Friday, December 31, 2010

MBMMBI vs PPSMI : A response to MOE’s defence of abolishing PPSMI

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The Education Ministry via  Encik Mohd Solihan Badri, Corporate Communications Unit, has posted its arguments in defence of its decision to abolish the policy of teaching and learning Science and Math in English (PPSMI) with the new policy Upholding the Malay Language, Strengthening the Command of English (MBMMBI), (Science & Mathematics: Plan will boost BM, English, NST October 11, 2010).
The Parent Action Group for Education Malaysia (PAGE) would like to correct a few misleading and incorrect statements by Encik Mohd Solihan.
In 2008, after the fourth ministerial roundtable discussion under the leadership of the previous Education Minister and the late Arwah Datuk Razali Ismail, and intellectual debates and expert consultation, the general agreement was that PPSMI was a good and beneficial policy and that it would be maintained.
However in 2009, our new Education Minister under pressure from the street demonstrators and without consulting the stakeholders, completely overturned the policy within just three months of taking office, just days prior to the Manik Urai by-elections.
It was clearly a political decision with very weak “intellectual” arguments which PAGE has extensively won over in previous debates and forums.
In May 2010, in reference to a suit by some students against our government to declare PPSMI unconstitutional, our High Court ruled that PPSMI is NOT unconstitutional and it is also in line with the “Akta Bahasa Kebangsaan 1963/1967”.
The spirit of our Education Act 1996 also mandates that our government takes into account the general principle that students should be educated (in the language) according to the wishes of their parents.
No doubt, the new MBMMBI policy will increase the teaching of the English language from 16 per cent to 21 per cent of teaching time. However, with the removal of Science and Math in English, the overall exposure to the English language will drop from 41 per cent to 21 per cent.  This is a significant drop by half. Any linguist will tell us that it will be a total disaster for our students’ as far as comprehension of the English language is concerned.
Scientific English will also be totally wiped out to be replaced with Scientific Malay which has no commercial or intellectual value in the current competitive knowledge-based economy. We may stand tall against Indonesia which currently is the biggest exporter of maids and cheap labour to our country.
Other than that, God help us.
Comparing English vs Bahasa Melayu, the percentage of knowledge or articles available in the two languages are approximately 99.9 per cent vs 0.1 per cent respectively. We can find a significant number of intelligent and knowledgeable articles in English but the ones in Bahasa Melayu or Bahasa Indonesia are mainly from blogs with very little intellectual content.
Muslims believe that the first injunction brought by the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is “Iqrak” or “Read” to gain knowledge. With the new MBMMBI policy our children’s comprehension of the English language will be extremely limited and their access to the knowledge of the world will also be severely handicapped. This is totally in violation of the principles of the Islamic religion.
PAGE calls upon our leaders to do what is right. Reinstate PPSMI in schools that want it. Ego and saving face of politicians is a small price to pay for the future of our children and our beloved country.

Noor Azimah Abdul Rahim
* The writer is the chairman of Parent Action Group for Education Malaysia (PAGE)

Well, what's your thought my friends? Feel free to comment here.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

MBMMBI : Obvious flaws in new policy

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I REFER to “Longer hours for English in schools next year” (Sunday Star, March 21). In place of the Teaching of Science and Maths in English, better known as PPSMI, our Education Ministry has introduced the policy “Upholding the Malay Language and Strengthening the Command of English” which abbreviates into the tongue-twisting Malay acronym “MBMMBI”.
There are obvious flaws in this new policy which the ministry should address.
Firstly, every linguist will tell us that the way to mastering any language is through exposure, exposure and exposure.
PPSMI exposes students to English and allows them to practise English by application. Eliminating PPSMI and introducing MBMMBI will reduce English exposure time from 41% to 21% of total learning time. There is no other exposure time to English in national and vernacular schools.
Thus, MBMMBI will further weaken the command of English of our future generation. Evidence of this is obvious as since Bahasa Melayu replaced English as the medium of instruction in schools in the early 1970s, the standard of English of Malaysian students has dropped drastically to the extent that even local university graduates are rendered unemployable due to their poor English communication skills.
Secondly, MBMMBI will totally eliminate scientific English and replace it with “scientific” Malay words, the majority of which are actually nothing more than “Malay-fied” English terms such as oksida, fotosintesis, silinder, etc.
Many Malaysian students are currently experiencing difficulties coping with tertiary studies where English is the medium of instruction.
Thirdly, MBMMBI intends to introduce mathematical and scientific terms in English lessons to make up for the loss of PPSMI. But this will only serve to pressure and burden our teachers.
Fourthly, under MBMMBI, Bahasa Melayu would be the only main language spoken and mastered and English would be relegated to a distant second place.
As it is, Bahasa Melayu nationalists have labelled English as a colonial language and criticised those who want to learn in English as traitors. Unfortunately, there will be some hapless rural and urban folk who will be influenced and misguided by these “patriots”.
Incidentally, the Hong Kong government has just announced that half of its secondary schools will switch the medium of instruction from Mandarin to English, including specifically, the teaching and learning of science.
We parents must insist on a resolution to maintain PPSMI in our children’s schools at the next AGM of our Parent-Teachers Association.
DATIN NOOR AZIMAH ABDUL RAHIM,
Chairperson,
Parent Action Group for Education.

TheStar, Monday March 22, 2010

Fun in numbers

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Teenager Koong Zhe Xian admits he was a restless child who got bored of repetitive tasks. Today, he is all praise for a Japanese method of studying, which he credited for his passing the O-Level Mathematics at the age of 16.
The SMK Chan Wa, Seremban student – who is now proficient in pre-university level Maths syllabus such as algebra, calculus and statistics – was trained for 34 months under the Kumon Method.
“My marks in school (for Mathematics) have always been okay, scoring above 90%. But the method encouraged me to be more disciplined in my work,” said a visibly excited Zhe Xian when met in Kuala Lumpur recently.
The Science stream student added that he had learned to be independent in his thoughts.
Zhe Xian, who scored straight As in his PMR last year, aspires to be either a physics researcher or a teacher.
His mother Wu Swee Leng commented that many students failed to score in Mathematics due to lack of practice.
“To enjoy doing Mathematics, students need to get the basic skill correct. Then, they will enjoy the fun in the numbers. Otherwise, the subject will become stressful because they feel they can never get it right,” said Wu, who together with her husband, are both lecturers in tertiary level Mathematics.
The Kumon Method was developed by Japanese Mathematics teacher Toru Kumon in 1954.
There are about 200 Kumon centres spread out nationwide, providing training in Mathematics and English.

