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    All About GEP

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved GEP
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    • V Offline
      vlim
      last edited by

      2ppaamm:
      vlim:

      wa..way2go..reading your post makes my heart beat stop for 3 mins... šŸ˜“ šŸ˜“ šŸ˜“ šŸ˜“ .. šŸ˜‰


      hehe... I got resuscitated now. Need help at your end? šŸ˜„

      heheeee...no thanks 2ppaamm... :lol: :lol: :lol:

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • W Offline
        Way2GO
        last edited by

        phankao:
        Way2GO:


        There's something in that pledge about 'regardless of race', u know?
        Your wife is a local born Malay. The Malays are accorded special privileges, in particular free education, under the Singapore constitution. You must know this. Are u tapping into this to milk the system?

        No longer right? I thot the scheme expired after the 1980s or early 1990s...

        It's in the constitution.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • W Offline
          Way2GO
          last edited by

          Wasilaupei:
          No worry people. the student in HELP Uni will teach his son well in many social ill skill. :lol:


          he will learn how the smell of super glue is like and what cocaine taste like. :rotflmao:
          Let's not go that route.
          Ainan is the end game, not Mr. Cawley.
          It's a real pity if he is misguided n go to waste
          like some other progidies b4 him.

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          • 2 Offline
            2ppaamm
            last edited by

            Way2GO:
            Wasilaupei:

            No worry people. the student in HELP Uni will teach his son well in many social ill skill. :lol:


            he will learn how the smell of super glue is like and what cocaine taste like. :rotflmao:

            Let's not go that route.
            Ainan is the end game, not Mr. Cawley.
            It's a real pity if he is misguided n go to waste
            like some other progidies b4 him.

            Agree. He is definitely a talent that can be groomed to do great things for human kind. I hope Ainan will be greater than just being a child prodigy. Child prodigies don't go far. But a truly great scientist with a heart will.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • W Offline
              Way2GO
              last edited by

              EN:
              I thought the child's race follows the father? Friends of mix marriages still need to pay full amount of school fees. It is only this year that there is a change. Open to parents to decide what to state the child race is.

              Children with one expat parent hv the best of both worlds.
              They hv a choice to go international or get into the local schools
              if one of the parents is at least a PR.
              Mrs Cawley is a Singaporean by birth.
              Ainan was in Bukit Timah Primary.
              PRs and SCs all pay token sums in local primary schools.
              How much is tat? Very minimal sum.
              Recently, the gahmen announced that the PRs 'd hv to pay more
              to differentiate the PRs fr the SCs. Also a token gesture.
              And what's the diff? For many, still negligible.

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              • S Offline
                sleepy
                last edited by

                Just side track a little.

                Not all prodigies end up failure in life. There are in fact many more who are successful šŸ˜‰


                An extract from Hoagies http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/grade_skipped.htm


                So many times, only the negative examples of grade acceleration are remembered. For those who prefer a more positive outlook, here's a list of individuals who skipped one or more grades, and are successful in their fields... from professionals athletes to scientists to presidents to actors and actresses to Nobel Prize winners, and many, many more. There are far more positive examples than negative ones!
                But there is no discernable pattern... grade skips occur in the U.S. and elsewhere, in early and late grades, in girls and boys. The only common factor is that all these individuals are both grade skipped and successful!

                Neil Armstrong, astronaut, first man to walk on the Moon
                Skipped mid-year from second to third grade. As as a 2nd grader, he was reading at a 5th grade level, so they moved him to third!

                Warren Buffett, brilliant investor, world's first or second richest man, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
                Skipped once and graduated at 17.

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                • 2 Offline
                  2ppaamm
                  last edited by

                  sleepy:
                  Just side track a little.

                  Not all prodigies end up failure in life. There are in fact many more who are successful šŸ˜‰


                  An extract from Hoagies http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/grade_skipped.htm


                  So many times, only the negative examples of grade acceleration are remembered. For those who prefer a more positive outlook, here's a list of individuals who skipped one or more grades, and are successful in their fields... from professionals athletes to scientists to presidents to actors and actresses to Nobel Prize winners, and many, many more. There are far more positive examples than negative ones!
                  But there is no discernable pattern... grade skips occur in the U.S. and elsewhere, in early and late grades, in girls and boys. The only common factor is that all these individuals are both grade skipped and successful!

                  Neil Armstrong, astronaut, first man to walk on the Moon
                  Skipped mid-year from second to third grade. As as a 2nd grader, he was reading at a 5th grade level, so they moved him to third!

                  Warren Buffett, brilliant investor, world's first or second richest man, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
                  Skipped once and graduated at 17.
                  Agree. Of course not all prodigies end up in failure. But not all grade skippers are prodigies either. Prodigies have a very different definition, as clearly explained by Mr Cawley in his blog.

                  Even Mozart struggled after he is no longer considered a prodigy. That's why I say child prodigy don't go very far. Once they are >10 years old, no longer considered a prodigy. They then have to work towards being a great musician/scientist/mathematician etc. That, is the test, but most prodigies don't go beyond being a prodigy.

                  Explains? :?

                  So, by some definition, Ainan was but is no longer a child prodigy. Now, where does he go from here as far as his father's branding goes?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • S Offline
                    sleepy
                    last edited by

                    2ppaamm:
                    Agree. Of course not all prodigies end up in failure. But not all grade skippers are prodigies either.

                    Oh, does that mean they are just moderately gifted enough to skip grades :!:
                    2ppaamm:
                    Even Mozart struggled after he is no longer considered a prodigy. That's why I say child prodigy don't go very far. Once they are >10 years old, no longer considered a prodigy. They then have to work towards being a great musician/scientist/mathematician etc.
                    My understanding of giftedness:
                    Being gifted doesn't mean the child knows everything. It simply means he or she learns at a faster speed. So it still involves some effort

                    So for prodigy, no need to learn at all ?? Can play back a piece if he or she heard it once :!:
                    Did I get the differentiation right :?
                    2ppaamm:
                    That, is the test, but most prodigies don't go beyond being a prodigy.
                    Explains? :?
                    Do I seem like I get it? If not, please enlighten me further šŸ˜‰
                    This is an interesting topic šŸ˜„

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                    • 2 Offline
                      2ppaamm
                      last edited by

                      sleepy:

                      So for prodigy, no need to learn at all ?? Can play back a piece if he or she heard it once :!:
                      Yesterday my daughter told me that she has a classmate who could do just that. She never had a day of lesson, and she can replicate everything my daughter played with both hands! And it was a Mozart Sonata?!!! :!:

                      The only other person I know who could do that is Mozart. Who composed this same Sonata (16 pages long) in one seating in front of the audience. K309.

                      Maybe Singapore also got such geniuses, or is it my daughter who is exaggerating? :idea:

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • N Offline
                        ngbrdad
                        last edited by

                        Btw what the boy achieved was a pass grade in O level chemistry and subsequely O level physics and A level chemistry right ?

                        No exact grade wa revealed right ?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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