Monday Nov 17, 2025
Saturday, 15 November 2014 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
First, let me thank Dr. Harsha Alles for inviting me to be with you this evening to be the keynote speaker. At the outset, I wish to pay my tribute to my teacher, my mentor and of course a giant in the field of education, be it in the state school system or in the domain of international schools in our country. And that’s none other than the late Ralph Alles, founder Principal of D.S. Senanayake Vidyalaya and Gateway International School, both excellent education institutions. I am certainly very happy to be amongst this galaxy of stars in the education sector whose contribution to the realm of education has been enormous.
These international schools continued to evolve and grow, even exponentially, especially after the 1950s and the impacts of globalisation. People started to increasingly criss-cross country boundaries. As the number and reach of multilateral organisations, international NGOs, and transnational companies grew, people of different nationalities and expertise were required to work in different locations around the world.
Their employment abroad was often incentivised with contracts providing separate allowances to educate their children accompanying them abroad, which also gave rise to a new phenomenon – the TCKs. TCKs – some of you may know what the term means – are “Third Culture Kids” or children who have accompanied their parents in their global travels and have grown up for a significant period moving between cultures.
I believe some explanation is needed here for those who are not familiar with this term. This is a term coined in 1950s. When children who come from their native homes (or first) culture move to a host (or second) culture, they form a culture, or lifestyle, different from either the first or second cultures. This is the third culture. Anyway, with a significant proportion of a globally-mobile population, the incidence of the Third Culture Kids is growing exponentially, and so is the demand for an appropriate system of education for them.