TheStar, Sunday December 19, 2010

Student registration, orientation to proceed Friday

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imageKUALA LUMPUR: Student registration and orientation sessions for the 2011 school year will proceed despite Friday being declared a public holiday in conjunction with the national team's victory in lifting the AFF-Suzuki Cup 2010.
In a statement Thursday, the Education Ministry said the sessions would continue as planned because most schools had already made the necessary preparations.
“For the sake of education and convenience to parents, the ministry has advised that the activities should go on,” the statement said.
Meanwhile, the ministry also conveyed its congratulations to the national team as well as gratitude to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak for declaring Friday a public holiday after the victory.
The final AFF-Suzuki Cup match at the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, Indonesia Wednesday saw the Malaysian team beating Indonesia 4-2 on aggregate.
The victory ends Malaysia's 14-year wait to bring the cup home. - Bernama

TheStar, Thursday December 30, 2010

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Full literacy by 2012, says Wee

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JOHOR BARU: The national objective to achieve 100% literacy and numeracy rate among primary school students by 2012 is on track, said Deputy Education Minister Datuk Dr Wee Ka Siong.
“We are close to achieving 90% this year and the number is expected to increase to 95% next year.
“It’s safe to say we are on track to achieving the intended target,” he said.
The ministry had introduced the literacy and numeracy screening programme (Linus) where effective this year, primary students would be monitored to ensure they mastered the three R’s – reading, writing and arithmetic.
The screenings are done three times a year on Year One students.
“Students who fail the screenings will be placed into either Linus-dedicated class to improve their performance or a Special Education programme if it is discovered they have learning disabilities,” he told a press conference after the Walk to End Polio programme.
Dr Wee said the ministry was working closely with the Health Ministry to ensure early identification of students with chronic illnesses.
“Early detection is paramount towards ensuring the students receive the adequate treatment needed,” he said.
On disciplinary problems among students, Dr Wee said 97% of students nationwide had good disciplinary records.

TheStar, Thursday December 30, 2010

Gender Noun Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the correct gender of the noun.
  1. teacher
    1. common
    2. masculine
    3. neuter
    4. feminine


  2. nephew
    1. feminine
    2. common
    3. neuter
    4. masculine


  3. grandchild
    1. neuter
    2. masculine
    3. feminine
    4. common


  4. mountain
    1. neuter
    2. common
    3. feminine
    4. masculine


  5. hen
    1. feminine
    2. common
    3. masculine
    4. neuter


  6. alumnus
    1. neuter
    2. common
    3. feminine
    4. masculine


  7. aunt
    1. masculine
    2. feminine
    3. common
    4. neuter


  8. hero
    1. masculine
    2. feminine
    3. common
    4. neuter


  9. landlord
    1. common
    2. feminine
    3. neuter
    4. masculine


  10. heiress
    1. feminine
    2. common
    3. masculine
    4. neuter


Possesive Noun Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the correct possessive case of the noun.
  1. What is the possessive case (singular) of the noun 'boy'?
    1. boy's
    2. boys
    3. boys'


  2. What is the possessive case (plural) of the noun 'hero'?
    1. hero's
    2. heroes'
    3. heros


  3. What is the possessive case (plural) of the noun 'wife'?
    1. wifes'
    2. wife's
    3. wives'


  4. What is the possessive case (singular) of the noun 'son-in-law'?
    1. sons-in-law
    2. son-in-law's
    3. sons-in-law's


  5. What is the possessive case (singular) of the noun 'man'?
    1. mans
    2. men's
    3. man's


Pronouns Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the pronoun that makes the sentence correct.
  1. Give the present to __________ arrives first.
    1. whomever
    2. whoever


  2. Ahmad asked ________ sister to do the dishes.
    1. his
    2. her


  3. The boy watched _________ cat play ball.
    1. her
    2. his


  4. I like my niece very much for _________ is very charming.
    1. she
    2. he


  5. The waiter apologized when _________ accidentally stepped on the woman's foot.
    1. she
    2. he


  6. The book is in the cupboard where you placed ___________.
    1. it
    2. him


  7. When I meet my uncle, I will tell _________ about you.
    1. her
    2. him


  8. Did Mei Ling give _______ dress to Wendy?
    1. her
    2. his


  9. The schoolgirl should do ______ best in the competition.
    1. his
    2. her


  10. She ____________ went to the library to check if it's really closed.
    1. herself
    2. himself


Conjunctions Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the conjunction that would make the sentence correct.
  1. We want to find happiness, _____ it seems so elusive.
    1. and
    2. because
    3. but


  2. _________she is not very tall, she is definitely pretty.
    1. Yet
    2. Although
    3. Since


  3. I will pay you ________ I get my salary.
    1. for
    2. when
    3. that's why


  4. Andy is good in Math ______ he is a genius in Science too.
    1. since
    2. for
    3. and


  5. She is thinking if she will dance ______ if she will sing for the upcoming competition.
    1. or
    2. but
    3. although


Tenses Quiz

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Instructions: Give the correct form of the verb.
  1. She ________everything if he continues to be like that.
    1. loose
    2. lose
    3. will lose


  2. They _________his advice yesterday.
    1. seeked
    2. will seek
    3. sought


  3. I have already _________a elephant before.
    1. ridden
    2. ride
    3. rode


  4. He _______ with his friends every weekend.
    1. drank
    2. drinks
    3. drunk


  5. Cindy couldn't believe that he _______to her.
    1. laid
    2. lyed
    3. lied


Adjective Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the adjective that would make the sentence correct.
  1. Kelly is ___________than I thought.
    1. bright
    2. less bright
    3. least bright

  2. Kyle runs _______ than his brother.
    1. more faster
    2. more fast
    3. faster


  3. Harry is the ________boy in their class.
    1. most intelligent
    2. more intelligent
    3. intelligenter


  4. Her condition is ________than before.
    1. worst
    2. worse
    3. badder


  5. _________clothes are mine.
    1. That
    2. This
    3. Those


Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Wee: Don’t cover up for students who play truant

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PUTRAJAYA: Parents will receive a warning letter if their children fail to attend school for three consecutive days without a valid reason, said Deputy Education Minister Datuk Dr Wee Ka Siong.
Parents must also not side with their truant children by giving reasons like “self-study”.
Truancy, he said, remained a main disciplinary problem as it could lead to other issues like getting involved in drugs, gangsterism and drinking alcohol, among others.
“Some students do not want to attend school before examinations, claiming that they want to study at home. However, that is considered playing truant,” Dr Wee said after launching the 2011 programme to curb disciplinary problems in schools.
Students can be expelled if they do not attend school for 30 days consecutively.
Next year, he said, the programme would focus on those studying in Felda where truancy was a serious problem.
There were 111,484 disciplinary cases this year, of which 35% involved primary school pupils, he added.
Dr Wee said the ministry would work with universities to conduct studies and find solutions to handle disciplinary problems among pupils in Years Four, Five and Six.
He said some parent-teacher associations took the initiative to install closed-circuit television cameras in schools to curb indiscipline.
The 2011 programme was in response to Education Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin’s call to revamp the current implementation and management of disciplinary cases in schools.
Under the year-long programme, discipline teachers and school prefects would be trained on regulations and enforcement and the police would also be actively involved as liaison officers.
Other measures included road shows and an online system for schools to record and manage disciplinary cases.

