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Sunday, September 28, 2008
And she’s back.

I planned to wake up at 7 a.m. (Come on, that's pretty decent!) to finish revising for good ol' Phonetics and Phonology but my body simply refused to cooperate. It's 1 p.m. now and I'm STILL not doing any revision. Perhaps listing down the things I have to accomplish by today will jolt me into Productive Mode, so here goes:

To-do List for Sunday, 28 September 2008:
1. Finish remaining 3 chapters for Sound System of English
2. Re-do tutorials for the above
3. Do up 'Language and History' slides for Inter-cultural Communication project
4. Start on readings for Media Writing reflection

Oh dear, that does seem like alot now, doesn't it?

ANYWAY.

Loolooolooooooooo!

One bloody seventeen p.m.; I spaced out for a whole thirteen minutes, whoopdeedoo. The bulk of my recess week was spent on studying and projects, leaving precious little time for rest and play. My mum always has this moment nearing the end of the holidays when she will start lamenting, "If I had just one more day, I would be contented." This is probably familiar to most people. Although I feel pretty good about actually being quite productive in terms of schoolwork, I still wish there was more time to go out, shop, exercise and read the pile of wonderful books that remain untouched in the corner of my shelf. Books that aren't textbooks or bound pages of readings, thank you very much. There's 'Twilight' by Stephenie Meyer and 'The Shadow of the Wind' by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, borrowed from my cousin Zhuang and Melv respectively, as well as 'Specimen Days' by Michael Cunningham, bought from Cheers at the petrol station (of all places). There's also what's left of 'The English Patient', which I unceremoniously abandoned for 'The Kite Runner'—great read alert! I can't start on them because I KNOW I'll just keep ploughing on and on till I reach the end of the book while neglecting other more pressing things in my life. Bad. Bad, bad Stevie. Baaaaaaaaaad. That's probably the only line I can remember best from Semester 1's 'The Secret Agent'! Haha.


The Student Exchange Programme (SEP) list is out, and I've narrowed down my choices to the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands; both have pretty good courses that are relevant to both my majors and I'm really looking forward to doing the tourist thing with my friends instead of my family, for the very first time—I know, I know. My parents are strict like that. L The Beijing trip in primary 6 does not count as there were so many teachers mothering us anyway. Melv and Jem already have plans to tour certain parts of Europe after our semester in either one of those places, but I'm not too sure about that. Besides the fact that my parents will probably object, there's also the nagging issue about money. I guess I'll have to find work during the holidays to settle at least part of that problem and like Melv said, I have one whole year to convince my parents that I can take care of myself abroad. I really hope I don't have to go back to do relief teaching again. It's not that I hated the job to the core (Candice, do you beg to differ? Hehe.) and it's not that it was an utter waste of time—okay, only on SOME days—but as someone whose chances of entering the teaching profession are about 5 percent, I would like to try out other things that'll be more relevant to what I want to do next time.


Speaking of relief teaching, I was reading my ex-colleague's blog where she shares her experiences and thoughts about being a teacher. She mentioned something about striving to be 'consistent in her respect for (her) students', which I've found to be extremely difficult. I mean, I've never scolded any student without explaining to him or her why I did that, 'cos I think it's really important to make it clear that I'm not picking on them for no apparent reason; I regard them with the respect they deserve as teenagers and I've always tried my very best to make sure I don't embarrass or humiliate them in front of their peers. It's evident that a little respect goes a long way, but sometimes enough is enough. There have been occasions when I felt taken advantage of, and it's hard to not falter in your resolve to keep seeing the good in them when whatever they've done tells you that they don't deserve it.


"Being a teacher is not easy." I'm saying this and feeling it with all my heart. The shortage of teachers in Singapore has resulted in the introduction of more set of perks, bonuses and flexible schemes like Contract Teaching to draw more people to the profession. "Profession" makes it sound like any Tom, Dick or Harry can be a teacher with adequate training. It is therefore unsurprising that the teaching profession has become diluted with (i) people who turn to teaching as a last resort 'cos they couldn't find other jobs, (ii) people who had no choice but to go to NIE due to poor A-level results and really wanted a university degree that's not from a private U and (iii) people who just see teaching as a job that will bring in the bacon. If this is the case, how is it possible for jadedness to not set in? Why do you think there are so many teachers who couldn't care less? I'm not trying to mock, insult or take the moral high-ground here, just stating some observed facts. To expect somebody who has the perfect balance of ability (i.e. has been trained), heart and soul is probably idealism at work, but I have tremendous admiration for those who try and keep on trying. That's why I think Allyson (said colleague) is amazing. We could do with more teachers like her.




