2025 Middle School Winter Term Course Catalog
Welcome to Winter Term at MICDS
Winter Term
For a two-week « term » between the fall and spring semesters, MICDS students embrace a unique experiential learning opportunity dubbed « Winter Term. » Launched in 2024, this program in January allows our Lower, Middle, and Upper School Rams to venture outside of the traditional school day in order to dive into immersive courses and hands-on experiences. From specialized classes and global learning trips to senior internships and job shadowing, Winter Term sparks a remarkable and perhaps pivotal learning adventure for all Rams!
Winter Term 2024 Gallery
In Winter Term, I valued creative ways to learn outside of the normal academic schedule.
Winter Term StudentWinter Term Student
Past Experiences
Read Past Experiences from 2024.
Lower School
Recap of Winter Term '24 in Lower School
Beasley Winter Term
Lower Schoolers were offered some incredible opportunities on celebrating difference as part of Winter Term 2024...
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Middle School Electives
In addition to the courses, what are the Middle School electives like?
Unique Electives
During Winter Term, our Middle Schoolers started all of their days with unique and engaging electives. Thirty different options were offered from Taylor Swift and Dude Perfect-themed classes to games, instruments, mysteries, and puzzles...
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Upper School
Write About Now
Write About Now
Under the careful guidance of Celeste Prince, Upper School English Teacher, students in the Write About Now course focused on the stages of the writing process, experimented with several genres, and crafted a variety of pieces...
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Upper School
3-2-1 Blast Off!
3-2-1 Blast Off!
Several years ago, Upper School Math Teacher Melanie Moody toyed with the idea of creating a fun summer course based on flight...
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Middle & Upper School
Sledding Into the Start of Winter Term
Sledding Into the Start of Winter Term
The first few days of the two-week stretch kicked off on Wednesday as students convened after Winter Break to SLED into a smorgasSNOWboard of “classes” like never before...
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Upper School
Cut, Press, Print: The Art of Printmaking
Cut, Press, Print: The Art of Printmaking
Students in the Winter Term course “Cut, Press, Print” explored the art of the ink transfer process by creating relief works, gelli prints, linoleum plates, E-Z-Cut blocks, and serigraphy (screen printing)...
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Upper School
Student Sports Journalists Launch Rams Nation Sportscast
Student Sports Journalists Launch Rams Nation Sportscast
Over Winter Term, 26 Rams studied sports journalism and launched their first episode of Rams Nation Sportscast...
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Upper School
Take a Hike!
Take a Hike!
Upper Schoolers in the "Take a Hike" course partook in several hiking adventures to view nature as would a transcendentalist with the help of Henry David Thoreau...
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Upper School
Upper School Thespians Immerse Themselves in Theater
Upper School Thespians Immerse Themselves in Theater
MICDS actors and crew members traveled to the Missouri State Thespian Conference to compete in performance and design events...
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Upper School
Cooking from Scratch
Cooking from Scratch
Students taking the Winter Term course Cooking from Scratch learned that science is a main ingredient in everything they eat...
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Upper School
Installation Art
Installation Art
Upper School students in the Winter Term course “Installation Art” enjoyed the unique experience of creating their own environment, an exhibit entitled "Lost & Found."...
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Middle School
Minecraft & Sustainability
Minecraft & Sustainability
Middle School Math Teacher Dustin Delfin, an architect, challenged the students in his Winter Term Course to use Minecraft Education, a favorite app among Middle School students, to explore sustainability...
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Upper School
Capturing the Moment
Capturing the Moment
For Winter Term, students were offered the opportunity to gain experience and skills in interviewing, writing stories, editing, design, and photography while producing spreads for a creative, innovative yearbook that records school memories and events...
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Upper School
Changing the World Through Pictures
Changing the World Through Pictures
Students were able to sharpen their photography skills while analyzing images that have been instrumental in shaping the world we live in today...
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Global Learning
Rams Explore South Africa
Rams Explore South Africa
Eighteen students and three intrepid chaperones started the new year by flying to South Africa for a two-week adventure...
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Global Learning
A Marvelous Trip to Spain for 27 Rams
A Marvelous Trip to Spain for 27 Rams
The Spain trip during Winter Term was the perfect opportunity to be immersed in the Spanish language, culture, history, and so much more...
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Upper School
The World Peace Game: A Political Simulation
The World Peace Game: A Political Simulation
Several Upper Schoolers put their problem-solving skills to the test in The World Peace Game Winter Term course where they tried to solve different, complex global crises to attain world peace.