TheStar, Tuesday December 28, 2010

Adverb Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the adverb in the sentence.
  1. The baby grew tall.
    1. baby
    2. grew
    3. tall

  2. Micheal sang sweetly.
    1. sang
    2. sweetly
    3. Michael

  3. David runs fast.
    1. david
    2. runs
    3. fast

  4. He looked calmly at him.
    1. He
    2. calmly
    3. looked

  5. I had an unusually good time.
    1. unusually
    2. good
    3. time


Verb Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the verb that would make the sentence correct.
  1. The policeman _______him.
    1. shoot
    2. shot
    3. shooted

  2. The sun had already _______when she woke up.
    1. rose
    2. rises
    3. risen

  3. I feel bad because the teacher didn't ________me.
    1. chose
    2. choose
    3. chosen

  4. All these years, I have _______that book with me.
    1. kept
    2. keep
    3. keeped

  5. Mr. Tan ________high school Math when he was younger.
    1. teaches
    2. teached
    3. taught

Preposition Quiz

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Instructions: Choose the preposition that will make the sentence correct.
  1. Cindy was torn______her mom and her husband.
    1. between
    2. among
    3. down

  2. Polar bears hibernate ________winter.
    1. within
    2. during
    3. concerning

  3. He lives ________356, Street 52, Legenda Garden.
    1. on
    2. in
    3. at

  4. John got ______the bus this morning.
    1. on
    2. in
    3. at

  5. She went to Singapore ____ 1963.
    1. in
    2. on
    3. at

Monday, December 27, 2010

My Schooldays: 'I never missed a day of school'

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single
ACTRESS-CUM-EMCEE Julie Woon, 26, hosts the 8TV Quickie slot and the station's game show Whack It! The lead actress of TV series Blogger Boy cites Wolverine as her favourite comic book character but unlike the brooding anti-hero, Woon "can hardly ever get angry!".

The Bachelor of Commerce in Economics and Marketing graduate from Curtin University of Technology lives by her motto "Expect the best. Prepare for the worst. Capitalise on what comes". She has been working since she was 15 to earn pocket money. A model since she was 18, she hosted Astro's SuperSport programme, Absolute Football, in 2006.

The following year, she hosted Star World's Championship Gaming Series, also over Astro. She also anchored ntv7's Motorsports@Petronas, which covered all types of motorsports that the national oil company is involved in, such as Formula 1, A1GP, MotoGP and Formula Nippon.
Woon says one of the highlights of her career is interviewing Italian professional motorcycle racer and multiple MotoGP World Champion Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo, who won the 2010 MotoGP World Championship title.

Another memorable event was flying to London, United Kingdom to interview the Clash of the Titans director Louis Leterrier and cast such as Sam Worthington and Gemma Arterton.

Woon answers questions on her schooldays:

Which primary and secondary schools did you attend?

SRK and SMK Damansara Jaya in Selangor. I was a prefect and was VERY studious in primary school. I was into sports. I took part in long jump and high jump, played badminton and tennis, and went bowling and swimming.

I never missed a day of school even when I was sick. I had to always be first in class and I read PMR and SPM books in Standard Six because I finished all revision and textbooks for my year!

I attended some nine tuition classes in a week (including ballet, piano and Mandarin)! I couldn't stop reading even during school holidays and weekends.

I was very close to my teachers and I'll never forget Ms Lily Lee Lee Lee! Her name is so cool.

I don't remember much about secondary school because I wasn't as active as in primary school. But I should have enjoyed school life back then and taken my time to grow up.

The children around my home were all males so I had to play Transformers toys with my brother and our neighbours. Needless to say, I grew up quite boyish.

I learnt taekwondo until I was an exam shy of black belt and I quit to take ballet classes!

Did you have a favourite teacher and why did you like him/her?

I like those teachers who gave me As!

What subject(s) did you like at school?

Mathematics, English and Physical Education (it's a subject too!).

Were you rewarded for good performance by your parents? If yes, in what way.

When I scored straight As for PMR and UPSR, my mum gave me a pat on the head and said "Good!".

What was your best (and worst) school holiday?

The best school holiday was when I went to Gold Coast, Australia. The worst was the year I had chickenpox.

What hobbies did you have while at school?

Taekwondo, playing the piano, bowling, ballet, badminton, swimming, skipping rope and playing computer games.

What was your ambition while schooling?

It varied but generally an architect, teacher, travel guide, bartender, fashion designer, cook... and the list goes on.

If you were to live your schooldays all over again, is there anything you would like to change?

I was a little naughty in secondary school. I wouldn't mind changing that if I could

NewStraitTimes, 27/11/2010

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Vocabulary associated with animals

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IN a mental ramble through the animal world, I realised that here is a veritable trove to tap for vocabulary and aphorisms. I went on to recall the myriad terms that are associated with animals.
Let me comment on the above title. Firstly, some people, when talking about animals, actually refer to mammals. Here I am being expansive – I use the term to include the larger members of the animal kingdom, be they insects, reptiles, amphibians, birds, or mammals (but not including humans). Secondly, animals make all sorts of noise – bees buzz, birds chirp or twitter, cattle moo, cocks crow, donkeys bray, elephants trumpet, frogs croak (as do some singers hogging the karaoke mike), gibbons whoop, goats and sheep bleat, horses neigh or whinny, monkeys chatter, and turkeys gobble – but they do not talk. Even then, English has a special vocabulary associated with them. Let me elaborate.

Common names
Scientists know animals by their Latin names. We shall note their common names, and the special names for the male and the female, and for their young. These are best summarised in the table.
The female of some animals is easily named by merely adding on the feminine “-ess” suffix, e.g. lion/lioness and tiger/tigress. But what do we call the product of the rare union of two closely related species? A lion-tigress union produces a liger, while a tiger-lioness union produces a tigon. A horse-zebra union produces a hebra. (What about zorse?). A union between a horse and a donkey (= ass) produces a mule, not a honkey nor a dorse; and the hybrid animal resulting from a cross between cattle and buffalo is called a beefalo.
The table shows gaps in certain sets. It is hoped that readers will help to fill these gaps if indeed they are gaps.
Insects in general undergo a metamorphosis in their life cycle, so that their young have special terms associated with the different stages in their metamorphosis: egg/nit, then larva, then pupa/chrysalis, and finally imago (the adult). For the several insects that do not undergo complete metamorphosis, the term nymph is given to the juvenile. Frogs also undergo a metamorphosis in their growing up, starting as a fish-like juvenile called tadpole.