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Wednesday, August 22, 2007
nostalgia
I've finally finished the whole tin of cookies Karen and Miss Chee (my mentors) gave to me on my last day at work. The cookies were from Famous Amos, came in assorted flavours and were absolutely yummilicious. Here's a picture of the fancy-looking tin: I'm halfway through my second week of university. The workload has been pretty manageable so far, owing to the fact that tutorials don't start until next week. Timetable matters have been settled after rounds of online bidding and balloting via the dreaded CORS and I managed to get all the modules and most of the tutorial slots I wanted, resulting in a very lovely 4-day week and extended weekend (Friday, Saturday, Sunday)! My only gripe is that I only have one tutorial on Wednesday, so technically, I will spend 1 and a half hours travelling to NUS for just one hour of class. Ah well. I guess I'll make Wednesday my Library Day and use it to print or photocopy readings.

Last night, I chatted with Poh Ling, my DHS senior cum ex-colleague. Poh Ling is a teacher-to-be at the National Institute of Education (NIE), training to mould and inspire the young minds of Singapore's future generations. I sound just like some National Education brochure! Hurhur. Anyway, Poh Ling was telling me how much more fun it is to be studying in school instead of teaching, 'cos can sleep in lectures' and 'wear shorts or jeans everyday!' What she implied was probably the relief of being out of the scutinising range of the "higher-ups" - the school we were at was especially particular about attire and didn't even allow us to wear sleeveless tops. I remember how Cheryl was totally goofing off during our Seoul Garden lunch buffet, how we were quite appalled at the change in the behaviour of our usually demure and quiet Miss Ho. Cheryl responded to our looks of astonishment with 'this is the real me!' - which brings me back to the scrutiny thing...naturally, teachers (whether relief, trainee or full-time) are expected to observe their conduct and set positive examples for students when they're in school. Of course I don't mean having to keep a stiff upper lip all the time while pretending to be someone totally different - that would be overdoing it! Let's just say that sometimes, it felt like an Orwellian 'Big Brother is watching' type of situation...I don't think it's appropriate to say anymore because students may be reading this blog. If you've read 1984 by George Orwell, you will definitely understand what I mean. For the ex Lit Loonies, think of 'under his Eye' ala The Handmaid's Tale.

Despite that, I still miss relief teaching, my students, my ex-colleagues. I had great mentors -Ms Chee was extremely patient with me, especially when I took such a long time to finish marking the test papers she assigned to me and Karen, with her hip dressing and random snippets of 'practical advice' ("when you get to uni, open your eyes bigger while you look for a boyfriend!"; once, she actually told Emen to get a girlfriend and stop having random flings. o_O) was like an elder sister to me when we weren't discussing teaching strategies for Charlotte's Web and the finer points of summary writing. I love our little Staffroom 2 with the cosy little desk I shared with Tuan and Sonia, plus the wonderful people whose larger-than-life personalities provided lots of entertainment and relief from noisy little morons and piles of accumulated marking. Last but not least, my 'comrades' aka the NIE trainees on practicuum or teaching experience, who still welcomed me with cheerful smiles every morning, even though I always brought them Post-its bearing additional class slots, courtesy of the atas people.

Ah yes, the students. I almost forgot. Enigmas, these people are.

I'm only done with two chapters of 'The Secret Agent'. Conrad's writing style is just not my cup of tea (or TEH-GAO). I space out everytime my brain gives up on it's attempt to navigate through the masses of convoluted-sounding sentences. For example: '...the whole social order favourable to their hygienic idleness had to be protected against the shallow enviousness of unhygienic labour.' Harrison and I did manage to figure that out eventually, but it was nevertheless a mental challenge. Bah. Imagine doing that for at least ten sentences on every page, and you'll understand why I'm such a sloth.