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Upper School
Instruments by Design
Instruments by Design
From cigar-box guitars to washboard basses, American popular music has a long tradition of repurposing materials to build musical instruments...
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Upper School
MICDS Congress
MICDS Congress
The MICDS Congress course provided students with a hands-on simulation of the United States legislative process...
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Upper School
Luau Party
Luau Party
Several Upper Schoolers figuratively escaped to the Polynesian Islands during Winter Term as part of the Luau Party course offered by Jenna Lin, Upper School Math Teacher...
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Global Learning
Domestic Exchange
Domestic Exchange
Some Upper School students participated in a domestic exchange during Winter Term...
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I enjoyed facilitating something that I'm passionate about that would not (usually) fit into my regularly scheduled classes. Winter Term allowed me to use open-space curriculum, student-led activities, and problem-based inquiry; I couldn't have been happier.
Upper School TeacherUpper School Teacher
All-School FAQs
- What is Winter Term?
Each year, when we return from Winter break, we pause our typical academic program for one week in the Lower School and two weeks in the Middle and Upper Schools so that students can take interdisciplinary courses and electives. Our faculty develops Winter Term classes based on their passions and curiosities, and our MS and US students register for Winter Term classes based on their passions and curiosities.
- Is Winter Term required for each student?
Winter Term is required for each student and attendance is mandatory. In the Upper School, participation in Winter Term all years a student is enrolled and it is offered is a requirement for graduation. Vacations are not considered excused absences from Winter Term. If a student misses more than one day of Winter Term, the Winter Term committee will review the feasibility of the student receiving credit for the course or whether the student must make the course up in June.
- Why did MICDS introduce Winter Term?
Many schools in the United States have begun offering programs like Winter Term. We can all get a case of the Januaries, so it’s a great time to introduce new ways of working with new groups of peers. Also, our academic program is very thoughtfully designed based on students’ developmental needs so that they are well-prepared for college, but sometimes, you need to just try something new. Play. Do something challenging. You can learn a lot when you play at school!
- What kinds of learning opportunities do students have during Winter Term that they don't enjoy during the regular academic calendar?
Students have so many exciting choices in Winter Term. They can design games, explore sustainable architecture through Minecraft, build art installations, put on a play, or learn magic. Winter Term also lets us do more community and career work. Students can learn about service animals, gain a better understanding of women’s health care, apprentice as a journalist, and learn leadership skills. We also offer national and international educational trips for Upper School students during Winter Term and all of our seniors do internships.
- How are courses and electives selected for Winter Term? What are some course examples?
We developed our Winter Term offerings by asking classroom teachers to design and propose courses. MICDS attracts teachers who are lifelong learners and interested in design work. In the Middle School, teachers share their passion for forensic science, military history, mahjong, and playing the ukulele. In the Upper School, a teacher offers a guitar-building class where students learn about the physics of acoustics, while others offer rocketry, cooking, printmaking, and marine biology. Check out the Course Catalogs for a full list.
- How do students sign up for Winter Term classes?
Lower School students don’t need to sign up–they are automatically placed in mixed-age level groups for Winter Term activities. In the MS and US, students will receive and review the catalog, and then share their top choices with us during the school year.
- Does Winter Term support classroom instruction? Is Winter Term a good use of time during the school year?
Winter Term feels like a break from regular schooling, and it is, but it’s not a break from learning. Winter Term feels like new content, and it often is, but the skills are the same. Students ask questions, read, write, listen, collect data, find patterns, design, solve problems, work together, and present their ideas. It’s great for students to apply the skills they are developing in their regular classes in the novel situations that Winter Term offers!
- Is there homework?
There is no homework for Lower and Middle School Winter Term courses. However, Upper School students do have some homework as they prepare for classes and finalize their projects.
- What have students and parents/guardians said about the experience?
We hear from families that Winter Term is rejuvenating for students. It feels like a break from the traditional semester just when students need one. Families also tell us that without the homework and assessment load that our college-bound students typically experience, they see more relaxing and family time during Winter Term. Many of our students share that they appreciated the chance to explore an interest in depth and the opportunity to experience their future careers now.
- Why are we doing this in January rather than in May?
We hope to support enthusiastic engagement in school despite the dreariness of January. In May, there are already many events and programming that we don’t want to undermine or compete with. Additionally, we want to include seniors, and they are gone in May. This timing creates two semesters of equal length to support depth of study in our credited classes and a change of pace in the winter.
- What if there is a snow day?
