Back to School….

School started today after a week-long break. This is the last term for the year and the most pressured one in terms of moms nagging at children. This is because of the spectre of the Semesteral Assessment 2 which will start from next month!

For me personally this is going to be a real intense 2  months as predictably BB & GG failed in the Common Test for Hindi. They take Hindi as their Mother Tongue language and now I am really worried! This next SA 2 is the make or break test for them. I just don’t know how to get them to learn and love the language. If they find Primary 2 difficult, then what will happen in P3 when the ante ups considerably?

God, if you are listening in or reading this blog, please help me!

On another note, here is an interesting article with a local flavour on the teaching of the English language.

TGIF…

Thank God It’s Friday! Today’s Friday and the start of a the weekend! While most people rejoice at the thought of two blissfull days of doing other stuff, my weekends usually entail doing the same stuff that I have been doing the rest of the week – in fact if I can say so, my weekends are even more busy!

On Saturday, I do have the luxury of sleeping for another 75 minutes and wake up only at 6 am compared to the 4:45 am that I usually wake up. Then it’s a flurry of activities to get BB & GG ready for their Mother Tongue classes aka Hindi classes. I have opted them to take Hindi as their Mother Tongue since here, you have to take an another language in addition to English and the other options with us – Tamil and Mandarin were not really options. Tamil, because even though we are linguistically Tamil speaking, I can’t read or write the language to save my life and Mandarin because we do not speak the language at home and so even though they’ve been learning it since Pre-Nursery, I was scared that when the higher levels of the language kick in, it will be difficult for them.

Coming back to the point, they are out of the house by 8 am and then I have some free time till they are back at 1 pm. After lunch and some rest (read afternoon nap), we then go for their music lessons at 5:30 pm. They are learning Carnatic music. Carnatic music is the classical Indian music more common in south India. They will complete one year of learning in October and this year during the Navratri festival, their class will be singing a song at a nearby temple. More about the festival and their performance later.

From tomorrow, GG has additional ballet lessons on Saturdays. These are special lessons specifically for the exams which her class will take sometime in the first quarter of next year. GG has been learning ballet since she was about 3.5 years old.

Sunday’s are relatively free with just GG’s regular ballet lessons. Normally S will take them both – and it’s just some days when he has to work that I take over. This weekend, being the last day of their semesteral holidays, we’re taking them to see the Smurf Movie. I love the Smurfs and it brings back memories for me too, so we’re all looking forward to it. I’ll review the movie next week!

Primary 2 – Term 1 – Week 2

Ok, I had written this yesterday and tried uploading it through my phone, but it didn’t go through! Now the WordPress app is giving me grief – guess I’ll have to delete it and reinstall it….

Week 2 was nothing to write about. The children are just settling down and getting to the business of studying. They had their first spelling test last week and both D&P got 9/10. Sigh! I expected perfect scores from both as they knew all the spellings!!

D has a bad cough today which was diagnosed as bronchitis by the doctor. She’s on a two day medical leave and a week off from PE. She just didnt want to stay at home today and had to be persuaded to stay back as the school would send her back home if she did go to school (that was my argument). We’ve decided to check again tonight to see if she can go back tomorrow. Since D was not going to school today, P also decided he was not going too! He argument was that there wont be anyone to sit with him in the bus coming back home!!

 

School

Today was a parents curriculum talk in D&P’s school. As their principal is fond of saying “this is a neighbourhood school, but not a neighbourhood school” To those who have no clue what I am talking about – neighbourhood schools refer to schools which are not nationally recognised schools – schools where the average child goes to. To that extent this is true – D&P’s school is none of those – they go to a regular school in the western part of Singapore, where most of the children come from within a 1 km radius. Most of the children are normal middle-class children. But a big difference is that this school is also part of the Future Schools of Singapore.

Future Schools@Singapore is a project by the Ministry of Education and the Infocomm Development Authority to build a more IT-savvy nation.  This will be done by having a small group of schools to lead the way in providing possible models for the seamless and pervasive integration of information and communication technologies (ICT) that include interactive and digital media (IDM) into the curriculum for engaged learning in schools.

D&P’s school – Beacon Primary is the first new primary school for the project. This is a new school – D&P’s cohort is the third cohort and the school just welcomed their fourth cohort last week. Once I heard about the school and the fact that it was literally on our doorstep, I was determined to get D&P in – I was a Parent Volunteer at the school for 2 years (that’s for another post). So far, I am liking what I see. This year, the school plans to take the MOE standard curriculum a bit further and enhance learning. Well we’ll see how that comes about.

I’ll leave you with a small anecdote. The P4s in the school have started using their own personal laptops. I did see some students with it last week and this was confirmed by D last week. She came to me and we had this conversation:

D: Mom, do you know that when I get to P4, I’ll have my very own computer

Me: Wow! That’s fantastic! You’ll be able to do so much with it.

D: Yes….I can use my own computer to play any games whenever I want….

Me: <Zapped>

We do not allow D&P unsupervised time on the laptop, which is also password secured so that they can’t use it without permission also not go to websites they are not allowed to .

 

Singapore Education

The ‘O’ Level results were out yesterday and as usual most of the top scorers were foreigners! This is a lesson for us – when children who come from outside of Singapore not knowing much English can go from an F6 to an A1 in two years or less, then why can’t our children do the same? Are we mollycoddling our young ones? Here’s an article I just read while browsing WordPress which somehow relates to this issue. Most of the top scorers, especially the foreign students came from China and in two years stared acing subjects. I also know of the son of a friend of a friend who came to Singapore when he was in P3 (I think) and failed in all subjects in his first exam here. He then persevered (to the extent of reading dictionaries daily) and went on to become a top student in his school and after his Primary School Leaving Exams (PSLE), went to one of Singapore’s top secondary schools – Raffles Institution.

Everytime these results come out, I show them to D&P and in my heart, hope that they emulate these children. After all, which parent would not want their child to be academically brilliant, especially here in Singapore which is obsessed with paper qualifications and want to know which primary/secondary school you went to, even if you are the Prime Minister of the country!

The front page of The Straits Times has this picture. It showed a line of people queuing up for something in the dark. As a teaser the article asked readers to go to a specific page to know why these people were queuing up. The shocker – people were queuing up to get admission forms for a kindergarten! And the best part – the admissions were for their tiny tots for 2013!! Here’s the article from the Straits Times website. The article also has a picture with a baby who looks to be less than a year old. And it also mentions that this kindergarten was the alma mater of the Singapore Prime Minister and his children. So what does this tell us – even if you are the PM of the country – where you went for Kindergarten is important!

No wonder parents in Singapore get so hysterical when their children reach P6 and it’s time for the dreaded PSLE. My turn in the next four years – with two of them doing the PSLE, wonder what I will be doing (boink!)