Rawrrrrrrrrrrrr. Okay! Must. Start. On. Conrad.
ARGH.

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Friday, August 10, 2007
Photos photos!
LYSS trainees and one Sai Kang Warrior minus Gui Li.

Clockwise from bottom left: Cheryl, Poh Ling, Lynette, Han Chien, Zakiah, Me (SKW), Emen

Miss Ong says, "Oei! How come I'm not in the picture!"
You went for tuition whaaaaat...

Lynette on a photo-taking spree....starting with herself.
Zakiah is so sweet and demure! :-)
Lynette says the orange are dry...
Mr Low shares an intellectual thought....
while Miss Neo gives her best spasticated expression.


Satisfied with her own self-taken portrait, Lynette proceeds to take pictures of other people. Han Chien laughs at the people being photographed laughing with food in their mouths.
Gui Li says, "Eh Lynette! That piece is mine! Don't you dare touch it!"
Zakiah and Gui Li.
I don't know what Gui Li is trying to do with the lump of food in her mouth...


Cheryl and Poh Ling. They're my Dunman High Seniors!
All together now...*sings* "It's a small world after all..."
Clockwise from left: Me, Emen, Cheryl, Han Chien.
Cheryl: I shall give my best -squeeeee- face!!!
Han Chien: Buay tahan la, act cute!

English Lang./Lit people: Me and Emen (fellow TJCians!)
It so happened that we were talking about TJ Mass Dances, and Emen actually let slip that his batch was the one responsible for the monstrousity that is 'Larger Than Life'. Hurhurhur.

Emen sure is enjoying his food - the expression says it all. OooomphmmmmmMmMmmmm.
Zakiah, Gui Li and Me.

That's my lettuce cooking!








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Thursday, June 28, 2007
workworkwork
The June holidays have ended and it's back to school all primary and secondary school students. For me, that means more crappy assignments to mark, more noisy little buggers and definitely more childish antics that either entertain me or piss me off. Campus Superstar Kid is starting to really, really annoy me with his newly-acquired self-importance, which appears to have followed his newly-acquired fame - I use 'fame' in the broadest sense of the word. Today, I found out that some of my sec 2 kids are really anti-him! I think he'd better watch his smarty pants attitude before some sec 2 Ah Beng whoops his sorry little under-developed ass.

I guess what really irks me is how he and his friends cluster together everytime I go into class, and just talk, sing and make alot of noise instead of doing the worksheets I give out. That cute koala bear thing is getting oldddd. :( Yesterday he took out his phone in class and I told him to keep it. He actually replied in a super indignant matter-of-fact tone (as if I was the one being an unreasonable nuisance), "I sending sms to the Mediacorp people la!" What the hell. Apparently, this kind of behaviour occurs during other teachers' classes as well, so I think it won't be long before someone caves and threatens to screw him his chances of appearing on TV.

Another kid that has succeeded in making me want to wring his neck is this idiot who kept shouting, "MISS ONG, WO AI NI!!! (Miss Ong, I love you!)" whenever I walked past last term. This term, his vocabulary has expanded to, "MISS ONG, JIA GEI WO! WO YAO NI DE AI! (Literally: Miss Ong, marry me! I want your love!)" Every. Single. Freaking. Time. I was like, wtffffffff. Eventually I was so mad, I scolded him in a complex series of Chinese phrases, which he of course did not understand. Muahahahahahaha!

Candice, Anis, Joylynn and Khairul (all the relief teachers present last term) have left, so it's just me and this new girl named Anne. It's been fun chatting with her during breaks 'cos she's just so frank and unpretentious and we can bitch and bitch about students like nobody's business. :) New batch of NIE teachers have arrived, so our workload isn't so heavy. Speaking of new teachers, a lighter workload isn't just the only good thing that has happened. HEHEHEHEHE...

I wanna shee eurrr sshy, shhweet shhweet schhmile and kyuutey kyuutey kyuuute dhimplesss!

