Pre-IB and IB Diploma teachers
Quality teaching
With highly-experienced academic staff, specialist knowledge of the IB methodology and our high staff-to-student ratio, students really benefit from the quality of our teaching. This is backed up by our quality IB exam results and positive inspection reports.
‘The quality of the students’ academic achievement is excellent’. ISI report 2019
Also, many of our teachers are IB Examiners or International Baccalaureate Organisation (IBO) Workshop Leaders, so they know exactly what skills and attributes are needed to help students thrive.
Our Teaching staff
Our teachers are listed below in alphabetical order:
Alex Palmer
Alex Palmer is an English teacher who has worked at St. Clare’s since 2011. After reading English Language and Literature at the University of Manchester, Alex began his teaching career in Argentina in 2008, where he taught groups of teenagers, trainee teachers and managers from banks and oil companies. On his return to the UK in 2011, Alex started teaching at St Clare’s International College and completed the DELTA qualification through the University of Cambridge. Over the next four years he taught every option offered on that campus, including the University Foundation course, the English plus Academic Subjects programme and exam preparation classes. He was also the Director of Studies for the teenage and junior summer courses (2013-2015), where he developed the syllabuses to encourage students and teachers to progress onto the courses that run during the academic year. In January 2016 Alex moved to the IB campus on a full-time basis to teach English B on the IB Diploma. Alex has since gone on to teach English A: Language and Literature, as well as Pre-IB English, including IGCSE. His aim is to not only develop a student’s intrinsic motivation to learn the language, but also to expand their vocabulary and understanding of their other subjects too.
Andrew Young
Andrew Young, who graduated with Combined Honours from the University of London, has been teaching both History and Politics at St. Clare’s, Oxford since 1987. As Joint Head of the Humanities Department he has recently overseen the introduction of the IB’s newest course, Global Politics, into the curriculum. As an author he has published articles in Modern History Review on topics as diverse as Benito Mussolini’s rise to power, and Mao Zedong’s policies towards women. Andrew has a particular interest in an arcane branch of politics known as Psephology – the study of electoral systems and voting behaviour. He has helped to organise and co-lead multiple St. Clare’s trips including India, Israel, Prague, Northern Ireland, Krakow and Auschwitz. As part of his commitment to advancing international education and understanding he runs the in-house Model United Nations group, and has co-led delegations to inter-school MUN conferences. Married to a Californian girl, Barbara, they have four mid-Atlantic children: Acacia, Jemma, George, and Ian.
Angeles Torres-Armendariz
Angeles Torres-Armendariz was born and grew up in Paris. A French citizen, her parents were Spanish, and she grew up with two cultures that she loves sharing with her students. She has been a teacher of French B, Spanish B and pre-IB at St Clare’s since 2013 and a personal tutor since 2016.
She studied at the Sorbonne in the University of Paris, where she gained BA Honours in Spanish and an MA in Teaching French as a Foreign Language. Before coming to St Clare’s, she taught French at the Oxford University Language Centre where she prepared and equipped students from the colleges with the skills needed for the Oxford University language programme (Opal exam) at different levels (beginners-threshold advanced).
She also taught French and Spanish at Oxford Brookes University, where she prepared students of various nationalities to become Spanish teachers or to study in France on the Erasmus scheme. She also delivered Spanish booster courses which trained students to prepare the PGCE in teaching Spanish in primary and secondary schools in England.
She started her teaching career teaching French and Spanish at two preparatory schools, Godstowe in High Wycombe and Cothill House in Oxfordshire, where she prepared children from 8 to 13 years of age for the Common Entrance examination.
Over her years of teaching, Miss Torres-Armendariz continues to love giving language classes to students from different nationalities. She really appreciates the cultural diversity at St Clare’s. It is the reason why she feels lucky to work in such a rich environment.
She enjoys travelling and discovering new cultures. She also loves art and studied fine art for a year at the Tolbiac University, Paris I. She has a strong interest in French baroque music, literature and French cinema. She also does a lot of cycling, which is one of her favourite activities.
Andrew Hennigan
Andrew Hennigan graduated with a BSc Hons from Aston University, Birmingham, which included a year spent working in industry for BP in Scotland. After university he worked as a Process Technologist for London Rubber Company and then as an Industrial Chemist for Linde Gas.
He moved into Science teaching having completed a PGCE at Keele University, and discovered that his time spent in industry allowed him to engage his students, motivating them with real life experiences. After seven years teaching at both state and independent schools in the UK, he has spent the last thirteen years teaching IB Chemistry overseas, in such diverse locations as Malaysia, Thailand, El Salvador, Slovakia and most recently Lithuania. In addition to science teaching he also taught Theory of Knowledge, Maths and coached rugby and athletics.
Any spare time is spent cooking, reading, travelling and enjoying time with his family.
Ashley Armitage
Ashley Armitage graduated with Honours from Newcastle Business School. He then attended Leeds Trinity University for his PGCE in Business and began his teaching career in state schools in Yorkshire and Oxfordshire. Ashley has experience leading departments as a Head of House and Head of Business, before joining St Clare’s in 2022. He is particularly interested in marketing and was formerly a Managing Director of a tutoring and supply teaching company.
Ashley is a passionate sportsman, having represented his schools and universities in various sports including basketball, rugby, football and ice hockey. His sporting highlight was playing football at Old Trafford (the home of Manchester United). In his spare time, Ashley enjoys visiting national parks with his friends and family.
