Logo
    • Education
      • Pre-School
      • Primary Schools Directory
      • Primary Schools Articles
      • P1 Registration
      • DSA
      • PSLE
      • Secondary
      • Tertiary
      • Special Needs
    • Lifestyle
      • Well-being
    • Activities
      • Events
    • Enrichment & Services
      • Find A Service Provider
      • Enrichment Articles
      • Enrichment Services
      • Tuition Centre/Private Tutor
      • Infant Care/ Childcare / Student Care Centre
      • Kindergarten/Preschool
      • Private Institutions and International Schools
      • Special Needs
      • Indoor & Outdoor Playgrounds
      • Paediatrics
      • Neonatal Care
    • Forum
    • ASKQ
    • Register
    • Login

    Child Underperforms Because Tested Above Cognitive Level

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Recess Time
    526 Posts 47 Posters 114.7k Views 1 Watching
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • C Offline
      Chenonceau
      last edited by

      I think I have worked very hard in this thread to raise the issue of concern. I have done everything I know how to draw attention to this thread and have people (hopefully MOE) read it. I have argued and presented and called MOE's top civil servants some inelegant names. :rotflmao:


      It is good to know when to stop. I am happy with what I have done, and I think I have done my best.

      So now, I stop. Cheerio...

      šŸ˜„

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • doodbugD Offline
        doodbug
        last edited by

        deminc:
        Was staying away from this thread but curiousity got the better of me, wow! The number of posts!


        I don't think we can say that children are ALL tested above their cognitive level. I think there is a spectrum, but few parents are willing to accept even the average.


        I think what parents are referring to is that children are tested beyond the prescribed syllabus and the textbooks.

        I also agree with wonderm that though there are challenging questions, the concepts usually have already been covered. We are trying to move away from rote learning, that is a good thing right? And it is something we have been clamouring for right? But in moving away from rote learning and memorisation/regurgitation, the variations in teaching abilities become more apparent, and children's abilities to apply concepts in different fields will differ.

        I am fully supportive of moving away from content and memory work. The exams of the past tended to differentiate kids based on carelessness, silly and trivial stuff. My children are not in P6 yet and I cannot comment on whether subjects like Science has moved away from rote learning and memory work. I did recall that I memorized a TON for Science PSLE as that was how to get an A* back then (tons of food chains and stuff); I hope the memory content has been reduced, and has evolved to become more conceptual.

        It's a bit of a catch-22 to expect this shift in education without further sifting of abilities on both teachers and students' part. We can be more selective about teachers, but we have to accept all students and they come in all types and abilities. Are parents willing to accept that the days of scoring 90+ across all subjects are dwindling?

        The way I see it, the textbooks are the baseline, the sky is the limit.


        The last statement really got me thinking. There is a huge and fundamental difference between the PSLE and O or A levels. At the O or A levels, one is graded. One attains a certain level of competency or performance, and one is graded an A. The sky is the limit in that you can score 100, but it is still an A. Whereas the PSLE is a different construct - every point of differentiation counts in the T-score. It becomes more of a relative and zero-sum game, at each subject level. The sky (or more accurately 100 marks) is really the limit. The chase becomes endless, and there is no end in sight. It's a different challenge, and Singaporean parents have responded to the PSLE with an approach of tuition, tuition and more tuition. Yikes, and I will be one of them soon šŸ˜ž

        I do have my own wishlist for MOE. But more textbooks and model essays are not among them....at least not now. I may repent in a few more years! Never say never. *grin*


        I think the more fundamental issue that some of us have is perhaps not the textbook per se, but the differential access to good resources across different schools. Also, I think KSP demographic profile is probably not representative of the general Singaporean demographic profile. We are parents who have the priviledged time and take the effort to surf the web for resources on how best to help our kids. As such, many of our kids will not face the issue of the lack of good resources. I may be wrong but a disproportionate number of KSP forummers have children in one of the better (say top 30) Primary Schools, where as there are actually close to 200 Primary Schools. Truly I think there are many parents and children out there who are lost in navigating resources, and helpless, thus the best recourse is tuition, tuition and more tuition.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • P Offline
          psle2011mum
          last edited by

          Chenonceau:
          I think I have worked very hard in this thread to raise the issue of concern. I have done everything I know how to draw attention to this thread and have people (hopefully MOE) read it. I have argued and presented and called MOE's top civil servants some inelegant names. :rotflmao:


          It is good to know when to stop. I am happy with what I have done, and I think I have done my best.

          So now, I stop. Cheerio...

          šŸ˜„
          Chenonceau, thank you - thank you for taking the time to write, for taking the effort to put these points across in such elegant, readable and for me, thoroughly enjoyable posts. Thank you for your passion in giving a voice to those of us who stand in the gap for our children.

