Category: Singapuraku

  • Teach, Don’t Demand, Success

    Teach, Don’t Demand, Success

    I was walking to my Primary 1 class when a pupil told me that a boy was crying.

    I found out the boy had scored 98 out of 100 marks for his Chinese test, which was a fantastic score that he should have been proud of.

    But no, he was afraid to go home as his mother would cane him for not achieving a perfect score. My heart went out to him.

    I saw another boy, a Primary 4 pupil, crying quietly and blaming himself for his errors after scoring 83 marks for mathematics. He, too, was afraid to return home.

    A year later when I left the school, he made a photo album as my farewell gift.

    In it was a note that read: “Dear Mrs Yeo, do you remember the day that you consoled me for getting low marks? I would like to thank you for telling me to be strong, and that everybody makes mistakes.”

    He was able to overcome the setback because a figure of authority showed him that it was all right to fall down, that he will continue to do so and that he can benefit from it.

    Our children constantly look up to us for approval and guidance.

    Let’s remember the huge impact these have on them. When they feel loved and supported after they tumble, they will be able to stand up, learn to avoid the pothole that made them trip and emerge better and stronger.

    These incidents in my career as a teacher and principal altered my expectations of my own children’s academic achievements.

    I decided that I certainly did not want to create pressure and foster performance anxiety in my children. Just achieve your personal best, I told them.

    Parental expectations can have a strong and positive effect on a child’s academic success.

    In a study by the Harvard Family Research Project, Professor William H. Jeynes of California State University in the United States found that parental expectations affected children’s academic outcomes more than other types of parental involvement, including attendance of school events and the setting of clear rules.

    Clear expectations, paired with loving and supportive attitudes, can help children to learn manners, social skills, study skills, and other tools that they will need to succeed in school and in society.

    To establish healthy academic and behavioural expectations, parents should be aware of their children’s unique needs, skills, strengths, and maturity levels.

    Avoid comparing them with others, as every child develops at a different rate.

    But this does not mean parents should set their sights too low. Low expectations can make it difficult for children to realise and achieve their full potential.

    It is better to create small, manageable goals to ensure that children progress in their learning, while not feeling daunted.

    I helped a Primary 1 pupil who was scoring zero out of 10 marks in her spelling tests, by encouraging her to learn just one word instead of 10 per test. She tried and managed to spell the word correctly.

    I then increased the number of words to two, and then to three. Over time, she finally achieved a perfect score of 10 marks. She was not just learning how to spell words; she learnt that she could do it.

    Moreover, she learnt to break things down into bite sizes when the task became too daunting.

    This goes far beyond doing well in school. When she faces this type of situation at work or life, this skill will continue to serve her well. Unrealistically high expectations can set a child up for failure, anxiety, discouragement and low self-esteem when he cannot live up to his parents’ goals. This can also lead to insubordinate behaviour.

    A boy enrolled in a “branded” school was struggling to cope. I spoke to his parents about his challenges and frustration and suggested that they place him in an environment that nurtured his strengths. They were indignant at my recommendation and insisted that their son was just not trying hard enough.

    The poor boy was unable to keep up with the academic requirements in school. He felt that he would never be able to meet his parents’ expectations and became very angry.

    He thought that since he would never be good enough, he might as well be really bad.

    He hung out with bad company and became very rude to his parents, swearing at them whenever he interacted with them.

    Fortunately, his parents realised that there are many paths to success and stopped insisting that he pursue this through academic means.

    He eventually found his calling in cooking and is now at the helm of two successful cafes.

    His mum and dad are very proud of his achievement and they now get along very well.

    Establishing healthy expectations and communicating them to children are important keys to fostering success.

     

    Jenny Yeo was a principal for 18 years in Kheng Cheng School, Radin Mas Primary School and South View Primary School.She is a lead associate focusing on partnerships and engagement in the engagement and research division of the Ministry of Education.

     

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

     

     

  • Cemetery Worker Gets 15 Years Jail And 24 Strokes Of The Cane For Raping Homeless 12 Year Old Girl

    Cemetery Worker Gets 15 Years Jail And 24 Strokes Of The Cane For Raping Homeless 12 Year Old Girl

    A cemetery labourer who raped a homeless 12-year-old girl staying at the burial ground with her family was sentenced to 15 years’ jail and the maximum 24 strokes of the cane yesterday.

    Roslan Jaafar, 42, had pleaded guilty in April to two counts of statutory rape and one count of sexual assault of a minor.

    Yesterday, his lawyer, Mr Subir Singh Grewal, appointed under the Criminal Legal Aid Scheme, asked for a jail term of 10 years.

    He noted that Roslan had not intentionally sought the girl for sex and believed she was sexually experienced when in fact she was not.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Quek Jing Feng, however, argued for a deterrent sentence of 10 to 15 years, pointing to the 26-year age gap between Roslan and the girl.

    Two other counts of sexual assault of a minor and sexual exploitation of a child were taken into consideration during sentencing.