Astrid Fraser
Astrid Fraser is the Senior Librarian at St. Clare’s, and has worked at the college since 2004, starting as the Assistant Librarian and moving into her current position in 2006.Astrid graduated in Politics and Media Studies from De Montfort University, and went on to work in bookselling and publishing before deciding to make the move into librarianship. She did a library traineeship at the Bodleian Library and gained her MA in Librarianship from the University of Sheffield. She returned to Oxford and worked at the Politics and International Relations Faculty Library, for the University, before joining St. Clare’s.Astrid is a longstanding committee member of the Oxfordshire School Library Association, and was on the editorial committee of the School Library Association publication, Riveting Reads Plus: a view of the world, which consisted of reviews of books and films chosen to increase young people’s understanding of different cultures. Astrid has worked in children’s homes in India and Bangladesh and loves to travel. She also enjoys visiting museums and galleries, watching films and reading.She loves the fact that a book can open her eyes, and transport her, to another time or place.
Darrel Ross
Darrel grew up by the coast in Devon before going to study at the Oxford School of Architecture. As a RIBA Chartered Architect he worked with various private practices involved in projects all over the UK, Europe and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. As well as undertaking private commissions, he has mainly specialised in the education sector working on schools, colleges and universities. This exposure eventually led Darrel into teaching, where he chose to specialise in Maths because of his fascination with mathematical concepts, his enjoyment of problem solving and the importance of Maths in the workplace – especially relating to construction. He enjoyed studying various Maths courses with the Open University before returning to Oxford for a PGCE course. Darrel worked in three UK schools and recently managed a department of 12 secondary maths teachers, and undertook leadership and management of assessment and progress before moving to St. Clare’s as Assistant Principal Academic in 2014. Darrel lives in the beautiful city of Oxford and spends time progressing building projects, and with his family (including 3 children). He enjoys visiting new places, art, architecture, design, painting, woodwork, reading and KenKens. He likes a wide variety of music, plays guitar and aspires to play piano. Darrel enjoys swimming and has intermittent success when surfing in the summer months.
David Beale
David Beale studied Environmental Science at Kings’ College London and completed a Master’s degree at the University of Edinburgh. He worked in wildlife conservation in Oxford, Indonesia, Eritrea and Tanzania and then made wildlife documentaries at the BBC. He moved into teaching having completed a PGCE and over the last twenty years He has been lucky enough to work in some of the most amazing schools in the UK and Australia. He has taught IB Biology for over ten years.
David Chaplin
David Chaplin has been a member of the St Clare’s community for twenty years. He teaches Theory of Knowledge on the IB and Photography on our Pre-IB, summer school, and senior courses. He also developed our popular ’TOK tours’ of Oxford, which explore the rich intellectual heritage of the city. In 2015 he began working as a Personal Tutor, and also works in the library where he recently set up an educational e-video platform for staff and students. He was awarded his first degree by the University of Wales in the Humanities, gained his PGCE in Oxford, and has studied Art and Design. He also has a certificate in teaching basic literacy and numeracy to adults with learning difficulties, which was inspired by his work prior to St Clare’s in the mental health division of the NHS. His main interests are photography and hiking. He has exhibited photographs in Oxford and has taken many of the pictures on this website.
David Harris
David Harris is the Head of Mathematics and has been teaching at St Clare’s since 2006. He also teaches Theory of Knowledge. He holds a BSc (Hons) in Mathematics (Edinburgh), and MEd (Bristol) and a PGCE from Manchester.
David has had his work published in four consecutive decades, for the European Council of International Schools, the Association of Teachers of Mathematics, the International Baccalaureate Organisation and Oxford University Press, for whom he co-authored their current Mathematics: applications and interpretations textbooks.
Born in Dunfermline, Scotland, David has taught in international schools in London, Cairo, Buenos Aires and in France where he was part of the team who founded the International School of Toulouse. David has presented at the International Conference for Technology in Mathematics Teaching, the British Congress for Mathematics Education and has delivered workshops to teachers in the USA and in Singapore.
David has various roles in the IB and has been an assistant IB examiner since 2004.
David finds relaxation in the gym, by cooking, and by enjoying photography, music and time with his family. He especially enjoys following his football team with a loyalty that is unconditional and at times irrational.
Didier Descamps
Didier Descamps is a born linguist and has been a language teacher all his working life. Over the years he has taught Dutch, French and English as a Foreign Language although he has always principally been a German teacher. After having gained an MA and PGCE in Germanic Languages from the Catholic University of Louvain, he first worked in his native Belgium for ten years before moving to Oxford.
Didier has always preferred working in an international context. In addition to being a language teacher, he has taught first aid to asylum seekers and refugees with the Belgian Red Cross, managed residential English Language summer courses in the UK and helped run a summer theatre youth programme in the US.
Here in the UK, Didier has continuously taught IB German as well as GCSE and A level French. He arrived at St Clares in 2021 to take up the role of part-time IB Dutch teacher, while he continues teaching fulltime in another IB Sixth Form college.
When not working, Didier loves to travel or organize trips for friends and relatives to various places with which he is familiar. He has a keen interest in history, particularly post-WWII European and postcolonial history, which he inevitably incorporates into his courses. Nowadays, however, the bulk of his home time is taken up by the care for his young daughter, whom he is raising trilingually. He is fond of cycling, and has spent countless hours roaming the wilds of the United Kingdom with his two dogs.
Emily Woodeson
Emily Woodeson is our Assistant Principal of Pastoral, Deputy Designated Safeguarding Lead, Biology teacher and Oxbridge adviser. She has worked at St Clare’s since 2014. Before this she worked in a variety of local schools as Head of Science. A keen traveller, Emily has worked in schools and charity projects in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Kenya and Nicaragua and spent two years helping to set up an international school in Penang, Malaysia. Emily has a Biology degree and PGCE from Oxford University and has been involved in interviewing PGCE candidates for the Department of Education. Whilst Biology has her academic heart she places considerable emphasis on the importance of extra-curricular activities and has many years’ experience running Duke of Edinburgh Award, diving trips, field trips, sports tours and overseas personal development expeditions. At Oxford University, she was more likely to be found in a boat than in the lab and represented the University in the Boat Race, being part of the first victorious Oxford crew for 10 years. Now she runs, cycles and is a keen netballer.