Plurals
I once read that British big-game hunters (“in the days of empire”?) talk of their animals in the singular (I shot two lion today), symptomatic of a lingo (or snobbery?) among members of their circle. In common language, animals generally add on the “-s” or “-es” suffix to indicate the plural – except that the singular and the plural share the same form in the following examples: bison, carp, deer, fish (but fishes if used to indicate different kinds of fish) and sheep. To complicate matters, certain animals have the same form for the singular and the plural, plus the optional “-s” form for the plural; e.g. boar (i.e. plural same or boars), buffalo, elk, partridge, quail. Unusual plurals are goose/geese and ox/oxen. The word cattle is plural, for which there is no corresponding singular.
Then there are special words that refer to specific animals collectively; e.g. cattle (for “large ruminant animals with horns and cloven hoofs, chiefly domesticated”), fry (for the hatchlings of fish), kine (for cows), swine (for pigs), and vermin (for noxious and disease-carrying insects, rodents, etc, including animals inimical to agriculture).

Collective nouns
Why would one use an insipid expression like “a group of birds” or “a group of sheep” when there is a wealth of specific collective nouns for specific animals?
The following are some examples of the more uncommon ones: (1) an army of herring; (2) an aye of pheasants; (3) a clowder of cats; (4) a colony of bats or seals; (5) a covey of quail or partridge; (6) a crib of goats; (7) a crook of kangaroos; (8) a drey of squirrels; (9) a drove of oxen, sheep, or swine driven in a group; (10) an exultation of larks; (11) a gang of elks; (12) a murder of crows; (13) a murmuration of starlings; (14) an ostentation of peacocks; (15) a rookery of penguins or seals; (16) a skulk of foxes; (17) a sloth of bears; (18) an unkindness of ravens. (My thanks to Mr Ng Pak Leng for help in compiling this list.)
Note that in some cases the specific collective noun for a specific animal reflects some trait of the particular animal, e.g. a pride of lions (suggestive of a lion lording it over a group of lions or, more correctly, over his harem of lionesses) and a gaggle of geese (imitative of the noise made by geese). Such being the case, may I be excused for saying “a ladder of giraffes” or “a gobble of turkeys”? (Come to think of it, these could be terms already in use – and which I might have previously encountered and then winkled out from memory.)

Associated adjectives
The common names of animals, as with many nouns, may add on suffixes to form the adjectives, e.g. cat/cat-like or catty, elephant/elephantine, fish/fishy, fox/foxy, and sheep/sheepish.
Adjectives may also be derived from the Latin nouns. Such adjectives are used not to sound erudite but to distinguish from those derived from the common names of animals; for example, feline is not the same as catty; likewise, ovine does not mean sheepish. Here is a short list of Latin-derived adjectives: (1) ape/pithecoid; (2) ape or monkey/simian; (3) ass/asinine; (4) bear/ursine; (5) bee/apian; (6) bird/avian; (7) bull/taurine; (9) cat/feline; (10) cattle/bovine; (11) dog/canine; (12) fish/piscine or ichthyological (the latter word is of Greek origin); (13) fox/vulpine; (14) goat/caprine; (15) horse/equine; (16) lion/leonine; (17) pig/porcine; (18) sheep/ovine; (19) wolf/lupine.

Meat from animals
Certain animals are the source of meat, for which there are special terms, as in the following examples: cattle/beef; chicken/chicken; deer/venison; lamb/lamb; pig/pork; sheep/mutton. Note the word mutton, which, in Malaysia, is also taken to mean meat from goats, but such usage is decidedly incorrect. The dictionaries invariably define mutton as “the flesh of mature sheep used as food” or words to that effect. Will some reader put us wise to the proper term for goat-meat?

Expressions associated with animals
The animal world has provided the English language with aphorisms and evocative expressions. For example, “mutton dressed as lamb” is a derogatory description of an elderly woman trying to look young by wearing clothes or by dressing in a style suitable for a younger woman. Take another example: “a dog in the manger”, originating from one of Aesop’s fables, refers to a person who selfishly keeps something that he does not need so that others may not use or enjoy it.
Here are more examples: (1) to have a bee in one’s bonnet; (2) to bell the cat; (3) to set the cat among the pigeons; (4) to shed crocodile tears; (5) gone cuckoo; (6) to have other fish to fry; (7) what’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander; (8) a red herring; (9) a dark horse; (10) into the lion’s den; (11) stir up a hornets’ nest; (12) stubborn as a mule; (13) come home to roost; (14) one swallow does not make a summer.
In general, “animal” expressions are self-evident or else their meanings are easily obtained from dictionaries. In fact, reference to the dictionaries is recommended. One might find interesting facts about the basis of these expressions.

Closing remarks
I must admit that I rather enjoyed compiling, and making the occasional comment, on words in “animal” talk. Doggone it! Who say English in Malaysia one-kind one? We got know English enuf to comnikate with the world. Malaysia English not yet gone to the dogs.

TheStar, Friday December 24, 2010

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Teach for Malaysia to recruit best talents

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KUALA LUMPUR: Outstanding graduates and young professionals will be recruited to teach at under-performing schools under the Teach for Malaysia programme.
Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, who launched the programme yesterday, said high-performing graduates who wanted to contribute to the country were encouraged to take up this challenge.
“I am glad that the best among our graduates have shown interest in joining the teaching profession,” said Muhyiddin in his keynote address here yesterday.
Muhyiddin, who is Education Minister, said Teach for Malaysia was in line with the Education National Key Results Area (NKRA) to enable access to quality education for all.
“We hope to emulate the success of Teach for America and the Teach First programme in Britain where the graduates enlisted are able to improve the performance of students from challenging schools,” he added.
Muhyiddin said the programme participants would undergo an intensive eight-week training stint before being placed at low-performing schools in the Band 6 and 7 rankings.
The participants will be employed as full-time teachers and serve in the schools for two years.
“Teach for Malaysia marks an important milestone in the Government’s effort to enhance the standard of the teaching profession and attract the best brains to teach,” he said.
He expressed hope that those who were recruited would continue teaching after the end of their tenure.
Teach for Malaysia, which was first announced under the 10th Malaysia Plan, is a key human capital and public-private partnership initiative to attract top talent into the teaching profession.
A non-profit organisation, Teach for Malaysia is a partner organisation of Teach For All, an international body which enlists top college graduates to teach in high-poverty areas in its mission to eradicate education inequity.
Malaysia is the first country in South-East Asia and the third in Asia to introduce this programme.
Applications for the Teach for Malaysia programme open on Jan 11.
Teach for Malaysia co-founders Dzameer Dzulkifli and Keeran Sivarajah said the organisation aimed to recruit 50 graduates and young professionals for the initial batch of the programme.
They will commence teaching when the new school session begins in January 2012.
Those interested should go to http://www.teachformalaysia.org/

