In fact, Ethan’s mother, Christina Amara, noted that Ketch has proven more reliable than the boy’s glucose sensor [6†L13-L14]. For a family living with the daily uncertainty of diabetes, that reliability is priceless.

For families of Frontier Primary School, purchasing the yearbook is not just about having a record of who was in what class; it is an investment in a tangible emotional anchor.

A major highlight in this year's edition is the feature on the school's signature Applied Learning Programme. Pages are filled with high-quality photographs of students tinkering in the maker spaces, coding prototypes, and presenting scientific solutions to real-world problems. The yearbook captures the raw excitement of discovery, showcasing snapshots of the annual Innovation Fair where students pitched eco-friendly inventions to industry experts. Learning for Life Programme (LLP)

The ritual is specific: You do not look at your own photo first. You look for the photo of the kid who left in October—the one whose desk is still empty, whose coat is still on the hook.

Pages reserved exclusively for award-winning student poetry, digital art, and science fair innovations.

Frontier Primary School has always prioritized innovation in education, and its approach to the annual yearbook is no exception. Over the years, the publication has transformed from a traditional photo album into a dynamic storytelling medium. From Print to Hybrid Media

Vibrant gradients of deep space blue and sunrise orange symbolize looking toward the future.

: Yearbooks are typically pre-sold during the beginning, middle, and end of the school year.

Our exclusive begins with the 1979 edition—the first yearbook to feature full-color photographs. The theme was "Building the Future," fitting for a school named after the westward expansion.

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