Fanny Gutjahr
Fanny Gutjahr started teaching at St Clare’s in summer 2018. She studied Sociology, Pedagogy and Philosophy in Mannheim and Darmstadt to a master’s level. For 10 years, while still living in Germany, she managed a charity supporting schools’ in improving their pedagogical and educational concepts. During this time, she also taught at the University of Darmstadt, and led a research projects on how to implement better communication and mediation in schools. She gained additional specialist qualifications in family therapy and psychotherapy, which enabled her to get involved in the first email emergency call service set up in Germany, where she supported clients as well as she trained volunteers.
Having lived in France and Germany her career as a teacher and translator took her to companies like BMW and the Ministry of Defense During this time, she studied creative writing at the Open University (part-time), and in 2017 she gained her PGCE in Oxford.
Fanny speaks German, French and English. As an admirer of different cultures, she has travelled through most of Europe, China, Georgia, Mongolia and Russia. Her passion for education, language, literature and the arts make her feel very much at home in a city like Oxford.
Francesca Shakespeare
Francesca Shakespeare is a practising artist and Art teacher. She has worked part-time for St Clare’s for fifteen years and teaches on the IB, Pre IB and the senior courses programmes. Francesca did a Fine Art and Italian degree at Exeter University, living and working in Italy before and during her course. Before moving to Oxford over twenty five years ago, she ran a mural and decorative Art business in London with a studio in Notting Hill and commissions all around the country. She then started painting and teaching and exhibits both locally and further afield. Francesca is an active member of the local art community. She coordinates Summertown Artweeks (part of the big Oxfordshire Art Festival) and is a founding committee member of Young Art Oxford, a county-wide children’s art competition that exhibits at The Ashmolean Museum. She also works regularly with the Ashmolean’s education department to create interactive artworks for the galleries. As an illustrator, she has produced the decorative map of St Clare’s as well as ones of the River Thames and Cherwell. Francesca is married and has two daughters and a son. Website: www.francescashakespeare.com
Ida Kenward
Ida joined St Clare’s in 2017 and has taught Psychology and Swedish literature as well as supervised Extended essays and run the popular CAS activity Psychology film club. Ida has a degree in Politics & English and a PGCE from Uppsala University, and a Psychology degree from Stockholm University. She studied parts of her Uppsala degree as an exchange student at the University of Hull and at Oxford Brookes University. Ida is currently living in Stockholm and continues to teach Swedish literature at St Clare’s, as well as English, Politics and Psychology at a Swedish upper secondary school.
Isabelle Pickett
Bella has been the Head of Psychology at St Clare’s since December 2022. Before St Clare’s, she taught IB Psychology at both state and independent schools in Queensland, Australia. Alongside teaching Psychology, she has coordinated several co-curricular activity programs, taught Theory of Knowledge and dabbled in middle school mathematics teaching.
Bella graduated with a Bachelor of Liberal Arts and Sciences with a major in Psychology, from San Diego State University in 2014, where she was also a member of their Division 1 Lacrosse team. After moving back to her home town of Adelaide, South Australia, she then completed her Honours in Psychology and a Masters of Teaching. Bella then moved to sunny Brisbane where she began her teaching career in IB schools.
Outside of teaching, she enjoys travelling, seeing friends, playing lacrosse and is currently a competitive long-distance runner.
Inger-Marie Olsen
Inger Marie moved to Uk in 1997 and worked at the Norwegian school in London for 13 years. In 2010 she began teaching in the IB context and she has now taught students of all ages, including IB Norwegian Literature, IB Norwegian Language and Literature and Norwegian Language B in different London-based IB World Schools.
Inger Marie qualified as a teacher after studied at the Artic University in Tromsø, Norway. She studied at the same University for a BA.
Jadwiga Wanelik
Jadwiga studied Literature and French at Jagiellonian University in Kraków and at Sorbonne IV in Paris. In 1986 she was awarded a Master’s degree in Romance Philology from Jagiellonian University, which included a Polish equivalent of PGCE. Between 1986 and 1989 she taught French at the French Institute in Kraków, after which she moved to Oxford. During her first three years in England she worked for Oxfam as a part-time translator, translating monthly bulletins from English into French. Jadwiga has been working at St. Clare’s since 1993, teaching both Polish and French. She has also been working as a residential warden, duty manager and library assistant. Jadwiga loves literature, films, art and has a keen interest in Japanese literature and culture. She also very much enjoys her voluntary work for Mind, the mental health charity.
James Eve
James Eve joined St Clare’s as Head of English in September 2023. He has a degree in English from the University of St Andrews and a Masters in Renaissance Literature from the University of York. The first ten years of his working life were spent as a journalist, first on the Arts and Books sections of The Times in London, then as a sports reporter for Reuters in Rome. In 2007 he returned to England to fulfil a long-standing ambition to work as a teacher. Since then, he has taught in the state and independent sectors. His previous roles include Head of English at Magdalen College School in Oxford, and Director of Studies at the Royal Grammar School High Wycombe. In his spare time, James enjoys reading, running, going to the cinema, and practising his rusty Italian.
