Tuesday, April 28, 2009

曾经拥有

Yeah...
I am proud to announce that I manage to put myself at the first place among my friends now.
Bejeweled Blitz on Facebook
201900 points!!!
Incredible!

My friend even asked me how did I do it?
She is furious to defeat me.
The answer is....
I ALSO DON'T KNOW!!!

I just click, click, click....
Play again, play again, play again....
And I never realised that I did it.

Till now, I cannot crack my own point.
So, I think I better stop playing it.
Let me retreat during the peak period.
hahaha...

Chinese says,
曾经拥有就很满足

Monday, April 27, 2009

ASM, ASW, ASS?

Today, almost everyone in the staffroom were talking about ASW 2020.
A few of the teachers managed to buy a few lots of the share.
We were informed around afternoon that the shares might sold off in any time that hour.

I can only envy my colleagues.
It is a smart way of saving but only to those who has extra cash.
I am very quiet compare to any other days in the staffroom.
hahaha...
I am really sad that I didn't buy any of the share although I have an account since 1996.

Well... when I analyse back, those who are buying are the real senior colleagues.
After working for certain years, I am sure they do have a strong saving compared to me.
Currently, I dare not touch my extra cash due to a 'big project' that I am having at the end of the year.

I can only envy for the moment.

Semakan keputusan kemasukan ke tingkatan enam rendah 2009

Update: During my meeting this afternoon, the Form 6 teachers were told that name list for the Lower 6 students will be released on the 8th May (Friday).
We were also told that the students will have to come to school for registration on Monday, 11th May.
For those entering my class, lesson will start on Thursday, 14th May 2009.

The sad news is all students have to be back in school on Saturday, 16th May 2009 too.
Sorry... It is the nation wide Teachers' Day.

How I wish it is a holiday for all teachers.
Teachers Day should be a day for the teachers to relax and release the stress of working, right?
Now, I have to be back in school, sitting in the heaty hall, listening to the long long speeches from the Minister, Principal, the YDP of PIBG, etc.
Tiu....

******************

To those who are waiting to enter Lower 6,
you can check your entrance status on the
8 May 2009
at the KPM's website
http://www.moe.gov.my

I hope to see more students studying Form 6 this year in my school.
To those who has doubt of studying Form 6,
it is really not a bad choice although it is tough.
It is quite easy to get a place in the local university.
But I know there are worries of not getting the course you like.
Quota system sucks.

But studying at the private colleges is not as easy as you think.
I know people keep on repeating the same papers, over and over again.
All this cost $$$$.
Studying in the local university is still cheaper compare to private colleges.

But the choice is yours.
Just make sure it is the right one.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Labour of Love

I read the article below from Malaysiakini. I found it very interesting and ashamed of myself after reading it. I know I cannot be like Apik. I am glad if I have 20% what he is doing now. We need more people like Apik to make the world a better place.

******************

Apik's love of learning

Keruah Usit | Apr 22, 09 7:14am


Apik can survive in the rainforest, completely alone, with a parang and some salt. He hunts, dives for fish and makes a bed for himself under the forest canopy.

MCPX


He climbs trees to harvest honey from wild hives. He picks ferns and bamboo shoots to cook, and finds edible fruit and roots. He collects herbs to heal, and uses ipoh, a tree bark, to prepare poison for blowpipe darts.

He travels to neighbouring villages in a wooden longboat, with an engine modified from a grass-cutting machine. He manoeuvres the longboat through rapids strewn with giant boulders, as expertly as KL folk weave through rush-hour traffic.

If he finds snakes on jungle trails, he picks up them up with twigs and branches, moving them away from the paths, and from other travelers. He makes fishing nets, and mends them, with a dexterity associated with more delicate, less muscle-bound, maidens.

He can remain underwater for an astounding length of time, looking for fish or a missing propeller. He rears puppies, teaching them to hunt for barking deer and wild boar. He can carry a wild boar heavier than himself, on his shoulders, through the forest, for hours.

His real passion, though, is teaching. He teaches pre-school and primary school, in his small, remote Orang Ulu village in Sarawak. His students adore him, trailing after him after classes, pestering him to go swimming with them.