TheStar, Saturday December 25, 2010

Friday, December 24, 2010

More students score well in PMR 2010

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KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 23 — Most states have made significant improvement in the Penilaian Menengah Rendah (PMR) results this year, the best in four years with the number of students failing all subjects decreasing.
Federal Territories education director Mohd Adenan Deraman said 1,850 of 21,612 candidates from Kuala Lumpur scored grade A in all subjects compared to 1,940 last year.
He said three schools maintained 100 per cent passes, namely Sekolah Menengah (Sains) Selangor, Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Aminuddin Baki and Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama Kuala Lumpur.
In IPOH, Perak education deputy director Mohd Idris Ramli said the overall results in the state showed an improvement in terms of quality, quantity and school average grade.
He said 27,105 candidates or 64.83 percent of the candidates obtained grade A, B, C and D in all subjects - an improvement of 3.44 per cent compared to last year.
He said Sekolah Tuanku Abdul Rahman (STAR) emerged as the best school, recoding 100 per cent passes with 88 students scored A in all subjects.
In ALOR SETAR, Kedah education director Abdullah Saad said 1,981 of 35,909 candidates scored grade A in seven, eight or nine subjects compared to 1,736 last year.
He said the minimum average grade rose by 0.021 to 2.857 while the minimum achievement percentage in all subjects increased to 62.57 per cent compared to 58.22 per cent last year.
In KUANTAN, the number of candidates who passed all subjects increased by 3.6 per cent to 16,478 compared to 15,714 last year.
Pahang state education deputy director Yahya Zainal Abdidin said the number of candidates who scored grade A in all subjects rose to 1,641 compared to 1,367 last year.
In KOTA BAHARU, Kelantan education director Hussain Awang said the state scored the best results in five years with 6.76 per cent or 2,023 of 36,953 candidates scored grade A in all subjects.
He said it was an increase of 1.86 per cent improvement compared to last year when 1,510 students obtained A in all subjects.
In JOHOR BAHARU, Johor education director Markom Giran said 3,575 of 53,082 candidates scored grade A in all subjects — the best results in four years.
He said the number of students who scored A in all subjects rose by 267 candidates (0.61 per cent) to 3,575 (6.73 per cent) this year.
In PENANG, state education director Ibrahim Mohamad said 2,103 candidates scored 9As, 8As and 7As compared to 1,971 last year.
He said 131 students scored 9As followed by 1,521 (8As) and 450 (7As) with the state average grade rose to 2.70 from 2.72.
In SEREMBAN, Negeri Sembilan education director Abdul Halim Abdul Razak said the number of students who passed all subjects rose by 0.62 per cent or 64 to 1,482 students compared to 1,418 last year — the best results in three years.
In KANGAR, Perlis education director Abdul Hadi Harun said 7.41 per cent or 333 of 4,494 students scored grade A in all subjects compared to 282 last year.
He said three schools maintained 100 per cent passes, namely Sekolah Menengah Sains Tuanku Syed Putra, Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan (SMK) Derma and SMK Dato’ Sheikh Ahmad, Arau.
He said 68 students scored 9As followed by 258 (8As) and seven (7As).
In SHAH ALAM, Selangor education director Sulaiman Wak said 6,907 of 75,711 candidates Selangor scored grade A in all subjects — the best results in four years.
He said seven schools registered 100 per cent passes — Sekolah Menengah (SM) Sains Hulu Selangor, Sekolah Berasrama Penuh Integrasi Gombak, SMK Seri Puteri, SM Sains Kuala Selangor, SBPI Sabak Bernam, SMA Bestari and SMK Agama Simpang Lima.
In KOTA KINABALU, Sabah education director Datuk Dr Muhiddin Yussin said 734 candidates scored grade A in all subjects compared to 659 last year.
He said 44 students obtained 9As followed by 386 (8As) and 304 (7As) while 20,378 of 38,741 candidates passed all subjects.
Among 12 schools which achieved outstanding results are Sekolah Menengah Sains (Kota Kinabalu), Sekolah Menengah Sains (Lahad Datu), SMA Kota Kinabalu, SMA Inanam (Kota Kinabalu), SMK All Saints (Kota Kinabalu), SMK St Francis Convent (Kota Kinabalu) and SMK Lok Yuk (Likas).
In KUCHING, Sarawak education director Mortadza Alop said the number of students who scored grade A in all subjects rose by 0.18 per cent to 1,877 candidates compared to 1,860 candidates last year.
He said 27 students obtained 9As followed by 1,147 (8As) and 703 (7As).
In MELAKA, the state grade average improved by 0.02 per cent to 2.65 per cent compared to 2.67 per cent last year.
State education director Juliah Leman said 1,137 of 14,716 candidates scored grade A in all subjects, an increase of 63 candidates (0.66 per cent) from last year. - BERNAMA

Utusan Online, 24/12/2010

‘Teach for Malaysia’ to raise educational quality

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The 'Teach For Malaysia' programme launched Friday will complement the current initiative by the government to raise the quality of education in this country, said Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin.
Muhyiddin, who is also the Education Minister, said this was because the programme was closely linked to the policies under the 10th Malaysia Plan (10MP) aimed at developing human capital of quality.
"Although the main focus of the programme is to provide teachers of quality to primary schools which are performing poorly, the programme is closely linked to the policies under the 10th Malaysia Plan.
"This effort is the thrust towards innovation and achieving a high-income economic growth which is the country's main objective currently," he said when launching the programme, here.
He hoped the programme would attract outstanding graduates to contribute to the education sector.
The Teach For Malaysia programme is based on the concept of teaching while serving the country propagated by the global network 'Teach For All', which gives an opportunity to outstanding graduates to serve the country by joining the teaching profession after completing their university education.
"I believe that with the talent and knowledge that they possess, outstanding graduates joining the programme can carry out their tasks as teachers effectively, and at the same time improve the performance of the students, especially at the low-performing schools," he said.
Muhyiddin said Malaysia was the first country in South-east Asia and the third in Asia after India and China to implement this important initiative.
He said the programme had been included into the 10MP and identified as a programme that was capable of strengthening the quality of the teaching profession in the country based on the success already achieved in the United States and the United Kingdom through the 'Teach For America' and 'Teach First UK'.
The Education Ministry had carried out a preliminary study to gauge the programme's viability in Malaysia in 2009.
"I look at the programme as a good sign of the strong social involvement of the country's young generation in tackling educational issues and challenges.
"I believe if our country gives strong support to our young generation in implementing the programme, we have actually made a smart investment for the future of our country," he said.
Muhyiddin said the placement of participants of the Teach For Malaysia programme at the schools with high requirement would begin in Jaunary 2012.
Participation for the programme, which is a collaboration between the Education Ministry and the Teach For Malaysia Foundation, will open from Jan 11 and selected participants are required to undergo an intensive course for eight months at the Insitut Aminuddin Baki before being assigned to selected schools for two years. - Bernama