James Jacob
James Jacob joined St Clare’s as an IB History Teacher in September 2023. He has a BA (SOAS, History) and an MSc (UCL, Security Studies) and has taught in the state and independent sectors in London and Oxford. Before that, Jacob worked as an aid worker in Ghana, Uganda and Sudan. In his spare time, he enjoys cricket, debating, board games and history. Jacob’s favourite novel is ‘Quartered Safe Out Here’ by George Macdonald Fraser and his favourite film is Zulu.
Jennifer Taylor
Jennifer Taylor has been teaching Italian literature at St. Clare’s since 2005. She is passionate about her subject and has always been immersed in language and literature from an early age. Born in Turin, Italy, to an Italian mother and Canadian father she began her childhood in Germany, returning to Italy aged 7. Jennifer is a dottore in History of Art which she has studied alongside with Italian literature at Turin university and has grown up speaking 5 languages: Italian, English, German, Spanish and French. She studied in Berlin for a year having gained a place on the Erasmus scheme. She also obtained a creative writing diploma at Scuola Holden in Turin. She taught in Italy for two years before moving to the Cotswolds in 2005 where she lives with her potter husband, Adam, and their four children. Jennifer loves teaching at St Clare’s and continues to be very enthusiastic about her roots and regularly returns to Italy.
Jennifer Wirth
Jennifer Wirth joined the Mathematics Department at St. Clare’s in 2011. With both of her parents as teachers, she had wonderful examples of the joys and commitment linked to the field of education. She received her BA in Mathematics from the University of Minnesota, Morris, while also working on her teaching certification. She earned a Masters in Curriculum and Technology from the University of Phoenix, and she uses her technology skills to ensure colleagues and students update their calculator software every year. Jennifer completed her teaching practicum in Geelong, Australia. The experience teaching overseas opened her eyes to the idea of blending teaching and travelling. She returned to her native USA and taught Mathematics at middle and high school levels before making the bold decision to return overseas. Her first overseas school was the American Community School of Abu Dhabi. During her tenure, she was Head of Maths and served as the first IB Diploma Coordinator after helping to bring the IB Diploma to the school. She also enjoyed participating in Habitat for Humanity projects that took the students to India and Bangladesh. Jennifer moved to Budapest to teach at the American International School of Budapest. After her time in Hungary, she followed her heart to the UK to marry her husband. Jennifer lives in Abingdon with her husband and two children. She has shared her love of travel with her family through local walks and trips to visit family and friends around the world. She aims to get back to trying new recipes with the assistance of her little chefs.
Jing Fan
Jing is a teacher of Chinese who joined St Clare’s in 2003. She currently teaches Chinese A: Literature, Chinese B, Mandarin ab initio and Pre-IB World Literature. She is also a personal tutor and has worked as an IB examiner. Trained as a teacher, Jing graduated from Central China Normal University with a BA in English Language and Literature, and she then did a postgraduate certificate in Comparative Literature in Wuhan, China. She also holds a PhD in Education and PGCE in Language Teaching from Goldsmith’s College, London. During her PGCE work placement, Jing spent one academic term at the prestigious Eton College, where she had an interesting and memorable experience. Before moving to the UK, she worked as a university lecturer, teaching English as well as Chinese to undergraduate students.In her spare time, Jing enjoys yoga, swimming and playing the piano. She also enjoys travelling with her family, exploring exotic places and authentic foods.
John Woodings
John Woodings has been a teacher of English Language and Literature at St Clare’s since 2015 and has previously taught secondary English for ten years in Reading, in the United Kingdom, and as an English language teacher in Lima, Peru and Imola, Italy. Born in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire, he initially graduated with BA (Hons) from the University of Sheffield, with an exchange year in the University of Massachusetts, Amherst before going on to complete a PGCE in English with Canterbury Christchurch University College and an MA in Education for Global Futures at Reading University.
John enjoys reading and studying contemporary English and world fiction; he has been fortunate to pursue a career teaching a subject which is complemented by his wide range of interests. A true jack-of-all-trades, he variously enjoys international travel, travel writing, cinema, philosophy, and outdoors sports. One area where he does not prevaricate is his near-obsessive interest in cycling, racing mountain bikes, and has raced locally and around the country, to no great distinction, but with great enthusiasm.
He lives in South Oxfordshire with his wife Rita and their two young daughters, whose emerging personalities and aptitudes are a constant source of fascination and enjoyment.
Juan Pablo
Juan Pablo graduated in Psychology from the Universidad de San Simon in Bolivia, and completed courses in Audiovisual Language and Audiovisual Production in Argentina and Bolivia. Juan Pablo combined his experience in psychology and audiovisual production to work on the “DFD-PROFORTES Higher Education Strengthening and Transformation Project” in Bolivia, in coordination with the Universiteit Twente and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Holland.
He also worked in the Department of Culture at the Cochabamba City Council in Bolivia, in the area of Communications, and was the production director of the film “La Cruel Martina”, which won the national Best Film of the Year prize. In the area of psychology, Juan Pablo worked in Bolivia as a psychologist for the National Foundation of Cancer Sufferers. Juan Pablo holds, and has held, many roles in St. Clare’s: between 2011 and 2014, he taught Spanish to Pre-IB students and he is currently part-time librarian, senior invigilator and has been working as a relief warden for 14 years.
A very important part of his life now is looking after his little daughter, and in his free time, he enjoys casting off on his narrowboat, The Temeraire, with his daughter, to travel along the canals of England, and down the Thames.
Julia Hammett
With a background in both the private and public teaching sectors, Julia Hammett has lived and worked in Finland and Italy where she taught for the British Council. Julia is an experienced course designer who has devised many specialist courses in every type of English imaginable including technical courses for adults and a language course for diplomats which she taught at the University of Westminster, London.