          Will this achieve anything? I quote John Piper in reply :

          You don't have to know a lot of things for your life to make a lasting difference in the world. But you do have to know the few great things that matter, and then be willing to live for them and die for them. The people that make a durable difference in the world are not the people who have mastered many things, but who have been mastered by a few great things. If you want your life to count, if you want the ripple effect of the pebbles you drop to become waves that reach the ends of the earth and roll on for centuries and into eternity, you don't have to have a high IQ or EQ; you don't have to have good looks or riches; you don't have to come from a fine family or a fine school. You have to know a few great, majestic, unchanging, obvious, simple, glorious things, and be set on fire by them.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • coastC Offline
            coast
            last edited by

            psle2011mum:
            Chenonceau:

            I think I have worked very hard in this thread to raise the issue of concern. I have done everything I know how to draw attention to this thread and have people (hopefully MOE) read it. I have argued and presented and called MOE's top civil servants some inelegant names. :rotflmao:


            It is good to know when to stop. I am happy with what I have done, and I think I have done my best.

            So now, I stop. Cheerio...

            šŸ˜„

            Chenonceau, thank you - thank you for taking the time to write, for taking the effort to put these points across in such elegant, readable and for me, thoroughly enjoyable posts. Thank you for your passion in giving a voice to those of us who stand in the gap for our children.

            Will this achieve anything? I quote John Piper in reply :

            You don't have to know a lot of things for your life to make a lasting difference in the world. But you do have to know the few great things that matter, and then be willing to live for them and die for them. The people that make a durable difference in the world are not the people who have mastered many things, but who have been mastered by a few great things. If you want your life to count, if you want the ripple effect of the pebbles you drop to become waves that reach the ends of the earth and roll on for centuries and into eternity, you don't have to have a high IQ or EQ; you don't have to have good looks or riches; you don't have to come from a fine family or a fine school. You have to know a few great, majestic, unchanging, obvious, simple, glorious things, and be set on fire by them.

            Hi Chenonceau,

            :thankyou:

            :udawoman:

            Hi psle2011mum,

            Thanks for the inspiring quote šŸ™‚

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • C Offline
              Chenonceau
              last edited by

              http://i39.tinypic.com/saw1eq.jpg\">

              Today's newspapers published an article about 2 PRC students who set up a website where contributors give free online lectures for JC students.

              http://i44.tinypic.com/2sac6qx.jpg\">
              They did it to help students too poor to pay for tuition and enrichment.


              (1) Clearly, such online resource sharing is not at all difficult to set up. Why accept from MOE a mere booklist identified by individual Teachers as suggested by wonderm and ksi?

              (2) These 2 PRC students share their knowledge for free with the whole world. MOE does not pay them. Why are our teachers so jealous of their resources? What's this about being unfair to teachers (something which worried Piggylalala) just because we ask them to share their worksheets, their models and their notes with other teachers across the nation's schools?

              (3) Why believe that the best resources are those that are already published in Popular? In my personal experience, the most helpful resources are those that I have managed to get from friends in schools that DO write resources. NOT Popular assessment books. In my personal experience, the best resource for P5 and P6 Math for my son can only be bought online. Top school exams (written by Teachers) beat any Popular assessment book any day in being flexibly tailored to the requirements of the PSLE. I have spent hours poring over assessment books in Popular searching for resources. Of the plethora of resources in Popular, I have been able to find only 1 or at best 2 a year that I consider of a quality that is worth my son's foregone playtime.

              The kind of resources that I use to power my son's crazy improvement from lousy to groovy CANNOT BE BOUGHT even with money. I have NO science assessments, NO English assessments, NO Chinese assessments.

              Best resources are written by teachers for the students they teach (either in schools or in tuition centres) NOT by some money-making publisher who just wants to push out a book. Indeed, a friend of mine was tasked to write and she assures me that the publishers don't really know (nor check) whether what you write is absolute junk. It just has to look ok enough to fool the average parent.

              At present, there already exists excellent resources within the school system, hidden inside schools. To marshall these resources, the following is possible...

              (1) Run yearly competitions for highest quality resources
              (2) Allow any Teacher to upload resources for sharing with teachers in other schools.
              (3) Check the clickthrough rate for each Teacher's upload and reward the Teacher with a writing bonus (and maybe one day, our children will be able to access videos made by their teachers to teach them and help them revise)

              It's not more difficult than setting up a KSP forum, and it'll
              (1) offload Teachers
              (2) allow Teachers to quickly and easily respond to individual student needs (just access the database and pull out stuff)
              (3) allow Teachers to see how others write good resources
              (4) provide Teachers with pride in their work (especially if the community appreciates their uploads)
              (5) provide free access to high quality educational resources to every child in the nation without lining the pockets of low quality publishers out to make a quick buck from the unsuspecting parent

              Setting up a sharing database is not difficult at all.

              Since I am asking for a level playing field for all students rich or poor, I might as well ask for the full works... instead of beg for scraps by asking for
              (1) just a book list
              (2) hopefully some private sector publisher will write a good textbook to make money

              I am a Singaporean. I pay taxes and have been loyal to this country for years and years. I see no reason to accept that our MOE (which consumes milions a year in salaries) can deliver less than 2 PRC students. Unfortunately, the 2 PRC students share for JC level. We need a similar resource for primary level.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • corneyAmberC Offline
                corneyAmber
                last edited by

                Chenon, I have to disagree here that there is a difference. System implementation is one of my forte and when implemented in an organisation, it has more components than you can imagine unlike what these 2 kids have done.