TheStar, Friday December 24, 2010

Interested to apply ? Check this at http://teachformalaysia.org/apply/who.php

Girl and mum killed after collecting exam results

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KOTA BARU : A 15-year-old girl and her mother were killed in a road accident in Kok Lanas town after they had collected the girl’s PMR examination result.
Siti Aishah Zakaria and Azizah Musa, 42, who were on a motorcycle, died on the spot in the accident at the traffic light junction of Jalan Kuala Krai-Kota Baru at about 1pm, said a spokesman of the Kota Baru district police.
The spokesman said Azizah, who was riding the machine, had stopped at the lights when she was hit by a lorry carrying sandstone.
He said the lorry also crashed into three vehicles waiting behind the motorcycle.
Aishah’s father, Zakaria Muhamad, 43, an ex-serviceman, said he learned of the accident from a friend who called him at 1.15pm.
He said his daughter’s teacher had informed him that Aishah had scored 4As, 4Bs and 1C in the examination. — Bernama

TheStar, Friday December 24, 2010

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Evaluating teachers

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Binding teachers with short-term contracts instead of tenure will ensure that they are held accountable for their work performance and the academic achievements of their students.
AN ENGLISH language teacher enters a class, opens the textbook and instructs her students to read a few chapters. Then, she pulls out a women’s magazine from her handbag and is so engrossed reading, she barely hears the school bell ring until reminded by her students.
The scenario is almost similar in another school where a teacher tells her pupils to work on the exercises in their workbooks, while she clears her excessive paperwork.
While their indifference may not be atypical of most teachers in government schools, they are a small but growing group of ineffective and incompetent teachers who are not being held accountable for their job performance.
What is it that makes them so? Could it be because of job security in the civil service? As it is now, teachers – like others in the government – get steady increments based primarily on their educational qualifications and years of service.
However, the dynamics of all this is changing as there are some quarters who strongly feel that teachers should give up the safety of a tenure in exchange for a pay structure that rewards merit and hard work.
As it is, there are the odd ones who have tarnished the image of the profession but who continue to remain in it. They are the teachers who are in a way “protected” and benefit from the tenure.
Many of those who spoke to StarEducation are in favour of the proposal of giving teachers an employment contract instead of tenure. Their main contention is that teaching tenure is a barrier in getting rid of teachers who are indifferent and ineffective in their jobs.
Some feel that matters related to teachers’ incompetency are simply swept under the carpet. Lack of motivation, burn out, depression and moral misconduct are some of the issues that are not openly discussed.
Sara*, who has been teaching for about three years, says that most people are drawn to the profession because of the “iron rice bowl” (a Chinese idiom used to refer to a profession that offers very high job security).
“The problem is that incompetent teachers are still allowed to continue teaching in schools. My lazy colleagues don’t get penalised at all,” she says.
Senior teacher Wong* of Klang says teachers are rarely sacked unless he or she commits a serious crime.
“Teachers are not easily dismissed. They are usually transferred to another school ,” he says.
Pang*, a retired teacher from Penang, adds that many are simply not cut out for the job, or have lost the passion to teach, but remain in the system for job security and the pension it brings after retirement.
“When there are ineffective teachers in a school, dedicated teachers are expected to cover for those who are not. It is like hiring two people to do the job of one teacher.
“That’s when you hear complaints and stories of teachers’ burn-out. It is very taxing for teachers, who are already loaded with work, being instructed to take on additional tasks to help out their incompetent colleagues,” says Pang who taught for 32 years.
To address the problem, the Education Ministry will introduce the Teacher Professionalism Standard next year, in line with the New Economic Model.
Deputy Education Minister Datuk Dr Wee Ka Siong says that the standard would focus on the selection of trainee teachers, pre-service training, teachers’ placement, professional induction and continuous professional development.
While teacher training elements remain important, he says that the current employment system also needs to be re-examined.
National Union of the Teaching Profession (NUTP) president Hashim Adnan is quick to point out that the number of incompetent or goyang kaki teachers are “just a handful”, and school heads have learnt how to deal with them.
“There is no need to have contracts drawn up for individual teachers,” he adds.
While tenure protects incompetent teachers, it also gives dedicated teachers job security that they rightly deserve.
National Parent-Teacher Association Collaborative Council president Assoc Prof Datuk Dr Mohamad Ali Hasan says a tenure gives a teacher the confidence and a conducive environment to work in, adding that teachers need to be evaluated periodically based on the five Ps - professionalism, passion, patience, proactiveness and performance.
“I am concerned that drawing out contracts for teachers will only backfire, and may even bring our education system to a standstill. What is the point of giving them an attractive job contract if there is no job security?” he says.
Dr Mohamad Ali further opines that contracts are drawn up when parties are unsure, or are distrustful of each other.
Abdul Halim*, a primary school headmaster in Shah Alam, says that cash incentives for head teachers and teachers who have proven to have contributed significantly to bolster the academic performance of their respective schools would be a better idea than employment contracts.
Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, who is also the Education Minister, had recently said such incentives were in line with the concept of giving priority to performance and output under the education National Key Results Area (NKRA) of the Government Transformation Programme (GTP).
NUTP secretary-general Lok Yim Pheng responded saying that these incentives will act as motivating factors, instead of enforcing contracts which will make teachers feel “dispensable and not have a sense of belonging to the school.”
“It (tenure), unfortunately, protects good as well as bad teachers,” says Pang, adding that it has become a sore point and the cause of growing anger and unhappiness amongst teachers.
Would it have made a difference if teachers, like some professionals, were offered a teaching job under contract and be rewarded according to their work performance?
“No,” says Pang. “Whether the results are good or otherwise, teachers have been given specific tasks in and outside class. They also bogged down with unnecessary paper work.
“So it is nor fair for some quarters to link a teacher’s capabilities with her students’ performance.”
Sara says that using student achievements to measure a teacher’s performance will not be fair to those who are asked to teach weaker classes.
“This may even backfire and discourage teachers from teaching students who are weak in their studies,” she says.
However, she concedes that in today’s world, where parents are more demanding when it comes to their children’s education, it is only fair that teachers are given a contract and evaluated regularly.
“Many teachers will be very unhappy if contracts are drawn up, but it will be fairer to teachers who are dedicated and committed to their job,” says Sara, adding that such contractual evaluations must be fair and accurate.
Mother of two primary schoolchildren P. Anushia is of the view that a performance-based contract will motivate teachers to work hard. Such a contract, she says, will ensure that teachers are held accountable for matters pertaining to student learning and even character development.
At the same time, it will also help weed out teachers who are deemed incompetent and unfit to teach, she adds.
Some may say that the entire debate over teachers’ tenure will be irrelevant if teacher selection is stringent, and only those who are are genuinely interested in the teaching profession should be selected and trained.
As Anushia says: “With parents placing emphasis on education, it is only fair that the competent and dedicated teachers are given the job.”
* Names have been changed.