A graduate of the University of Dundee, Julia has a MA in English and History, a PGCE from Moray House in Edinburgh, and a Diploma in TEFL. Before beginning her job at St. Clare’s where she has been teaching English and History since 2007, Julia worked as Director of Studies of the busy summer language programme based at Banbury Road. Julia has also produced successful theatrical events for summer courses at the school.
Outside the classroom Julia is an active member of her local community and was a local Councillor for eight years. She is a passionate defender of the natural environment in Oxfordshire and, in her role as Chair of the Oxfordshire Badger Group, liaises with local councils and other organisations about planning issues and their impact on wildlife. Julia also enjoys field work and mapping out wildlife habitats in the countryside and is a Trustee of a British animal charity based in Sri Lanka.
Kevin Hennessy
Kevin Hennessy is a qualified History and Business Teacher with experience in the Republic of Ireland and an amazing opportunity to teach for three years in Botswana. His first degree was from Cork, Ireland where he also completed his PGCE. He then did a Master’s in Educational Management at Oxford Brookes University. In 2001 he moved to Oxford as the Creativity, Activity, Service (CAS) Co-ordinator at St. Clare’s, and in 2006 he was appointed Head of Department. He is a trained IB CAS workshop leader. He was awarded the UEFA B Diploma for Football Coaching in 2010 and is a member of the English Football Coaches Association. He has the Leadership in Running Fitness Award and is working towards the British Athletics Coach in Running Fitness qualification.
Creativity, Activity, Service is at the heart of the IB Diploma programme. Kevin is attracted to the key idea that CAS enables students to enhance their personal and interpersonal development through experiential learning. He has organised and led school trips to Belfast, Barcelona, Jerusalem and most recently to Verona. He works with colleagues in delivering the Duke of Edinburgh Gold Award with expeditions across the Brecon Beacons Mountains in Wales.
Kevin works closely with the English Language Courses Department at St. Clare’s. He has responsibility for the Summer English Language Activity programmes along with the recruitment and managing of the Summer English Language Activity Organisers team. His pastoral responsibilities have included being a Dean of Students on the Summer English Language courses and a House Warden from 2002 to 2006. Work aside, ultra marathons, off road running and his toddler Jack keep him fit and healthy.
Kristel Vandenrijt
Kristel Vandenrijt joined the Humanities department as a Teacher of History in September 2018. She is also a Personal Tutor, and she’s involved in the Model United Nations sessions that are run at St Clare’s. Kristel is a qualified History teacher with an MA and PGCE from the Catholic University of Leuven, in her native Belgium. She is also an IB History Examiner, and has a CELTA qualification.
Kristel is a true believer in the IB’s internationalism, and has lived on 3 different continents so far. Her first experience with living abroad came during an exchange year in Arizona, USA. After completing her teacher training, Kristel wanted to combine teaching with her love of traveling and exploring new places. She moved to Vietnam where she taught English as a Second Language to Vietnamese students. She returned to Europe afterwards to pursue her passion for history, and started teaching at the International School of Nice in France. During her time there, Kristel was involved in the development of the history curriculum, as well as responsible for the organisation of many school trips. Kristel moved to the UK to seize the amazing opportunity to become part of St Clare’s community.
When not at school, Kristel has developed a real love for French cuisine, in particular cheese, and will be found hunting the UK to discover new flavours. She has a real sense of adventure which often manifests itself in traveling to faraway places or finding herself outdoors hiking.
Lewis Fraser
Lewis Fraser is an Activities Teacher at St Clare’s with the main role of overseeing the Creativity, Activity and Service (CAS) participation of the Pre IB students. He has worked at St Clare’s since 2015. Lewis completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Gloucestershire, graduating with a First Class Degree in Sport and Exercise Science, and his postgraduate degree at the University of Bristol, graduating with a Distinction in Nutrition, Physical Activity and Public Health.
Since graduating, he has gone on to complete a Level Three Diploma in Personal Training and Fitness Instructing and offers training programmes to St Clare’s students. He has also completed a variety of other fitness instructing certificates, including gym based boxing and studio cycling. He hopes to continue his professional development in the fitness industry to continue offering a variety of different classes. Since coming to St Clare’s, Lewis has taken leadership of the Duke of Edinburgh Award programme and believes passionately in the skills this challenging award can develop.
Mark Watts
Mark studied Economics at Liverpool University, graduating in 1988. He attended Warwick University for his PGCE in Economics and Mathematics and began his teaching career in state schools in London and Berkshire. He has been teaching IB Economics at St. Clare’s since 1997, initially as Head of Economics and Business and subsequently as Joint Head of Humanities. He has a particular interest in game theory and in macroeconomic schools of thought.
In his spare time Mark is a passionate rugby player, currently in transition from semi-retired to almost-retired.
Matt Dolan
Matt has been working as a Chemistry teacher for seventeen years and has six years of experience teaching the IB diploma. Since arriving at St. Clare’s in 2012 he has also enjoyed teaching the Theory of Knowledge and is currently the staff development co-ordinator.
Matt studied Chemistry with industrial training at the University of Bath which included a year working in the research and development department of Shell in The Netherlands.
He has always enjoyed opportunities for travel and has worked abroad in schools in Rome and Buenos Aires. In addition to his science teaching in Italy, he also taught maths, IT, and PE. He particularly enjoyed teaching Italians to play cricket.
In his spare time, Matt is most often found exploring the Cotswold and Chiltern hills on his bicycle, but this is mostly just preparation for his more ambitious and exciting trips to the mountains of France and Spain during his holidays.
