PSLE - New Format for Maths
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Rason:
Singaporeans generally are afraid to complain, because they believe that the authorities will be able to track them down and later make life difficult for them
More open and targeted protocols have to be in place to bridge the gap between government and populace for policy review and recourse - that's my ultimate recommendation.
Actually there is no need to worry. MOE does not require us to send in our real name and IC number. I sent in using my gmail account and got a prompt reply from them. They probably can still track me down using my IP address, but I am not worried about that, because I am asking a valid question.
I have also sent emails to SGH, MOM and LTA. In the case of SGH, they even admitted to their mistake and got the relevant nursing staff to call me and apologize to me. And they promised to make improvements to their work process.
I believe that the government will take action to make changes if they receive enough complains about a problem. -
Hi Tam
This is exactly what happen to my dd.
She got back her math paper yesterday and mostly fault on presentation just cos her way of presentating is different from answer keys.
Quite stress for kids cos they are trying hard to solve the math n at the same time get so paranoid about presentation...I saw my girl paper,poor presentation.
I just smiled and tell her its ok, go and find out what your teacher wants.
rgds
Joytamarind:
Hi Joy,
The problem is that not all teachers are good. There are teachers who do not understand MOE's guidelines. I heard that there are many relief teachers nowadays, they are probably going to make things worst.
What worries me is not the loss of marks, but the fact that kids end up losing their creativity and their abilities to think out the box, because they must follow the teacher's marking scheme. -
Hi Joy,
Yes that is really stressful ! I don't think I will be able to keep quiet about it, I will probably email the principal
I would ask the principal : \"Do you want to produce future Einsteins, Bill Gates, etc or do you want to produce workers who only know how to follow instructions ?\" -
tamarind:
I agree totally. I have sent in numerous complaints, suggestions etc and see things done.Singaporeans generally are afraid to complain, because they believe that the authorities will be able to track them down and later make life difficult for them
Actually there is no need to worry. MOE does not require us to send in our real name and IC number. I sent in using my gmail account and got a prompt reply from them. They probably can still track me down using my IP address, but I am not worried about that, because I am asking a valid question.
I have also sent emails to SGH, MOM and LTA. In the case of SGH, they even admitted to their mistake and got the relevant nursing staff to call me and apologize to me. And they promised to make improvements to their work process.
I believe that the government will take action to make changes if they receive enough complains about a problem.
If nothing is done, I even send a copy to my MP and get immediate response. :lol: It's just a myth that you be black marked. How to make them improve their services if we don't feedback. :heresmyfish:
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tutormum:
I agree totally. I have sent in numerous complaints, suggestions etc and see things done.
If nothing is done, I even send a copy to my MP and get immediate response. :lol: It's just a myth that you be black marked. How to make them improve their services if we don't feedback. :heresmyfish:
Hi Tam and Tutormum, the simpler cases may take a simpler route towards plaintiff's satisfaction, however there are the more complex situations that require case studies and extraordinary hearings. It is the lack of convenient / public access to these that increases the risk of unilateralism and group-think - a phenomenon whereby decisions are reached without sufficient deliberation of issues / ideas.
In short, feedback, complaints and suggestions alone are barely enough for arresting some of our (national) problems. -
Channel 8's drama serial \"Daddy At Home\" last night spurred this analogy...
I imagined a number problem departing from \"Peanuts and Candies\" to teach kids about wealth management:
In 2008, The Economist reported that Morgan Stanley had estimated the Singapore Government Investment Corporation (GIC) fund's assets to be at US$330 billion. Wall Street Journal reported that the GIC suffered a loss of around 59 billion Singapore dollars in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2009, and its portfolio currently stands at around S$265 billion after drops in equity investments and property valuations.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_Singapore_Investment_Corporation The Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF) under the charge of http://www.singaporebudget.gov.sg/expenditure_overview/pmo.html typically awards university research projects at S$2 million each. If both Morgan Stanley and Wall Street Journal estimations/reports are accurate, find the total number of local university research projects that can otherwise be funded by the GIC's loss starting from 2008.
Or more elementary -
Last year, the Sing family had $450,000 in foreign investments for retirement and household development. Unfortunately this year, it lost 40% in the foreign stocks market. If the Sings are affording public education for children at $2 per student, how many more schooling kids could it have had if the head of family cashed out earlier on the market?
Disclaimer: Just food for thought from all over the internet in a hypothesis, no presumption or endorsement of facts and figures on the author's part to construe misrepresentation and malice. -
can algebra be used in current PSLE Maths.
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Most of my students get A*/A for PSLE Maths, this exam is fair.
Most of them also get A/A* for PSLE Science. Conclusion is that it is easy to get A/A* for Maths and Science as long as the student is diligent and has someone to teach him the right things. -
My DS3 classmates scored what is expected except for a few shocking (both good and bad) results. This means, more or less what they have got for their prelim. It also seems that all of them got the A* for Maths which they worked very hard for despite the earlier saga. :lol:
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It didn’t happen for some…those expected to get A* actually didn’t. I was told that the no of A* may have dropped this year.
Also,i think science was actually a harder paper than Maths this year. Kids didn’t realise it because it’s a subject that answers are not so clear cut…
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