The Peterson Symposium
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2009 Carol Bellamy 2008 His Highness the Aga Khan 2007 Daniel Ritchie 2006 Martha C Piper 2005 William A McComish |
Alec was a Scotsman who read at Oxford and quickly gained a reputation in Britain as an educator who wanted to reform the A-level system. His work with Mountbatten in Malaysia during the second world war gave him a zest for promoting world peace and inroads into diplomatic and political circles on an international scale. He was for many years (until 1977) chairman of the editorial board of the prestigious periodical Comparative Education. A highly respected and broadly travelled educator, he had the international and academic stature to promote the IB Diploma Programme around the world while at the same time being a charismatic visionary with his feet on the ground—a rare combination. He played a particular role in shaping the theory of knowledge course, then at the core of the IB Diploma Programme and now influencing all aspects of the curriculum, from the Primary Years Programme through the Middle Years Programme to the Diploma Programme. His students admired him. He was bright, caring, civilized and very persistent. In 1987, a year before his death, Peterson published Schools Across Frontiers, his account of the creation of the United World Colleges and the International Baccalaureate®, and his final tribute to these two organizations whose history was so intertwined with his own. When he died in 1988, Alec Peterson had supported the IB for a quarter of a century as an educator, an internationalist and a pacifist. |

The Peterson lectures (now the