Melanie Martindale
Melanie Martindale has been teaching Geography and Environmental Systems and Societies at St Clare’s since 2013. Her first degree was from Liverpool University. She then completed a PGCE and a MA in Geography in Education from the University of London.
Melanie has been teaching since 1990. She began her career in London before moving to Botswana where she spent nine years working in both government and independent schools. She moved to Oxford in 2004 where she was Head of Geography at a local independent school before heading to Thailand to teach IB in an International school.
Melanie enjoys travelling and spends most of her holidays exploring the world. She has organised numerous trips for students including geography tours to Botswana, Sri Lanka and Iceland. She accompanied a group on a World Challenge expedition trekking in the Himalayas, in India. She has been involved in volunteering programmes including working with the sea gypsies in Thailand and setting up a permaculture garden in Botswana.
Melanie is an IB examiner in Geography and is presently involved in writing an online textbook for the new Geography syllabus. She is a member of a local golf club and spends most of her weekends on the golf course
Nadia Jones
Nadia Jones was educated in Romania and studied Mathematics at Babes Bolyai University, Cluj. Following her Master’s in Numerical Analysis and teaching diploma, she taught in various schools in her home country before relocating to the UK in 2004 to learn English. Prior to her appointment at St Clare’s in 2009, she was a teacher of Mathematics at The Oratory School near Reading and at Wycombe High School. She is married with two young children. Although her passion is Mathematics, she also enjoys cooking, languages and travel.
Nisha Bauluck
Nisha Bauluck graduated from the University of Sussex with a BSc (Hons) in Mathematics and French which she followed up by completing a PGCE in Mathematics. She has taught Maths since 1996 in various schools in England and joined St Clare’s in 2011. She is an examiner for the Standard Level internal assessment and is therefore very familiar with the requirements of this component.
Nisha has taken on many different challenges whilst teaching and these have included Head of Maths as well as Head of Year roles. She worked with the University of Oxford on their PGCE programme where she was in charge of recruiting and training new Maths teachers. Now she has settled into the role of a full time Maths teacher as this is where she feels most fulfilled.
In her spare time, Nisha has been following a yoga course for the last six years, where the focus is on the physical as well as the spiritual benefits of yoga. Otherwise, she can be found at her sewing machine or with knitting needles in her hands.
Paul Sinclair
Paul Sinclair is the Director of Studies for the Academic Programmes at the International College and enjoys both working with our university partners in the USA and advising students who apply to American Universities, a role he has fulfilled since 2007. He studied Medieval History at the University of St Andrews and also completed a year of study abroad at Queen’s University, Canada, and an MA in History at the University of Washington in Seattle before moving to Oxford to research thirteenth century England on a British Academic Scholarship at St John’s College, especially kingship, knighthood and the reign of King Henry III. Paul teaches Liberal Arts courses on history and art history and gives seminars on a range of medieval topics, J.R.R. Tolkien and Victorian medievalism; he is currently researching the utopian writings of William Morris. In his spare time, he likes to explore eighteenth century English landscape gardens and listen to 1960s American soul music – although rarely at the same time.
Rebecca Pyrah
Rebecca Pyrah has been an Activities Teacher and the Creativity, Activity and Service (CAS) Coordinator since 2007. She has gained a wealth of knowledge in the field of CAS and extra-curricular activities and she enjoys adapting the provision of the programme to meet the needs and interests of the current students.
Rebecca has a first class honours degree in Physical Education (PE) from Leeds Beckett University, and studied for her PGCE at Loughborough University. Before coming to St. Clare’s, she worked as a secondary PE teacher, and thoroughly enjoyed taking GCSE and A Level PE classes.
Rebecca loves to travel and had a gap year before starting her teaching career travelling around South America, Australasia, South East Asia, China and India. She has used her passion for travelling by organising St. Clare’s trips to Northern Ireland, Barcelona and the mountains of Wales. Rebecca also helps running the Gold Duke of Edinburgh Award, and values the skills that this challenging award instils in students. Moreover, Rebecca helps with the planning and delivery of the Summer English Language Courses.
Ricardo Da Silva Esteves
Ricardo Da Silva Esteves was born in the Portuguese University city of Coimbra and subsequently brought up in Nantes, France. He teaches literature in French and Portuguese, and French and Spanish language; he has been teaching at St Clare’s since September 2005.
After finishing his French Baccalaureate, Ricardo completed a Master’s degree in English and Portuguese applied to business and international affairs at Nantes University and first came to the UK on an Erasmus exchange, studying at Cardiff University. He then settled in Cambridge, working as a Language Teaching assistant for Anglia Polytechnic University whilst also running language classes for the Cambridge Alliance Française.
In 2000 Ricardo completed his PGCE at Hughes Hall, Cambridge University, beginning his teaching career at Comberton Village College. He then taught at Didcot School for Girls before coming to teach at St Clare’s. Ricardo came to us with a breadth of teaching experience from primary school language workshops, GCSE and A level, to adult evening classes and business courses. As well as teaching both language A and B courses, Ricardo has also been an examiner for the IB for a number of years. In his teaching, Ricardo strives to give his students first hand experiences and encounters with the languages they are studying. Consequently, each year Ricardo organizes and runs trips to both Paris and Lisbon.
Ricardo is a passionate linguist who relishes the cross-cultural exchanges between the four cultures that have shaped his intellectual development. He is an avid reader, cinemagoer and gardener, with strong interests in both the visual arts and music. Ricardo divides much of his spare time between the UK, Northern Portugal and France.