He takes them down to the river, to cool off and indulge in some horseplay. The children mob him, climbing all over him. They beg him to push them around in their makeshift dinghies, made from truck tyres. They perform somersaults, shrieking and splashing into the water, to impress him.

“I like watching the children grow up, watching them grow in knowledge and understanding,” he says. “It’s a wonderful feeling - hard to explain.”

He says kampung students are far easier to teach than urban children. He endured a nightmare, during his training, teaching in an urban school, trying to get students to listen.

When asked why, he ventures, “Maybe it’s because the kampung children get more attention. When the children go to their neighbours, they’re made welcome and cared for, as if they were their neighbours’ children.

“Parents in the ulu talk to their children all the time, even when they are bathing the small children. And then, of course, there’s not much television,” he smiles.

No IC until he was 25


Apik came to his calling late in life, graduating when he was nearly 30. He could not attend teacher training school when he completed secondary school, he says, because he had no identity card until he was 25.

“I didn’t think I could ever get to teachers’ training college,” he remembers. “To tell the truth, I was lucky to get to Form Six. The headmaster in my boarding school encouraged me to stay on, and he turned a blind eye to the fact that I didn’t have an IC.”

Apik was born to farming parents, in a quiet Orang Ulu village. His parents had been born and bred Sarawakians. Apik’s father even had a shotgun licence given him by the British colonial rulers, dating from the 1950s. But they could not obtain ICs for many years.

“My father served as a border scout during the Konfrontasi with Indonesia in 1963,” Apik says.

“He helped keep Sarawak part of Malaysia. Yet he couldn’t get an IC. My parents went to the towns to apply for ICs, many times. The journeys would take a week by boat, down fierce rapids, to the Registration Department.”

Many times, Apik’s parents were told the decision to confirm their Malaysian citizenship and ICs had to come from KL, and the decision took time. When Apik’s parents asked when they should return, they were bestowed the time-honoured advice of the bureaucracy – “just wait”. They waited for the letters from the Registration Department, but the correspondence never came.

Apik’s parents obtained ICs eventually, in the 1990s. The Registration Department had established “mobile units”, traveling to remote communities. Apik says the villagers appreciated these visits, because they could not afford the cost of travel to town. But the visits were rare.

He walked four days to school


“My parents were highly respected in the village,” he says. “They were always good to their neighbours, including the Penan communities who were beginning to settle down near our village.

“They spoke Penan fluently, they helped the Penan with farming techniques, and helped make relationships easier with the rest of the village – many of the people in my village looked down at the Penan.”

Most of Apik’s fellow villagers grew to accept the Penan, thanks to Apik’s family.

Apik went to primary school in the next village, where Penan children formed the majority.

“I learnt a lot from them,” he remembers.

“I learnt to be gentle, to respect my neighbours, and respect the forest. I learnt to value the trees and animals in the forest. The Penan are the best trackers around. They can walk for hours. They share what they have, so I always knew I wouldn’t go hungry when I went hunting with them.

“And they never waste. If they hunt a bear, and the dead animal’s young is left behind, they take the cub in and care for it.”

Apik went on countless hunting trips with Penan friends.

“Every time I went into the forest, the first few days were hard. I was tired all the time. But when my body settled into the routine of walking, I began to appreciate the beauty of the forest. The streams, the waterfalls, the animals, the trees, the wildflowers… he stillness.”

After primary school, Apik moved on to the nearest secondary school. Children in Apik’s part of Malaysia often walk for several days to reach school.

“I walked to the Sekolah Menengah, Form One to Three, when I was 13 until I was 15. Twenty of us, schoolchildren, walked four days, carrying our food rations, sleeping in the jungle.

“Some parents asked me to look after their young daughters, so I ended up carrying their books, food, clothes, even packets of sanitary pads… I ended up carrying 30 kilos,” he laughs.

Teachers ‘parachuted’ into rural schools

Many rural children suffer far worse than walking for days to get to school. Children are bullied by fellow boarders and even by teachers.

