“I had a very clear view on how we could design the classroom spaces and ensure the ability of kids to learn beyond the classroom, complemented by IT. A FIS athlete – that’s 16- 19-year olds who attend the academy full time – might travel to 25 competitions from January to April. They are not going to be in the classroom for long but they’ve got their laptop, the software. It’s a blended model of independence, flipped learning and small classes that is tailored to them.”

Chris Thomson, CEO of Apex 2100, was appointed to get the academy up and running.

High above the snow line in the French Alps, with views of snowy Mont Blanc, Tignes might seem an unlikely setting for a visionary new model of education. Apex2100 is the brainchild of a British investor and ski-enthusiast who asked Sir Clive Woodward, the world-renowned sports coach (and qualified teacher) who took England to victory in the 2003 Rugby World Cup, to ‘design the best ski academy in the world’. Five years later, Apex2100 opened its doors with a mission to create future World Cup and Olympic alpine skiers. It may also inadvertently have become a trail blazer for a model of technology-enabled blended learning, the potential benefits of which the global pandemic has brought sharply into focus. APEX2100 may inadvertently have become a trail blazer for a model of technology-enabled blended learning, the potential benefits of which the global pandemic has brought sharply into focus.

A school designed on three key principles

What makes an elite sports academy the best in the world? How do you balance the need for rigorous physical training with the requirement to furnish each athlete with an education that will sustain them throughout, and beyond, their sporting career? And how do you educate people whose innate physicality means sitting still for hours constitutes an existential threat? Sir Clive Woodward, now Director of Sport for Apex 2100, spent a year finding out, visiting elite performance institutions worldwide from football to ballet. He distilled his hands-on research into three key principles.

2. Think global

Make your cohort international, because globally minded athletes are better off. There’s no point just competing against your home nation, you need exposure to the best from all over the world. This is particularly important in skiing; we need future stars to level up if they are to compete on the world stage.

Agile spaces for agile learners

The Apex2100 athletes are, naturally, active learners, not ‘sit down for an hour’ people and the learning spaces take this into account. The classrooms are long rectangles, so Spaceoasis designed bespoke TeacherWalls featuring a central screen flanked by vast LearningSurface® writable walls with integrated storage. The LearningSurface® dry-wipe walls occupy the longest side of the classroom providing a huge canvas for teachers and learners to use. Athletes are actively encouraged to get up, move around and use the writable walls during lessons. The chairs, Ray and Turn&Learn, were also chosen, not just for their ergonomic qualities, but because they allow the user to rock or twist, enabling the athletes to sit actively.

Attention to every detail

The library is also a highly flexible space featuring shield-shaped tables above which are mounted screens, ideal for online lessons or for collaborative working. The power sockets on these tables have French, English, USB and USB-C sockets to make it easy for every athlete to plug in their device. Individual workstations in the library allow learners to work independently as needed.

Even the lockers have been designed to precisely meet the needs of the athletes, featuring integrated charging with dedicated spaces for a folder and the Apex2100 rucksack. These educational lockers open via the same RFID wristbands that register students, allow access to rooms and ski lockers, as well as reporting back to the Apex2100 database whether athletes are inside the building or not.

A collaborative curriculum

While nurturing sporting talent is the academy’s primary aim, athletes must also maintain high standards in their academic work too or they lose time on the ‘hill’ (aka ‘the mountain’). No-one is under any illusions; the career of an athlete may be short, curtailed by injury or simply fail to take off, so the education at Apex2100 is designed to support its athletes during their sporting career and afterwards. As an IB World School, Apex is committed to moving away from ‘old school’ style of education.

“The IB curriculum is all about collaboration and open mindedness,” explains Chris. “The environment we’ve created, the furniture and the IT, complements the IB curriculum. It’s very different from ‘here are your learning criteria, let’s tick them off’.

“We are delighted with the process of working with Spaceoasis, they were unafraid to be challenged and to work with us to get exactly what we wanted, they were also flexible in the planning and the installation process. A very good process from start to finish and I’m really looking forward to seeing how that curriculum comes to life in the environment we’ve designed.”