Sarah Jinks
Sarah Jinks is Head of Biology and teacher of Theory of Knowledge, as well as being the Learning Support Coordinator and Medics Supervisor. In addition, she is an IB examiner for Biology. Sarah has taught at St Clare’s since 2006 after teaching positions elsewhere in Oxford and in Costa Rica. She also teaches on numerous IB introduction and revision courses at St Clare’s and around the world. Her aim is to fill the Biology lab with a range of animals and plants and to help students learn a love of barnacles on the annual field course whilst writing their internal assessment.
Sarah has a degree in Biological Sciences from the University of Warwick, and a PGCE and Masters in Learning and Teaching from the University of Oxford. She has recently qualified as an Assessor for Access Arrangements, allowing her to identify students who need access arrangements such as extra time or use of a word processor. She takes an active interest in the role of ICT in learning and is a certified Microsoft Innovative Educator and a Quizlet ambassador. She has written about Biology extended essays for the IB Review and has also written several Biology textbooks for Harper-Collins Publishers.
In her spare time, she can be found sailing yachts, singing with the Oxford Bach Choir, trying to improve her bad Italian, or resting with her cat Murphy.
Sophie Howells
Sophie Howells joined St Clare’s as a teacher of English and Theatre in 2016. She is the Head of Department for the Arts – IB Group 6 (Theatre, Music, Visual and Digital Arts). She currently teaches Pre-IB English, Pre-IB Theatre, IB English Language and Literature and IB Theatre. A graduate in English and American Literature from the University of Manchester, Sophie taught in the Northwest of England following her Postgraduate Certificate in Education, before a love of all things French led her to take up a teaching position at an international school in Lyon. Sophie became an examiner for the French Baccalauréat during this time. Following that, she spent ten years at an independent school in Oxfordshire, where she developed an in-depth knowledge of the university application process in her role as Deputy Head of Sixth Form. As a teacher of IB Language and Literature at St Clare’s, she has developed a detailed knowledge of the course and loves the creativity and experimentation that this course fosters. Sophie is an accredited IB English Language and Literature examiner. She is also very active on the IB Theatre circuit, regularly attending workshops and training sessions with colleagues from around the world. Over recent years, the number of students opting for IB Theatre has greatly increased and this has led to many exciting new opportunities, bringing students’ devised work to the stage, in addition to drama showcases and other plays. Recent credits include a PIB cross-arts project on A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller, where PIB students composed and recorded the musical score, created an arts exhibition in the form of a 1950s “Brooklyn street” and set design, and performed the play to a packed audience. Regular theatre trips are another highlight of the college calendar. Monthly trips to Oxford, London and Stratford allow students to experience the very best of live theatre in the UK and provide stimulation and inspiration for IB, PIB and Theatre CAS students alike. Visits to the theatre, musicals, opera, ballet, art exhibitions and more make for an energetic and busy schedule in the arts.
Susan Khampuwieng
Sue Khampuwieng is from Leeds in the UK. She is an experienced IB Visual Arts examiner and has led art departments in the UK and international schools in Saudi Arabia, Tanzania and Thailand. Sue completed her BA, PGCE and Master of Arts degrees at universities in the UK. She has taught A level, IGCSE and IB Programs. During her career, Sue has worked for several international charities working to improve education in refugee communities in Thailand. She hopes to contribute to Creativity, Action and Service at St Clare’s. Sue promotes the Arts as a powerful vehicle for developing communication, collaboration and problem-solving skills. When she is not teaching, Sue enjoys painting, reading and caring for her pets with her husband, Den, and son, Dew.
Sharon Sillman
Sharon Sillman was born in Yorkshire but grew up in South Africa. She has been teaching mathematics for more than 35 years and finds it hard to imagine ever doing anything else. She joined St Clare’s in 2022 as a part-time mathematics teacher. She has an Honours degree in mathematics education from the University of Johannesburg.
Most of Sharon’s teaching experience was in South Africa, but more recently, she spent a year in Italy where she taught at the International School of Bologna. Sharon has also written lesson plans for a government organisation in South Africa with the aim to help schools that were oversubscribed and understaffed – due to South Africa’s history of apartheid and segregated schools, there are sadly many schools struggling to produce quality education.
When Sharon is not teaching, she enjoys reading and walking. There is always one book on audio for the commute to school and one ‘real’ book on the bedside table. She completed the Via degli Dei (Path of Gods) from Bologna to Florence and has also climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. Sharon has two grown up children, one in Oxfordshire and the other in Amsterdam.
Steve Marshall
Steve Marshall is an IB enthusiast with international experience in the Seychelles, Jordan, Spain, Brazil, China, and Ethiopia. He is currently Head of the Geography and Environmental Systems and Societies (ESS) Departments at St Clare’s, where he has been teaching since 2007, and delivers science and geography courses during summer school. He organises and oversees the annual residential field trip to Dorset, recently visited Iceland with a group of St Clare’s students and coaches the school volleyball club as a CAS activity. He holds a BSc (Hons) in Geography and PGCE from Newcastle University (UK), taught at King Edward’s, Morpeth in the North East of England for a number of years, and played volleyball at National League level, which explains his ‘adopted Geordie’ status and his curious support of Newcastle United.
Previous posts have included teaching Geography, Asian History, Biology, Economics and Business, Head of Economics, Head of Humanities faculty, Board Member, IBDP Coordinator and Examiner. He recently edited the new IBDP Pearson ESS course textbook and is currently editing and in charge of quality control of Kognity on-line textbooks in ESS and Geography. He also leads category 1 and 2 teacher training workshops in Geography and ESS throughout the Euro/African region for St Clare’s, the IBO and other providers including IBICUS and In Thinking.
He lives locally in Marston with his wife Mej, and two young boys (Zayne and Zak), which has temporarily curtailed his wanderlust, and spends the little spare time available to him playing and watching numerous sports, with a single figure golf handicap a future target.