    Roslan has a son and three daughters from a marriage which ended in divorce in 2006. He has lost contact with his ex-wife and daughters and looks after his son.

    In March 2012, his son, who was then eight, started playing with the victim and her younger sister at the cemetery while Roslan was working. At the time, the girl’s family had no fixed abode and lived temporarily in a tent at the burial site.

    After introducing himself to the girls’ mother, he visited the family regularly and grew close to them.

    In May, Roslan began to take her out regularly to run errands, usually for more than two hours each time.

    He would take her on his motorcycle to a quiet spot nearby at night.

    He had sex with her on a bench on two occasions and sexually violated her on three other occasions .

    He told the girl not to tell her mother about it.

    Although the girl consented to having sex with him, by law, sex with a girl under 14, with or without her consent, is considered rape.

    On June 1 that year, the girl’s maternal uncle was visiting the family when Roslan took her out.

    When they did not return after more than two hours, the uncle became worried.

    He searched for Roslan’s number on the girl’s phone and found text messages from him.

    After the girl returned, the uncle confronted her with the messages. She broke down and told him what had happened.

    A police report was made at the Nanyang Neighbourhood Police Centre and Roslan was arrested last year.

    The girl’s family is no longer staying at the cemetery.

    The maximum jail term on each charge of rape and sexual assault is 20 years.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Airforce Engineer Jailed 8 Months For Molesting Two Teenage Girls

    Airforce Engineer Jailed 8 Months For Molesting Two Teenage Girls

    An airforce engineer who molested two teenage girls in a bus and in a Housing Board lift was jailed for eight months on Tuesday.

    Andrew Teng Ye Feng, 26, had admitted to brushing against a 13-year-old’s buttocks inside a lift in Woodlands on Sept 14 last year, and touching an 18-year-old’s breast on a double-decker bus on Sept 8.

    A court heard that Teng saw the 13-year-old student at a bus stop that day and decided to follow her.

    He went into the lift as the victim and two women.

    After the two women got out, he stood behind the victim and committed the offence.

    The victim also saw him trying to pull down his pants from the reflection in the glass door of the lift.

    Feeling uncomfortable, she moved towards the door of the lift, and frantically pressed the lift buttons to open the lift door.

    She exited on the 12th floor and ran to her aunt’s house. She then related the incident to her mother over the phone. The mother made a police report.

    On Sept 4, Teng and the 18-year-old student boarded SBS Transit Service No 143 at Jurong East Bus Interchange.

    She went to the upper deck and sat at the window seat at the second last row while he sat behind her.

    When the bus was travelling along West Coast Road that evening, she felt someone touching her breast, but did not pay much attention. She thought her bag had bumped into her left breast.

    Teng did it again as she had not reacted to his touch the first time. She immediately turned around and saw his hand resting on the window ledge .

    Outraged, she said to him: “Excuse me?”

    Teng quickly moved his hand away.

    Investigation showed on both occasions when he touched her, Teng had used his bag to shield his hand from the closed-circuit television camera overhead.

    His lawyer, Mr Lee Ah Fong, said Teng has been suspended from work since October last year . Mr Lee said Teng committed the offences out of “mischief”, could not understand his own bizarre actions, and had sought psychiatric and psychotherapy treatment.

    The maximum punishment for molestation is two years’ jail, fine and caning. For outraging the modesty of a girl under 14, Teng could have been jailed for up to five years, fined, caned or given a combination of these penalties.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • PPP’s Goh Meng Seng Tries Unsucessfully To Diffuse 3-Cornered Fight In Potong Pasir SMC

    PPP’s Goh Meng Seng Tries Unsucessfully To Diffuse 3-Cornered Fight In Potong Pasir SMC

    SINGAPORE: People’s Power Party (PPP) secretary-general Goh Meng Seng has tried to persuade independent opposition candidate Tan Lam Siong to join the PPP to contest Chua Chu Kang Group Representation Constituency (GRC) instead of standing as an independent in Potong Pasir.

    Mr Goh told Channel NewsAsia his offer was a “last-ditch effort” to avoid a three-cornered fight in the Potong Pasir single seat.

    He said: “I have indeed met up with Mr Tan Lam Siong yesterday night to make the last-ditch effort to defuse the potential bomb of a three-cornered fight at Potong Pasir. I have urged Mr Tan to join my team at CCK but unfortunately I have failed to convince him to come over.”

    “Although there is seriously very little time left, we still hope Mr Tan could reconsider our proposal. Nevertheless, if Mr Tan so decides to continue his campaign at Potong Pasir, we can only hope the best candidate wins,” he added.

    Mr Goh also posted a note on Facebook alluding to his efforts. “I shall now leave it to nature to take its course. What will be will be,” he wrote.

    Mr Tan confirmed that he had met Mr Goh on Monday night but had rejected his offer. Rebutting online reports alleging that he was planning to join the PPP, he added: “I think people are just speculating because someone saw me having dinner with Mr Goh Meng Seng. But it’s not true, I’m still actively walking in Potong Paris SMC and I will definitely follow up my plans to contest as an independent candidate for Potong Pasir SMC.”