                Nobody will criticise the 2 kids if anything goes wrong as they started as a volunteer service but everyone will charge at MOE if it is implemented wrongly because everyone EXPECTS MOE to know-how and to do it flawlessly. That said, it is something they still can do but it takes more planning and time. For the boys, if they fail, no harm done and the scale of their project is small compared to what MOE needs to venture into. even as a pilot run, they need to do a RFI first. So it is not a fair comparison.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • C Offline
                  Chenonceau
                  last edited by

                  ksi:
                  Chenon, I have to disagree here that there is a difference. System implementation is one of my forte and when implemented in an organisation, it has more components than you can imagine unlike what these 2 kids have done.


                  Nobody will criticise the 2 kids if anything goes wrong as they started as a volunteer service but everyone will charge at MOE if it is implemented wrongly because everyone EXPECTS MOE to know-how and to do it flawlessly. That said, it is something they still can do but it takes more planning and time. For the boys, if they fail, no harm done and the scale of their project is small compared to what MOE needs to venture into. So it is not a fair comparison.
                  There may be a difference. It may be more challenging for MOE but it is not something beyond MOE's resources and ability. Of course it takes planning and time, but it is not impossible. No comparison is entirely fair. The point is that it is eminently doable.

                  I don't understand that we wanna mollycoddle MOE and indulge it in it's delusions of what it has done and is capable of. It sure doesn't mollycoddle our kids.

                  I don't think we should underestimate the scale of what the boys have done. They have a product. It is free. It is in demand. Facebook started in one university as a small scale something with USD2000...

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • corneyAmberC Offline
                    corneyAmber
                    last edited by

                    Chenonceau:
                    ksi:

                    Chenon, I have to disagree here that there is a difference. System implementation is one of my forte and when implemented in an organisation, it has more components than you can imagine unlike what these 2 kids have done.


                    Nobody will criticise the 2 kids if anything goes wrong as they started as a volunteer service but everyone will charge at MOE if it is implemented wrongly because everyone EXPECTS MOE to know-how and to do it flawlessly. That said, it is something they still can do but it takes more planning and time. For the boys, if they fail, no harm done and the scale of their project is small compared to what MOE needs to venture into. So it is not a fair comparison.

                    There may be a difference. It may be more challenging but it is not something beyond MOE's resources and ability. Of course it takes planning and time, but it is not impossible. No comparison is entirely fair. The point is that it is eminently doable.

                    That I agree it is doable...just not immediately. If the need is so strong and painful now, there has to be an interim solution first.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • C Offline
                      Chenonceau
                      last edited by

                      ksi:
                      Chenonceau:

                      [quote=\"ksi\"]Chenon, I have to disagree here that there is a difference. System implementation is one of my forte and when implemented in an organisation, it has more components than you can imagine unlike what these 2 kids have done.


                      Nobody will criticise the 2 kids if anything goes wrong as they started as a volunteer service but everyone will charge at MOE if it is implemented wrongly because everyone EXPECTS MOE to know-how and to do it flawlessly. That said, it is something they still can do but it takes more planning and time. For the boys, if they fail, no harm done and the scale of their project is small compared to what MOE needs to venture into. So it is not a fair comparison.

                      There may be a difference. It may be more challenging but it is not something beyond MOE's resources and ability. Of course it takes planning and time, but it is not impossible. No comparison is entirely fair. The point is that it is eminently doable.

                      That I agree it is doable...just not immediately. If the need is so strong and painful now, there has to be an interim solution first.[/quote]Yay! :rahrah: Then we agree. As long as we are talking about interim VS long-term. Actually, I was already quite sure that you had meant interim. I just wanted this point to be emphasized in this thread. Thanks for posting.

                      šŸ˜„

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • P Offline
                        Peggy Zee
                        last edited by

                        I believe that children should have a good foundation in math language and concepts in their preschool years. It is my mission to change how math is taught to our children between 3 and 12 (the specific of what math is, how children learn and how it should be taught.) Children often "under-perform" in maths because they are passive recipients of ready-made concepts. They are not guided to discover their own math understanding and acquire a personal "tool-kit" to deal with more complex problems. Children need to be given the opportunity to make math meaningful to themselves instead of learning by rote meaningless drills and activities. Peggy

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

                        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 šŸ’—

                        Register Login
                        • 1
                        • 2
                        • 49
                        • 50
                        • 51
                        • 52
                        • 53
                        • 52 / 53
                        • First post
                          Last post



                        Online Users
                        thebottomsupblogT
                        thebottomsupblog

                        Statistics

                        11

                        Online

                        210.6k

                        Users

                        34.2k

                        Topics

                        1.8m

                        Posts
                        Recent Topics
                        New to the KiasuParents forum? Tips and Tricks!
                        How do you maintain your relationship with your spouse?
                        Budgeting for tougher times ahead. What's yours?
                        SkillsFuture + anything related to upskilling/learning something new!
                        How much do you spend on the kids' tuition/enrichments?
                        DSA 2026
                        PSLE Discussions and Strategies

                          About Us Contact Us forum Terms of Service Privacy Policy