GEP kids and their parents
-
phtthp:
:rotflmao: Looks like we'll see more parents with 3-year-olds raiding Popular Bookstore for Primary school textbooks and assessment books soon.
Sheldon's mother, Dr Lee Tung Jean, a 35-year-old civil servant who holds a PhD in economics from Oxford University, said her son has been been doing maths puzzles and raiding the bookshops for maths textbooks and assessment books since he was three years old.
Just joking.
-
:rotflmao: come and raid BookFest @ Singapore 2011
18 November - 27 November 2011
http://www.kiasuparents.com/kiasu/forum/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=8964&p=611318 -
verykiasu2010:
Another 3 hypothesis could be -
oso, I read long time ago that musical trainings do help to wire the brain in a certain way that improves the math / spatial aspect ..... imagine the eye / hand co-ordination with accurate hearingchamonix:
Back to GEP, heard from my sister that a large number of those who cleared round 1 in her dd's school (about 30 of them) are learning music instruments. Incidentally, my niece, who cleared round 1, takes piano and ballet lessons.
Any observation of such correlation in your child's sch?
eye - score reading
hand - on the string / key board
hearing - perception / interpretation / feedback to hand etc .... to me all these are quite complex, and cannot 离谱
- parents who bother to send their kids for music lessons are usually more involved in their kids' work.
- parents who send their kids for music lessons usually have deeper pockets to send them for other enrichment classes.
- intelligent kids will do better both in studies and in music. So it's not the music that makes the kids smarter. It's that the kids are already smart, so can play musical instruments well.
Just to mix it up a bit, haha. :siam: -
phtthp:
parents' age is 35 when the son is 11 y/ofrom Straits Times:-
Sheldon Tan, 11, scores distinction in O-level Maths & Additional Maths :-
================================================================
IF THERE is one subject Sheldon Tan, 11, looks assured of scoring an A* for at the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) this year, it is Mathematics.
He has already bagged distinctions in Mathematics and Additional mathematics at O level.
.......
Sheldon's mother, Dr Lee Tung Jean, a 35-year-old civil servant who holds a PhD in economics from Oxford University, said her son has been been doing maths puzzles and raiding the bookshops for maths textbooks and assessment books since he was three years old.
His father Gary Tan, 35, a deputy director at a statutory board, said: 'We believe in sufficient rest and want him to be in bed by 9pm every day. But he has no problem doing that. He also has time to play with his brother and sister and play computer games. He is very organised.'
reference source:-
http://www.asiaone.com/News/Education/Story/A1Story20100214-198663.html
parents' age when son was born : 24
so age of marriage = 23 at the latest
age when finished A level = 18, plus 2.5 years NS = 21
so between age 21 to 23 gone to uni get a degree and get a wife for the father and for the mother, from first degree to Phd in 5 years immediately after A level ... wow
sorry for the :offtopic: -
verykiasu2010:
Interesting.
parents' age is 35 when the son is 11 y/ophtthp:
from Straits Times:-
Sheldon Tan, 11, scores distinction in O-level Maths & Additional Maths :-
================================================================
IF THERE is one subject Sheldon Tan, 11, looks assured of scoring an A* for at the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) this year, it is Mathematics.
He has already bagged distinctions in Mathematics and Additional mathematics at O level.
.......
Sheldon's mother, Dr Lee Tung Jean, a 35-year-old civil servant who holds a PhD in economics from Oxford University, said her son has been been doing maths puzzles and raiding the bookshops for maths textbooks and assessment books since he was three years old.
His father Gary Tan, 35, a deputy director at a statutory board, said: 'We believe in sufficient rest and want him to be in bed by 9pm every day. But he has no problem doing that. He also has time to play with his brother and sister and play computer games. He is very organised.'
reference source:-
http://www.asiaone.com/News/Education/Story/A1Story20100214-198663.html
parents' age when son was born : 24
so age of marriage = 23 at the latest
age when finished A level = 18, plus 2.5 years NS = 21
so between age 21 to 23 gone to uni get a degree and get a wife for the father and for the mother, from first degree to Phd in 5 years immediately after A level ... wow
sorry for the :offtopic: -
jtoh:
Interesting.[/quote]one possible conclusion : younger smarter parents produce even smarter kids
parents' age is 35 when the son is 11 y/overykiasu2010:
[quote=\"phtthp\"]from Straits Times:-
Sheldon Tan, 11, scores distinction in O-level Maths & Additional Maths :-
================================================================
IF THERE is one subject Sheldon Tan, 11, looks assured of scoring an A* for at the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) this year, it is Mathematics.