    Incumbent People’s Action Party MP Sitoh Yih Pin will defend his seat. Singapore People’s Party (SPP) chairman Lina Chiam has announced that she will contest the single seat – held previously by her husband Chiam See Tong for over 27 years – as she did in the 2011 General Election.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • State Of Play With A Week To Nomination Day

    State Of Play With A Week To Nomination Day

    The People’s Action Party (PAP) has been unveiling its candidates over the past two weeks. So far, 68 candidates have been introduced, including 15 new faces.

    In a break from tradition, the party has also identified where they will be contesting, in a bid to allow voters to get to know them and assess them better.

    The upcoming General Election, to be held on Sep 11, will see all 89 seats in 29 constituencies being contested, with the fight set to be between the PAP and nine opposition parties. For the first time since the country’s independence in 1965, all eligible citizens – numbering about 2.46 million – will be able to vote.

    The incumbent PAP still has to unveil candidates in four out of the total 16 Group Representation Constituencies (GRCs) and two of the 13 Single-Member Constituencies (SMCs).

    The focus is likely to be on the constituencies where the PAP is expected to face the Workers’ Party. These are the Aljunied, Marine Parade and East Coast GRCs, and Fengshan SMC.

    Besides taking the unprecedented step of announcing where candidate will run, instead of keeping its cards closer to its chest, the PAP has also introduced them in more informal settings, instead of at the party’s headquarters as was the case in the past. These include a coffee shop at Toa Payoh where the party introduced its line-up for Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC.

    PAP organising secretary Dr Ng Eng Hen, who is also Defence Minister, said that such locations underline the party’s message that this election is about voting in MPs who can care for residents.

    Observers have said that the profiles of the PAP candidates are also more diverse this time. They comprise not only former senior civil servants and an army general, but also others like former media personality Darryl David, who is currently working as a deputy director at the School of Design in Temasek Polytechnic.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is also the PAP’s secretary-general, recently said in his National Day Rally speech that leadership renewal is important for Singapore. He said that theme is central to the coming elections, as those voted in will form the core leadership for the next decades.

    The party has also unveiled a series of five-year masterplans to improve the various constituencies they are in charge of. The plans include ramping up infrastructure to cater to residents – both young and old – as well as providing more amenities such as polyclinics and hawker centres.

    PAP has also emphasised that the upcoming election is about choosing the party that will care for residents, and this means ensuring that both the estates and the town councils are properly managed.

    A total of nine Opposition parties have indicated they will contest the upcoming General Election in September – an increase of three compared to the last election in 2011.

    The Workers’ Party has said it intends to contest the most number of seats of all opposition parties. They are eyeing 28 in total, in five GRCs and five single seats.

    The parties have also indicated that they intend to campaign on issues such as the influx of foreigners, the cost of living and the need for checks and balances in Parliament.

    Ahead of this year’s election, Opposition leaders have highlighted the influx of foreigners as a key concern for Singaporeans.

    At a recent political forum, some pointed out that the inflows of foreign labour in the past few years have put a strain on existing infrastructure, such as housing and transport. There have also been calls by the Opposition to do more for Singapore’s ageing population, in particular in the areas of healthcare and retirement financing issues.

    Another issue raised is the cost of living, which opposition leaders say is getting worse over the years. The Opposition has also repeated calls for more voices in Parliament, to keep the Government in check.

    But even before Singaporeans take to the polls, the Opposition parties face another challenge of their own – the potential for multi-cornered fights to dilute any votes for them.

    The dominant Workers’ Party (WP) is the first Opposition party to win a GRC. It has staked its claim on 28 seats, in five GRCs and five SMCs. They include Marine Parade GRC and Sengkang West SMC.

    The party also announced that its incumbent MPs will defend their existing constituencies. These include Aljunied GRC, Hougang and Punggol East SMCs. It might face a straight fight against the PAP in those areas.

    But a three-cornered battle might be looming in MacPherson SMC. Just a few days ago, the National Solidarity Party (NSP) reversed an earlier decision to make way for the WP there. It now says it may contest the single seat.

    Both parties have yet to reveal their candidates, but they will meet PAP’s incumbent MP Tin Pei Ling.

    MacPherson became a single ward after it was carved out of Marine Parade GRC following changes to the electoral boundaries. It was last contested as a single seat in 2006. Then, the PAP had defeated the Singapore Democratic Alliance, winning over 68 percent of the votes.

    Taking into account its renewed interest in MacPherson, the NSP could contest up to 12 seats, the second highest of the Opposition parties.

    The Singapore Democratic Party intends to contest 11 seats in constituencies that include Holland-Bukit Timah GRC and Bukit Batok SMC, and alliances have been forged between the Democratic Progressive Party and the Singapore People’s Party. They said they will field a joint team in Bishan Toa-Payoh GRC under the SPP banner.

    Some Opposition parties have started unveiling their candidates, but most, including the WP, are still keeping their cards close to their chest, preferring to wait instead till Nomination Day to reveal its candidates.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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