TheStar, Sunday November 28, 2010

Ineffective educators

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DID you know that in the United Kingdom (UK), only 18 teachers have been sacked for incompetence over the past 40 years?
The under-performing teachers, instead of being removed from the system, are “recycled” by head teachers.
The scandal uncovered by the BBC’s (British Broadcasting Association) Panorama in July has sparked a heated debate on the hiring and retention system of teachers in the UK.
In what is said to be a common practice in the teaching community, the ineffective teachers are merely transferred from one school to another when they are found to be incapable of teaching.
It is further fuelled by the loophole in the employment system which allows incompetent teachers to continue teaching in schools without being penalised.
Panorama also uncovered evidence that some under-performing teachers agreed to be transferred to another school so long as they were given a positive reference in their work record.
Who is paying the price when a failing system is protecting the “bad” teachers? The children, unfortunately.
But more educators and policymakers begin to see this as a serious issue and that teacher quality is crucial in student learning.
This can be seen in the latest developments in New York, the United States (US).
Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently announced at the Urban Education Summit at Columbia University that he would soon unveil his overhaul plan of how New York City teachers earn tenure.
He said teachers would have to work to receive tenure.
In the US, the tenure rules for K-12 (kindergarten, primary and secondary schools) teachers vary from state to state.
According to an Associated Press report, some tenures give “no stronger protection than job security laws that prevent people from being fired without cause”.
But a number of states have taken the move to re-examine the tenure system of how tenure is awarded.
States like California, Florida and Colorado have passed or have proposed legislation to change tenure laws to remove ineffective and incompetent teachers.
The desire of securing some funding under President Obama’s educational initiative “Race to the Top” programme was said to be the motivation behind the change in rule and attitude of those states.
Teachers in Asia also enjoy high job security.
In a report titled Preparing teachers around the world by Educational Testing Service (ETS), traditionally, teachers in Singapore and Korea are granted tenure once he or she is hired.
It is is because their entry requirements are usually high and therefore only qualified ones make it through.
In the Netherlands, the ETS report states that new teachers normally have to work part-time or as relief teachers before they can get a permanent position.

TheStar, Sunday November 28, 2010

When good girls like bad boys

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MY still single friend and one time colleague Dilla, who has remained 39 since the year 2004, has always said that the phrase ‘‘opposites attract’’ was overused, clichéd and only applied to horse-shoe magnets in the school science laboratory.
She wasn’t very pleased therefore when our other friend Lynn mused about the budding romance between two of her Form Five students.
The girl, a straight A’s student in the first pure sciences class had been romantically linked with a notorious boy from one of the end classes.
“Not only does he have a discipline record that could fill an entire school block, his academic grades are way below average. In fact he has a failing mark in almost every subject in the recent trials.
“It was only recently,” continued Lynn in a lower tone, “that I came to find out he could hardly read or write ... they are so different the two of them … nothing in common at all. One so smart and high-achieving and the other … well you know… it has to be the case of unlike poles attract.”
“Ha,” said Dilla haughtily. “That has nothing to do with poles or opposites. Nothing at all. In fact this ‘phenomenon’ you are describing is most common... it is all about instinct.
“The woman’s natural instinct is to mother the errant, wayward child, take him under her wing and put him back on the right track.
“An innate, inborn instinct you may say. This womanly need to be the redeemer, the one to rescue a man who is in danger of self-destruction or on a downward spiral to doom.
“They’ve got a name for it actually but it’s too complicated. Such relationships have been known to work too ... but don’t ask me for the statistics. Not my cup of tea though,” she sniffed and dug deep into her handbag for her powder compact.
“I prefer to be taken charge of … hopefully by someone smarter than me,”she broke off with a little self-conscious giggle.
A crush
I remembered the long crush Dilla had had on Johan Alwi, the tall lanky captain of the neighbouring boys’ school hockey team when we were school mates way back in the 1970’s.
Everyone in school knew how hung up she had been on Johan and how his name turned up in every English essay she wrote, even when the topic had been ‘My country, Malaysia’.
The hushed excitement whenever his name was mentioned among the group had nothing to do with mothering or rescuing.
In fact, if anyone had needed rescuing, it was Dilla who had gone around for a whole year in a daze after Johan had asked her to hold his hockey stick while he adjusted his shoe laces just before an inter-school game one evening.
The infatuation ended only 20 years later after she saw his cheerful pot-bellied photograph in a magazine advertising products for men’s health and marital harmony.
“I couldn’t understand it at first,” continued Lynn. “I mean, there are so many boys in my own Form 5A class, hard-working, studious and intelligent, high-achievers, most likely-to-succeed types ... why does she have to go for a boy fron an end class?” She gave a little shudder.
“Are you referring to those pasty-faced nerd-type mama’s boys in your 5A?” asked Dilla, who was the class teacher of one of the end ‘K’ classes herself, a fact that Lynn had overlooked.
“That pale, sickly looking bunch who never turn up for sports practice or volunteer to help during any school ‘gotong-royong’ activities. The ones who can walk past the stooped form of a near-retirement teacher walking up four flights of stairs with three bags in one hand and never even stop to offer assistance.
“The same ‘high-achieving’ boys who ran out of the classroom last Monday before recess when a baby cockroach crept out of the waste paper basket? Well … little wonder then that your girls are looking for real men from the other end!”
“Well…” started Lynn regretfully. The brilliance surrounding her potential rocket scientists was gradually dimming.
“I suppose all that competition for scoring A pluses can make them a little self-absorbed at times.. but anyway, I am still going to have a word with my girl about this. Nip the whole thing in the bud. She should be concentrating on her studies now and not be involved in all this boyfriend-girlfriend stuff. Otherwise, I’m going to call her parents.”
“And so ends the hopeful awakenings of first love,” said Dilla.
“Which is probably for the best anyway. These kids are just too young to get emotionally involved.”
“That’s not what you said in 1977 at the end of S.W.A.L.K.” I reminded her. “You walked out of the cinema and vowed that the love you had for Johan Alwi was ‘pure and everlasting’ ... your very words.”
“What a long memory you have,” said Dilla drily. “And all for the wrong things.”
While teachers in Malaysian schools generally disapprove of romantic boy-girl relationships between their students, they also realise that it is a natural phase of adolescent development.
Sexuality issues
The years of secondary schooling is probably the period when students become most aware of their own developing sexuality and begin to regard students of the opposite sex as more than just someone who sits behind them in class or group members in a class project.
Teachers are also aware that most of the time these teenage “crushes” or infatuations are just temporary, unless there is serious emotional or physical involvement. Of late however, the rise of teenage pregnancies and reports of sexual activity among adolescents have made teachers more vigilant and be constantly watchful for “couples” among students.
School counsellors also address the issue of these boy-girl relationship problems in special seminars or one-to-one counselling sessions.
Getting back to the “good girl-bad boy” issue, I remembered that just like Lynn, I had encountered this situation among my own students several times. My other friend Jill had a theory on this when I mentioned it to her.
“It is all the fault of the movies,” she said, in a tone of deep conviction.
“Ever watched a movie, where young, beautiful and sophisticated professional falls in love with the village idiot because of his sincere and pure heart not to mention his skills at beating up the thugs who try to outrage the maiden’s modesty.
“Two hours, five songs and four commercial breaks later, he reappears in a slick jacket and tie after being sent for an education abroad. Most importantly he speaks only English now. The lovers then get married with the blessings of the whole village.”
When I thought about it I realised that Jill perhaps had a point there. Perhaps Lynn was right in warning her students about the dangers of getting carried away by emotions and idealistic visions based on fantasy.
But then again as Dilla says, you never know. There are people who married their school sweethearts and are still happily married after 20 years.
Still, we don’t really know if it was a romance that flourished despite being in classes at either end. Who’s going to tell, and after all these years, what does it matter anyway?