If you still don't get the above sentence despite having read it numerous times - assuming that you haven't died of frustration from the unnecessary letter 'h's - it's in Twit Language (Google 'Twitionary'), introduced to me by Anne. Fret not, I've not morphed into an airhead (although I know some people are begging to differ) I'm just mocking the silly goons who actually type like, write like this, talk like this. One word: EWW.

But he does indeed have such a nice smile. ;-)

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Friday, May 04, 2007
ahh.
I found out the name of the cute little boy who asked, 'Is this the last time I'm seeing you?' His name is Faris. Awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww.... Everytime I see that kid, I feel like pinching his cheeks. :-)

Laaadeedaadeedaaa Randomness is my middle name.

Ta.

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Thursday, May 03, 2007
This was taken somewhere towards the end of November 2006, during a family vacation to Italy. It was before my tour group boarded a ferry that would take us to Isola Bella, which means 'beautiful island'. The crisp, fresh air...the smooth caress of the ocean breeze against my cheek, playfully teasing my scarf...and best of all, the fabulous scenery. Truly a feast for the senses and sweet, sweet (temporary) relief from the world's weariness. I miss the feeling of being on vacation! Currently, there are plans to go to Japan at the end of June, but details are still fuzzy at the moment. Apparently, Mum's siblings are treating us to an all-expense paid holiday. Sadly, my Dad won't be able to go because he'll be working in Doha...sighh.

Anyway, it's been a boring Thursday. No work for the time being, 'cos the teacher whose duties I had been taking over has returned to work. I'm rather disappointed at the fact that I won't be seeing some of my students for lessons anymore, but it also feels good to be able to unload the massive burden I've been carrying around for slightly more than two weeks. I'm pretty worried for the kids though...they hate their current teacher (fyi, she IS a total cow. Really self-centered and rude. Ugh.) and that's not a good thing 'cos they don't hand in the work she assigns on purpose, which will have serious repercussions during their exams.

Loads of classroom drama for the past couple of weeks, and a fight in a sec 3 Normal Tech class closed my latest assignment in a stunning crescendo. Basically, some scrawny, pimply Ah-Beng wannabe pissed me off, then proceeded to irritate his classmate who then made it his mission to beat the crap outta that guy. To tell you the truth, I was secretly rooting for the classmate and so was the rest of the class; Ah-Beng wannabe likes to act tough and pisses people off on a daily basis. The queue of people waiting for a chance to give him a tight slap stretches from Loyang to Jurong, and there's probably an online waiting list as well.

Tuesday: public holiday. Met up with Tuan, who introduced me to this quaint little Turkish deli at Far East, called Anatolia. Good food, better conversation.Talked about lots of random things, sad stuff and happy stuff...relationships, family, love, sex, more sex. HAHA horny twit!!! Fantastic company made up for the less-than-fantastic coffee at Big O, so there was no need to go to Starbucks. ;-) Right, Tuan? RIGHT?

Tralalalala. Feel like going to sleep soon.

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Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Attack of the Monkey Boys - the Sequel
Something that made me smile today:

Little sec 1 boys ambushing me after school today as I waited for the Family Taxi to pick me up after work. 3 of them wriggled onto the bench next to me, and we sat like this in the middle of the foyer:


That's how small they are! One of them actually turned to me and said, "Is this the last time I'm seeing you?" with this really serious expression on his face, and I just COULDN'T bring myself to laugh. I tried telling them to go home and play computer games but they actually wanted to wait with me...so sweet huh. Then they started scolding the sec 3s who walked past and waved at me, and I decided to wait for Mum outside the school instead.


Anyway, it was a pretty exhausting day for me. Classes with the sec 3s were okay, with minimal disruptions. However,as usual the sec 1s were full of surprises. Example of conversation that made me do a double-take:

chubby sec 1 boy: Teacher, u pretty la.
Me: get to class.
chubby sec 1 boy: KISS KISS?