He has already bagged distinctions in Mathematics and Additional mathematics at O level.
.......
Sheldon's mother, Dr Lee Tung Jean, a 35-year-old civil servant who holds a PhD in economics from Oxford University, said her son has been been doing maths puzzles and raiding the bookshops for maths textbooks and assessment books since he was three years old.
His father Gary Tan, 35, a deputy director at a statutory board, said: 'We believe in sufficient rest and want him to be in bed by 9pm every day. But he has no problem doing that. He also has time to play with his brother and sister and play computer games. He is very organised.'
reference source:-
http://www.asiaone.com/News/Education/Story/A1Story20100214-198663.html
parents' age when son was born : 24
so age of marriage = 23 at the latest
age when finished A level = 18, plus 2.5 years NS = 21
so between age 21 to 23 gone to uni get a degree and get a wife for the father and for the mother, from first degree to Phd in 5 years immediately after A level ... wow
sorry for the :offtopic:
disclaimer : I am not implying the other way round :siam: -
verykiasu2010:
My aunt who has a doctorate and studied it under scholarship, was \"pak-toring\" with boyfriend while during Pre-U. She got married right after 1st degree, then with husband left together to London to do her Masters, then PhD, and they had 2 babies along the way. While they were studying, the children went to childcare.
parents' age is 35 when the son is 11 y/ophtthp:
from Straits Times:-
Sheldon Tan, 11, scores distinction in O-level Maths & Additional Maths :-
================================================================
IF THERE is one subject Sheldon Tan, 11, looks assured of scoring an A* for at the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) this year, it is Mathematics.
He has already bagged distinctions in Mathematics and Additional mathematics at O level.
.......
Sheldon's mother, Dr Lee Tung Jean, a 35-year-old civil servant who holds a PhD in economics from Oxford University, said her son has been been doing maths puzzles and raiding the bookshops for maths textbooks and assessment books since he was three years old.
His father Gary Tan, 35, a deputy director at a statutory board, said: 'We believe in sufficient rest and want him to be in bed by 9pm every day. But he has no problem doing that. He also has time to play with his brother and sister and play computer games. He is very organised.'
reference source:-
http://www.asiaone.com/News/Education/Story/A1Story20100214-198663.html
parents' age when son was born : 24
so age of marriage = 23 at the latest
age when finished A level = 18, plus 2.5 years NS = 21
so between age 21 to 23 gone to uni get a degree and get a wife for the father and for the mother, from first degree to Phd in 5 years immediately after A level ... wow
sorry for the :offtopic:
So, you think Sheldon, likely was \"brought up\" in his early days in British childcare? Maybe managed to defer NS. My neighbour's daughter under GIC scholarship did masters in 4yrs, I think - in London School of Economics. -
verykiasu2010:
one possible conclusion : younger smarter parents produce even smarter kids
Interesting.jtoh:
[quote=\"verykiasu2010\"]
parents' age is 35 when the son is 11 y/o
parents' age when son was born : 24
so age of marriage = 23 at the latest
age when finished A level = 18, plus 2.5 years NS = 21
so between age 21 to 23 gone to uni get a degree and get a wife for the father and for the mother, from first degree to Phd in 5 years immediately after A level ... wow
sorry for the :offtopic:
disclaimer : I am not implying the other way round :siam:[/quote]Hahha! I was thinking the same thing.
-
jtoh:
And for this possible conclusion to be \"conclusive\", we need a set of older, smarter parents to produce some kids for comparison. Err, any volunteers?
Hahha! I was thinking the same thing.verykiasu2010:
one possible conclusion : younger smarter parents produce even smarter kids
disclaimer : I am not implying the other way round :siam:
-
markfch:
And for this possible conclusion to be \"conclusive\", we need a set of older, smarter parents to produce some kids for comparison. Err, any volunteers?
Hahha! I was thinking the same thing.jtoh:
[quote=\"verykiasu2010\"]
one possible conclusion : younger smarter parents produce even smarter kids
disclaimer : I am not implying the other way round :siam:
[/quote]I am older but dumber, so disqualified :(, sigh!
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better š
Register Login