout her life. “Working at the Academy has enabled me to become a more effective multitasker who is willing and able to take on a wide variety of roles that support teaching and learning,” she muses. “I believe that this is an exciting time for the Academy and look forward to being part of the journey.”

Pages