TheStar, Sunday November 21, 2010

Huraian Sukatan Pelajaran KSSR and KBSR For 2011

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Halo again all Malaysian teachers, here is another compiled collection of huraian sukatan Pelajaran KSSR and KBSR for 2011. You can find Huraian Sukatan Pelajaran KSSR Bahasa Melayu, Huraian Sukatan Pelajaran KSSR Matematik, Huraian Sukatan Pelajaran KSSR English Year 1 to Year 6 and all others at the ' Specification( Huraian Sukatan Pelajaran' link right above or click here.

See also,

Rancangan Pengajaran Tahunan KSSR & KBSR for 2011

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Halo all Malaysian teachers, please take a look at the compiled collection of Rancangan pengajaran tahunan KSSR and KBSR for 2011 You can find Rancangan pengajaran tahunan KSSR Bahasa Melayu, Rancangan pengajaran tahunan KSSR English, Rancangan pengajaran tahunan KSSR Sains and all others at the ' Lesson Plan' link right above or click here.

See also,

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Pertukaran Suka Sama Suka Guru ( Teachers' Transfer)

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Halo Teachers! Feel free put your information about the requested transfer.We wish you good luck in finding the suitable exchange ! Click on the Comments  to view the transfer or put in your information.

Sila maklumkan maklumat berkaitan Pertukaran yang diingini. Semoga anda berjaya mendapatkan pertukaran yang sesuai . Klik pada Comments  untuk melihat pertukaran atau memasukkan maklumat anda!

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Saturday, December 11, 2010

Hangman

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T R Y    I T



MatchUp

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Match each word in the left column with its synonym on the right. When finished, click Answer to see the results. Good luck!



 

Spelling Bee

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difficulty level:


score: -
please wait...
spell the word:


Wednesday, December 8, 2010

HubbyWife

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Wife : You always carry my photo in your handbag to the office. Why ?
Hubby : When there is a problem, no matter how impossible, I look at your picture and the problem disappears.
Wife: You see, how miraculous and powerful I am for you?
Hubby: Yes, I see your picture and say to myself, "What other problem can there be greater than this one?"

A newly married man asked his wife, "Would you have married me if my father hadn't left me a fortune?" "Honey,"
the woman replied sweetly, "I'd have married you NO MATTER WHO LEFT YOU A FORTUNE"



Sunday, December 5, 2010

Dear Boss...

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Dear Boss,
People who do lots of work... make lots of mistakes

People who do less work...
make less mistakes                                                                                              

People who do no work...
make no mistakes

People who make no mistakes...
gets promoted

That's why I spend most of my time
sending e-mails & playing games at work
I need a promotion.


Smart Kids

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TEACHER   : Why are you late?
WEBSTER   : Because of the sign.
TEACHER   : What sign
WEBSTER   : The one that says, "School Ahead, Go Slow."  


TEACHER   : Cindy, why are you doing your math multiplication on the floor?
CINDY          : You told me to do it without using tables!  

TEACHER    : What is the chemical formula for water?  
SARAH        : H I J K L M N O!!  
TEACHER    : What are you talking about?  
SARAH        : Yesterday you said it's H to O!


TEACHER  : George, go to the map and find North America.  
GEORGE    : Here it is!  
TEACHER   : Correct. Now class, who discovered America ?  
CLASS       : George!


TEACHER   : Jo, how do you spell "crocodile?"
JOHN         : K-R-O-K-O-D-A-I-L"
TEACHER   : No, that's wrong
JOHN         : Maybe it's wrong, but you asked me how I spell it!


TEACHER    : "George Washington not only chopped down his father's cherry tree, but also admitted doing it.  Now do you know why his father didn't punish him?"
JOHNNY      : "Because George still had the ax in his hand."


TEACHER: Willie, name one important thing we have today that we didn't have ten years ago.
WILLIE    : Me!  


TEACHER   : Ellen, give me a sentence starting with "I."
ELLEN        :  I is...
TEACHER   : No, Ellen..... Always say, "I am."
ELLEN        : All right... "I am the ninth letter of the alphabet."


TEACHER    : "Can anybody give an example of COINCIDENCE?"
JOHNNY     : "Sir, my Mother and Father got married on the same day, same time."


TEACHER    : Desmond, your composition on "My Dog" is exactly the same as brother's.     Did you copy his?
DESMOND   : No, teacher, it's the same dog!


TEACHER      : What do you call a person who keeps on talking when people are no longer  interested?
PUPIL             : A  teacher.




Saturday, December 4, 2010

What is Preposition?

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It’s quite common for people to misuse prepositions. At times, I even hear some people say “I’ll get down the train in the Central Station”, when actually it should have been, “I’ll get off the train at the Central Station”. For non-native speakers, this thing about using the appropriate prepositions is a little bit difficult and confusing. However, I hope that this entry will be able to clear out some confusion about the subject.

What is a Preposition?
It’s a word that shows relationship between a noun or a pronoun and another word. It takes an object and connects that object with some other word in the sentence.

Kinds of Prepositions
I. Common Prepositions
about, above, after, among, at, against, before, from, for, except, behind, in, by, near, inside,
of, into, concerning, off, like , down, on, to , during, over, toward, under, up, with, within, without, from, like

II. Prepositional phrases
In the closet
For an hour

III. Phrasal Prepositions
apart from, as well as, along with, in spite of, in accordance with, in view of, in addition to, because of, in place of, on account of, back of, together with, with regard to, contrary to

Double Meaning

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mouse
Meaning of English words

Used to mean only….
“Memory” was something you lost with age           
“An Application” was for employment                    
“A program” was a TV show                                                 
“A cursor” used profanity                                             
“A keyboard” was an organ                                          
“A virus” was the flu                                                     
“A CD” was a bank account                                          
“A hard drive” was a long trip on the road           
“A MOUSE” is a pest                                                  
“Hardware” are stuff used by carpenter               
“Port” is a place a ship lands                                 
“Server” is a plate use to serve food or drinks     
“Client” is a human being we provide service to 
“Net” is used to catch fish
“Web” is the house of a spider


What about words like “software”, “joystick”, “plug & play”, “wifi”, “touchscreen” etc etc……….

With the computer age, no wonder there are such situation as “generation gap”. Have fun learning the double meaning of simple English words, whether you are young or old.


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