Suso Rodríguez-Blanco
Suso Rodríguez-Blanco has been teaching Spanish Language and Literature at St Clare’s since 2002 and he became Head of Modern Languages in 2011. His alma mater is Santiago de Compostela, Spain, where he completed his BA in Spanish and English literature in 1992 followed by a PGCE and a postgraduate degree in Comparative literature. Suso started his career as a researcher in literary theory in Santiago and his experience in education began in 1998, when he was appointed to teach Spanish by Liverpool University and then Knowsley Community College before joining St Clare’s.
Suso is passionate about the IB Diploma and he has been a team leader of Spanish B examiners, as well as a regular member of standardisation and grade award committees and a workshop leader. He also took part in the IB joint groups 1 and 2 curriculum review and he wrote the Spanish B Course Companion and Skill and Practice books published by Oxford University Press. Moreover, he works every summer for the Department of International Courses of the University of Santiago de Compostela, where he teaches Spanish literature and culture to Spanish teachers from all over the world.
Apart from literature, Suso enjoys independent cinema, early and sacred music, flamenco, classical art and exploring the wonderful landscape and gastronomy in his native Galicia, as well as resting in old monasteries or castles turned into hotels.
Tatiana Solovieva
Tatiana graduated from Moscow State University with a degree in Soils Science and spent several years mapping and studying soils of Northern Russia. Tatiana joined St Clare’s in 1998, and has been supporting science teachers since then by providing practical support in the labs and on the annual field trip to Pembrokeshire. In 2006 she also become a Personal Tutor. When not looking after students, teachers, pets and plants in Biology lab she is tending to her allotment or exploring the mountains of Scotland and Wales with her family.
Teodora Petranova
Teodora has been a teacher of Bulgarian Literature at St. Clare’s since 2011. In 2012 she joined the Theory of Knowledge team, and she also teaches introduction to critical thinking to teenagers in St. Clare’s summer courses. For many years Teodora worked in the college Library – where she established a collection of books in Bulgarian, and since 2019 she has been a House parent in one of the boarding houses of St. Clare’s.
Teodora’s background is in the field of media. She has BA and MA in Journalism (Sofia 1988), and read for MSc in Media and Communications (LSE 1996). Earlier in her career, Teodora worked as a PR for a national NGO, and as a journalist in a national daily in Sofia, Bulgaria. After settling in the UK, she worked in London as a Producer-Presenter in the Bulgarian section of the BBC World Service (1995 – 2003).
Teodora’s career in education began in 2004 in the Anglo-American School in Moscow (where her family had been posted). After returning to England from Russia, Teodora taught Colloquial Bulgarian at the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages at Oxford University (2011-2012). In January 2015, together with a friend, she established a weekend language school for the children of the Bulgarian community in Oxford, which she continues to manage.
Ulf von der Osten
Ulf-Wedig v. der Osten is a Teacher of Economics and Business Management. He has been teaching since 2006 and at St. Clare’s since 2010. He graduated from the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany with an MA in Economics and Management in 2002. After working at the University of Navarre in Pamplona and the European Parliament in Brussels he did his teacher training at the Institute of Education in London. Since 2010 he has been the Link teacher for the Young Enterprise group at St. Clare’s and he is also a Personal Tutor to a group of Pre-IB students.
A German native, he enjoys building birch plywood furniture with his German engineered power tools and spending time with his family.
Vicky Bullard
Vicky Bullard has been teaching English and Theory of Knowledge at St Clare’s since 1983, making her the longest serving teacher in the college. She has a degree in English from Oxford University where she also studied for her professional teaching qualification. After three years teaching English to the whole age range (7-77) in Imola, Italy, she returned to Oxford taking up the post at St Clare’s, as a teacher of English A, English B and Theory of Knowledge, later becoming TOK coordinator. She loves literature and theatre and enjoys the opportunity of living in Oxford where she can go to university lectures on literature and current affairs, particularly environmental politics. She speaks Italian, French and a little German and Spanish. Another interest is music: she plays the piano (often duets) and sings in a choir. She is a keen cyclist and has travelled with her husband and their tandem in more than 15 countries. Their favourite place is the Italian Alps.
Vicky Watson
A European citizen, Vicky Watson has lived and worked in France, Italy, Poland and the United Kingdom. With a background in both literature and linguistics, Vicky has a BA in French and Italian from the University of London; a diploma in TESOL from Trinity College, London; a maîtrise from the Faculté des lettres d’Avignon and a PGCE from Christ Church College, Canterbury.
Vicky has been teaching English at St Clare’s for two decades and is an IB aficionado who believes the IB is gradually making the world a better place. An IB examiner for Group 1 English, Vicky is also an IB teacher-trainer who has led successful workshops all over the world and taught numerous IB revision courses.
Outside the classroom Vicky likes learning languages, riding horses, playing/learning musical instruments, painting and reading (everything from Shakespeare to dystopian fiction to 18th century diaries to Tolkien to Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey-Maturin series). Vicky is also a keen collector of boxes and fountain pens. She is a member of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain, a proud holder of the Gold Duke of Edinburgh’s Award and a politically active pro-European.
Victoria Staveley
Victoria Staveley works at St Clare’s in various capacities. In addition to teaching Theory of Knowledge, she is the Academic Office manager. She also teaches Liberal Arts courses in Renaissance Studies, European Crime Fiction, and Jane Austen. She studied English and French at Memorial University of Newfoundland in Canada before coming to do postgraduate research at St. John’s College, Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada doctoral fellow.
Specialist IB teachers
We have been teaching the IB Diploma for over 40 years
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