If there is a Snow Day, Winter Term programming will shift to virtual or asynchronous activities or cut back on planned activities. Winter Term programming will not be extended past Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Lower School FAQs
- What is the Lower School schedule?
The LS will be following the regular school day schedule. In the morning, they are in mixed grade-level family groups. In the afternoon they are in their homeroom classes to continue advancing their regular literacy and math programs. Afternoon classes also connect back to the Winter Term texts, activities, and themes.
- Why is the Lower School Winter Term so short compared to Middle and Upper School?
For our younger learners, we made Winter Term shorter to strike the right balance between consistency and novelty.
- Why do you create Lower School Winter Term cohorts with children from different grades?
Our thoughtful scope and sequence for academic work and intentional community building in the homerooms offer children a welcoming academic environment every day of the year. Winter Term is an opportunity for students to step outside of that comfortable environment and apply their skills, e.g., assertiveness and empathy with new peers and new activities.
Middle and Upper School FAQs
- Will MS and US students receive a grade for Winter Term?
MS and US Students will be expected to complete Winter Term coursework on a pass/no pass basis. US Transcripts will include “Winter Term” and denote whether the student passed or did not pass the session.
- Is this like summer camp with craft activities? Or academic?
Winter Term is primarily academic, offering a deep-dive into a “pure learning” environment that deviates from the thoughtful JK-12 scope and sequence of our academic program. A typical Winter Term course can cover classic topics that includes the common elements of an academic course (teacher-curated content, essays, tests, presentations, teacher-designed projects, etc.) while offering an opportunity to stretch into something that provides more space for students to develop the content and topics and drive the direction the course might take. The courses are driven by student-centered activities and active learning. Courses include peer and self-assessment and open exploration of a topic, theme, or question. To break up the day, there are supplemental activities designed to encourage students to have fun with their classmates and perhaps explore a new hobby or skill.
- What is the MS Winter Term Schedule?
8:00-8:10 a.m. Attendance
8:10-9:05 a.m. Electives
9:10-10:55 a.m. Course 1
11 a.m.-1:20 p.m. Students rotate among lunch, PE, and grade-level activities in 45-minute sessions.
1:25-3:10 p.m. Course 2
- What is the US schedule for grades 9-11?
For the 2023 Winter Term, the class schedule was:
8:00-10:20 a.m. Course 1
10:20-11:00 a.m. Advisory
11:00-11:45 a.m. 1st Lunch + Activity Period
11:45 a.m. -12:30 p.m. 2nd Lunch + Activity Period
12:30-3:10 p.m. Course 2
Lunch would rotate A/B
This schedule is subject to change in future years.
- Does Winter Term negatively impact AP classes?
While shifting two weeks from our typical courses does reduce contact time in those classes, in the Upper School, auxiliary classes make up that lost time and allow, e.g, AP test preparation. We carefully balance instructional days throughout the school year to ensure that students have appropriate time to learn material.
- I’m a senior; what can I expect from the Senior Experience?
The Winter Term courses are designed for students through 11th grade and the senior experience is designed for seniors in anticipation of their matriculation to college. Seniors make connections and dive deeper into their personal areas of interest by volunteering or exploring future career interests through internships. Seniors may also apply to participate in a domestic or international travel program.
- Will Winter Term interfere with sports?
With the exception of trips, all Winter Term courses will happen during the school day and should not interfere with sports schedules. Students can get sports early dismissals from Winter Term classes, just as they can from their semester classes.
- How are students selected for each course?
Middle and Upper School students are surveyed in advance of Winter Term and are able to rank select their courses of interest. We aim to give each student their highest choice possible while also maintaining balance in the student body. Students who enroll late will be placed in a Winter Term course with availability. All Winter Term course placements are final. Students are not allowed to repeat Winter Term courses and may also be restricted from participating in two courses that are similar in nature during the same term (for example, two cooking classes).
Course Catalogs
The Senior Experience
The Senior Winter Term Experience
The Winter Term Senior Experience is an opportunity to extend learning beyond the MICDS curriculum and campus. Seniors can pursue their interests, try something new, and use skills learned at MICDS in real-life situations. Options for the Class of 2025 seniors include internships, job shadowing, community service, and travel learning programs.
My advice for seniors next year is to find an internship or opportunity that deals with an issue or topic you're passionate about. For me, finding an opportunity to be involved in grassroots organizing and environmental policy was something that I will never forget and made these two weeks so crucial.
Agatha Curylo ’24Agatha Curylo ’24