Penan children, especially, are shy and unfamiliar with shouting and aggression. They often leave school because of bullying and loneliness, and sometimes because their parents take them away to help in the harvest.

But Penan children do well if they stay on, according to Apik. Many become top students, both in the classroom and on the sports field.

Apik gives chilling accounts of teachers beating and bullying rural children.

“Children from my home village tell me how one teacher in their secondary school lost control of himself, and chased them with a parang.

“Another teacher threatened them with a shotgun. The headmaster knew, but took no action. The school has received many complaints from parents, but nothing has improved,” Apik says bitterly.

Few teachers volunteer to work in rural schools, and there are few trained local teachers. Apik himself has been posted to an urban school in the past, even after he had requested to teach in a rural school near his village.

Teachers “parachuted” into the rural schools experience culture shock. Many of them are poorly motivated and ignorant. They receive little support from the education authorities in the towns.

Apik likes to tell the story of a teacher from Peninsular Malaysia, posted to a remote primary school. The young teacher had never heard of the place, and did not know the school is nine hours’ drive and three hours’ boat ride from the nearest large town.

The teacher arrived at the airport, climbed into a taxi, and asked the taxi driver to take him to the school, Apik relates with a smile.

Contractors profit, children suffer


The schools Apik teaches in are dilapidated, without adequate electricity supply, treated water or clean dormitories.

The children bathe in the nearby river, downstream from the rest of the village. Scabies, head lice and worms are routine (left).

One rural primary school had toilets installed and closed down the same day, because of the contractor’s sub-standard work. The children used the bushes for months, until the toilets were repaired.

During lunch hour in another school, the children’s usual meal is rice, tinned food and cabbage. The schoolteachers say the food supply contracts are determined and awarded “centrally” by the Education Department.

Vegetables and fish supplied from the towns are often rotting, so that well-connected urban food suppliers can make their hefty profits. The teachers would prefer to buy chickens and fresh vegetables for the children from the villagers, but are not allowed to.

Many children in these schools have no shoes. Their families struggle to buy them stationery and uniforms. Poor rural children are meant to have an allocation for these items, and are exempted from paying school fees.

Yet many children are still forced to pay fees in rural schools, according to headmen and parents in remote villages. Why? the parents ask. Incompetence, overzealous bureaucracy, or most likely, corruption.

One headmaster in a rural school provides an analogy: “The allocation provided by the Education Department starts out in the towns, loaded onto the transport.

“But the amount gets smaller and smaller as it makes its way upriver. By the time it arrives, it’s a tiny amount. Most of it has fallen off the transport, on the way to the ulu.”

Long walk, with a helping hand

Poor rural children throughout Malaysia face the same hardship. Some overcome astonishing obstacles in getting to school.

A rural indigenous girl used to walk for days to school in Sabah. She left school after Form Three, to work as a domestic helper for an urban Chinese family. Her employers knew about her family’s poverty, and decided to pay for her to complete her schooling, while she was helping in the employers’ household.

Her results were good enough to go to medical school. Her employers helped her through university, for five lonely, trying years in Peninsular Malaysia. She works as a doctor now, and supports her family and community.

Some rural folk, doctors like this young Sabahan, and teachers like Apik, seek education, so that they can contribute to their poor communities. They support their neglected communities as best they can, in their labour of love.

How many of us, the other Malaysians – educated Malaysians – do the same?


KERUAH USIT is a human rights activist - anak Sarawak, bangsa Malaysia. His ‘The Antidote’ column, which will appear in Malaysiakini every Wednesday, is an attempt to allow the voices of marginalised people to be heard all over Malaysia. The writer can be contacted at keruah_usit@yahoo.com.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Bejeweled Blitz

Now you guys know why there is no post for quite sometime.
I am busy and moody lately.
Busy to put myself in the first place of the tournament
and moody because I still cannot make it.
LOL

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

revive caning in schools

I just read that government has made the decision to revive caning in schools to curb discipline problems among students.
Will this be the best way to tackle the discipline problems among students?
During my time in school, I was a very discipline student.
I couldn't remember being cane by my teachers before.
But I was caned by my mother when I didn't listen to her.
I know that caning is not a fun thing.
hahaha...
I will definitely feel very embarrassed if I am cane for being a bad student in school.
That's why I am superb obedient in school.