And he actually ANGLES HIS CHEEK towards me. -insert WTH-esque expression of your choice-

It was Attack of the Monkey Boys -the Sequel for the last 3 periods (THREE PERIODS OF MATHS. Poor things.). I chased 4 naughty boys up and down the stairs while my senior co-teacher shepherded the rest of the class to the foyer in a desperate attempt to keep them from becoming restless. Being the relief teacher, such things are obviously left to me. So anyway, I couldn't catch them in the end, and the buggers were caught by their discipline master. No prizes for guessing what happens next. I was with my co-teacher when she spoke to one of the HODs (the PE-CCA guy)and let me tell you, you do not want to piss these people off. The way the staff at _______ secondary dish out punishment/detention with the swiftness and stealth of trained military personnel is scary.

Co-teacher: We have been onto these 4 students for a long time. They are always causing trouble in class.
PE HOD guy: Yes, I already spoke to Mr N (the DM). These 4, we're dealing with them on another level. We will keep building up records of all their offenses until we can CANE them.

And at that precise moment he said that, all the bunny rabbits died, locusts blocked out the sun and I felt really, really, sorry for those 4.

Yeowch.

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Monday, April 09, 2007
I'm a relief teacher! ( part 2)
(continued fromn previous post)

My next 2 classes (another sec one history class and a sec three CH class) were relatively well-behaved and respectful, so I was glad to take a breather after the exhausting first four periods. The last lesson of the day was Character Development with a sec 3 Normal Tech class, and I had zero lesson materials to fall back on. Nevertheless I went into class five minutes earlier and ended up waiting for another ten minutes before the first few students staggered in lazily. Upon seeing that I was a RT, alot of them stood up, 'Cher, need to go toilet.'. With their bags? Get real. Honestly, do they think that RTs are morons or what...so I happily made them leave their bags in class and deployed them to the loo one by one. HAH. 100 points to Pearlyn for keeping her guard up!

I gave them 2 options: (A) We talk about perseverance and exam preparation (as recommended by Ms Z) or (B) They do their own work quietly. No prizes for guessing which one they picked...but it was indeed a culture shock for me when I realised that during the 25-minute lesson, not a single student took out any work or did any revision; even the quietest girls merely sat in their groups and gabbed away! In DHS students would do their work without the teacher asking, and even when they were not supposed to be doing work some people would actually do it under their desks. Oh well, it's not a very fair comparison anyway. The class was fine, apart from a crew of cheeky boys who asked for my msn/friendster/handphone number/age, and some of them actually asked if I wanted to go steady. HAHAHAHAHA! I just looked at them with my most exasperated-don't-even-think-about-it-piss-off-do-your-work expression and said, 'I'm older than you, everything else is none of your business.' It pretty much took care of everything, but still didn't stop these particular 2 boys from repeatedly asking for a toilet pass to be excused to the gents. Those were the 2 boys who started the whole, 'eh cher u how old ah, eh cher u got boyfriend? cher I'm 18' crap which made the others start too. So I let them go the first time and they took 10 minutes to come back. And when I asked them for the past, Burly Dude #1 goes, "oh shit! Left in the toilet! CHer we must go and get it back!" This guy made Keanu Reeves' acting look Oscar-worthy. By the time the dymanic duo returned 5 minutes later I was ready to bare my fangs at them and claw their eyes out, after stapling their mouths shut without anaesthetic. Slowly.

THe bell rang at 1.30 pm and released them all from their misery. I was happily packing my bags when Burly Dudes corner me at the teachers' desk.

"CHer, so how old are you. I'm 18. -crooked grin-"
WTF.
Me: Older than you la! Eh, class has ended! Go and have fun!
"19? 20? 21?"
Me: -grabbing my bags and heading out as fast as my 2-inch wedges could carry me- Aiya! Enjoy your lunch!

And that was pretty much everything that happened on Thursday. The students at _________ secondary are a misunderstood bunch..in fact, the atmosphere there is so much more friendly than schools like CCHSM and DHS. Especially DHS. Everywhere I go I get smiles and greetings from students..some of them whose classes I didn't go to. I observed them as I was sitting outside the HOD room waiting for students to hand in their assignments...the genuine camaraderie and friendship between them was evident, and the sincerity with which they treated each other was a far cry from the guardedness that was a characteristic of many of my DHS classmates. Monkey Boys or not, I'm still looking forward to going back this week. I just wish my cough would recover soon.

croaaaaaak.

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