But as a teacher, I did cane my students.
hihihi...
Sometimes, it really works.
But I make sure that I don't over do it.
Seriously, I worry that I might hurt them.
So, I only cane their hand and buttock (usually for the boys).

As a Form 6 teacher, of course, I don't practice that anymore.
But handling my Form 4 students is another story.
They will be more discipline when they see me entering the class with a cane.
But now, I seldom do that anymore.
I think they are used to my style.
They know that I don't cane them anymore.

I think caning doesn't work for older students.
Sometimes, I feel that they just want us to adjust to their attitude towards studies.
We can't make them to do things the way we want it.

I once was told by a student of mine that,
"You do whatever you have to do in the class.
We might not want to study, but there are students who want to study.
If we want to listen, we will listen."

My friend who teaches in another school was told by her students no need to teach at all because they have no interest in study and they will not listen at all.
So, I think I have better students.

Anyway, may be by reviving caning in school it might tackle the discipline problems.
May be the fear of being cane might revive their interest to study in school instead of socializing with friends.

Below is the article that I copy from www.malaysiakini.com.

***************

Gov't to revive caning in schools
Apr 7, 09 1:51pm

The Education Ministry is to revive caning in schools to curb discipline problems among pupils, three years after making moves to ban corporal punishment, a minister said today.

The government made the decision to revive caning last month and it will issue specific guidelines on how to implement the punishment, deputy education minister Wee Ka Siong told

damansara school pc 051208 wee ka siong

"We will allow the headmaster or anyone who has been authorised to execute the punishment, while parents will be notified and invited to witness the caning to be done in a confined area," he said.

"We need to take precautions because students nowadays are not like students those days - they are 'too creative' in breaching the rules now," Wee said.

In 2006, the government said it was planning to ban public caning in schools, where the punishment is administered on the buttocks or the palm of the hand.
The education ministry also said a year later that it was considering allowing schools to cane unruly girls to curb an upsurge in discipline problems including gang fights and bullying.

Real/RMVB Media Player

I just bought two real/rmvb media player during the PC Fair two days ago.
I went to the PC Fair just to hunt for a wireless mouse, ear phone and may be a cooling pad.
Instead I spent more than RM350 on that day.

I don't know anything about this player and I was introduced to it during the PC Fair.
Immediately, I think it is a good way of sharing all those movies that I download with my parents and MIL.
That's why I bought two of it.
One for myself and one for my parents.
got the one exactly like the one in the pic.
A white one.
RM170 each.
Though it does not support HDMI.
The one that can support HDMI cost almost RM100 more.

It comes with VGA port and AV output.
I tried to use the VGA port to my Sharp LCD TV but the screen turns all red and without sound.
I called up the salesman and he advised me to connect using the AV output instead.
Everything is fine when I use that method.

So, my hubby is not very happy.
He feels cheated.
Well, I think they provide the low quality VGA output.
I was told before that LCD TV is very sensitive.
This kind of tv prefer good quality of cabling for sharp image.
So, if you guy wants to get one too, do check the cable provided.
I tested mine using his cable.
So, I suspect that they use the very good cable while testing my player.
That's why everything looks good at the stall and not the same thing when I tried at home.

Real / RMVB Media Player
Model: MP001
Support: AVI / MPG / WMA
Support: VOB / DAT / MPEG
High Definition Digital
RM/RMVB High Definition Digital Media Player: MP001


Monday, April 06, 2009

Marley and Me


I just watched Marley & Me.
I really love it.
The Labrador is so cute.
He can be the worst dog in the world but he has the biggest heart.
The last part of the movie is so touching.
When Marley is going to die and John telling Marley his last words, my tear just couldn't stop dropping.

How I wish hubby will let me to keep a dog like Marley one day.
It is going to be fun.
But a dog's life cycle is so short.
May be loving others' dog will be just alright for me.
hahaha...