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Sahabat Maya :

Monday, April 12, 2010

Happy to be at school




Happy to be at school


After the gloom that followed January’s devastating earthquake, Haiti’s schoolchildren are relieved to get back to the old routine of lessons and homework.

CHILDREN in pink and white uniforms ignore the bulldozer levelling the schoolyard as they lined up excitedly for class last week, almost three months after Haiti’s devastating earthquake.

Before the January disaster, the Institution Sacre-Coeur used to teach 1,500 children ranging from three to 18 years.

Hundreds are now returning for the first time since the quake for lessons under hastily erected tents.

The school’s theatre, chapel and all the classrooms have been badly damaged and like many buildings in Port-au-Prince and have been labelled as “red-zoned”, which means they are on a demolition waiting list. Only the roof of the gymnasium remains intact.

Conditons are far from perfect but this girl is happy to squat and copy from a blackboard during a Mathematics lesson in a makeshift school. — AP

The Haitian government has launched a tentative return-to-class campaign and encouraged schools in the capital to start welcoming students again from last Tuesday.

Plumes of dust swirl in the streaming sunlight of the Sacre-Coeur’s sports hall as staff keenly clean any objects worth salvaging from the debris.

A blackboard with a poem in French: La petite ecoliere, Maintenant je vais a l’ecole (The little schoolgirl, Now I am going to school), will have to wait to be displayed as the United Nations International Children’s Fund (Unicef) tents came with nothing that could suspend it.

“We worked all night so that the tents would be up and running today,” said Unicef employee Feruz Tork.

“It’s a great day for the kids. For them, it’s an escape from the rubble and bleakness of daily life,” said Tork, who for the past six weeks has been helping to rebuild Haiti’s education system.

Students pray before a lesson starts at what used to be a kindergarten in Port-au-Prince. — AP

The earthquake killed 38,000 schoolchildren and students, as well as 1,300 teachers and other staff, as it laid waste to 4,000 schools and symbolically flattened the headquarters of the education ministry.

“In the coming days, in the coming weeks, all the schools in Port-au-Prince will re-open, mainly in tents,” said Tork.

Unicef handed out 3,000 tents to serve as classrooms as well as materials for teachers and pupils alike.

At the Sacre-Coeur school, boxes full of pens, notebooks, even footballs awaited the children as they renewed contact with their teachers.

“It’s weird. I missed this, I missed my friends a lot,” 13-year-old Hermione Rocher said shyly.

Melissa Gentil, a teenager who wants to become a pediatrician, said that since the quake, which left at least 220,000 people dead, she had been at home “sometimes studying,” but mostly waiting.

A few metres away, a group of young girls turned out in their pristine uniforms sang the nursery rhyme If you’re happy and you know it clap your hands.

“Many members of the missionary group that run the school are too emotional to speak and are still in shock,” explained Wilmine Raymond Saint-Pierre, president of the former pupils’ association.

Three nuns, trapped under the rubble before being rescued by colleagues, were already back at work under the tents acting as a makeshift replacement for the nursery school that opened last September.

Former pupils have organised a collection fund for the reconstruction of the school and the plans are ready, said an enthusiastic Raymond Saint-Pierre.

“It is going to cost an awful lot of money,” she said.

“There will be four pre-fabricated buildings designed to withstand earthquakes.”

In Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, an astonishing 40% of the population is under 14 years of age and almost one in 10 children die before they are five years old. — AFP

The Star
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Confessions of a Cikgu


A senior teacher talks about how she is fast losing her enthusiasm for the job because of the ever-increasing non-teaching chores she has to take on.

IT was recently announced that a committee, headed by Education Director-General Tan Sri Alimuddin Mohd Dom, and comprising representatives from various teachers’ unions, has been directed to look into complaints by teachers on how they have been burdened with other chores instead of focusing on their primary duty — teaching.

However, it is comforting to know that the Deputy Prime Minister, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, has himself said that he feels that there is a basis to teachers’ concerns. He wants the committee to thrash out problems and get back to him with sound recommendations to improve the lot of teachers in the country. The deadline? Two months.

Let’s keep our fingers crossed. Teachers are looking forward to some positive and workable recommendations from the committee.

The story below is of a teacher with 27 years of experience whom I shall refer to as Tee. Tee loves sharing her knowledge with students. She even takes pride in class projects and thoroughly enjoys the interaction with her charges.

However, over the years, she has been burdened with paper work and has been constantly called to work on Saturday and dumped with more responsibilities.

Teachers are bogged down by unnecessary paper work which leaves them with little time to focus on teaching. — File photo

Such duties which can easily be carried out by a clerk, is taking a toll on Tee, 52, who is losing her enthusiasm for teaching. It will be a shame if the country has to lose dedicated teachers like her.

A steady job

Tee was born in a small town in Selangor, and is the eldest of 10 children. Tee’s father was a lorry driver and her mother, a rubber tapper. After completing her secondary school education, she decided to teach and had applied for a place in the then teacher training college (it is now known as teacher training institute).

“It had always been my ambition to be a teacher and my parents had no objections, so long as their eldest daughter had a steady job, or as they would refer to it, an ‘iron rice bowl’ job.”

However, before that materialised, she accepted a JPA (Public Services Commission) teaching scholarship at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) to pursue a Bachelor’s degree in Science and graduated with honours in 1983. She obtained a Diploma in Education from UKM the following year.

Tee started teaching in a secondary school in Karak, Pahang and had stints in Sekinchan, Sg. Pelek and Selayang all in Selangor, before she was posted to her present school in Petaling Jaya in 2004.

“When I began to teach in the eighties in small towns, students then were very simple and they respected their teachers.

They did not seek much outside help or tuition for the subjects they were weak in, as they do today.

“At that time, their only source of knowledge and solution to their problems lay in doing the homework we gave them in school.

“As such, the the teacher-student relationhip was good. I could actually chart the personal development my students made under my tutelage. We teachers were instrumental in shaping their personality and character,” she says proudly.

Tee does not mince her words when she is asked to comment on how teaching was like, more than two decades ago.

“Those days, all I had to do was to teach, guide and to get to know my students as well as I could. If there was paperwork, it was minimal.

“If you look at students today, you can see that, because of their exposure, they are more knowledgeable. They have higher expectations and demand more from their teachers. I even feel that some of them are very egotistical.”

There’s one aspect of her job that Tee feels has changed for the better — preparing and setting examination questions.

“It was a more difficult task back then, but now, with the advent of numerous workbooks, the computer and educational DVDs, the job has become so much easier.”

I ask her if she is satisfied being a teacher.Tee thinks hard before responding.

“When I first began teaching, my salary was very low but I was a happy teacher. Today, my salary is much higher, and rightfully I should be happy, but I am not.”

“The clerical work I have to do, is becoming unbearable. You see, as a Mathematics teacher, I already have a lot of preparation, planning and marking to do.

“Now, on top of that, there are many other deadlines to be met. All parties, including parents, the principal, colleagues and students have high expectations.”

As a ketua bidang (head of department), life at school is even more stressful for Tee.

She is in charge of several academic programmes and for her, the documentation and filing she has to oversee, is literally back-breaking.

At 52, and with menopausal symptoms, particularly hot flushes, plaguing her, Tee’s sentiments about school have not changed.

In fact, for the first time in her teaching career, she was stressed and worried when the new school year began in January.

“I was anxious about my work and the ever-increasing responsibilities for the entire year. Could I take all this and more for another year?” she asks with a frown.

Tee tells me of an ex-colleague who had just passed away due to breast cancer, and of another one, who was currently undergoing treatment for uterine cancer.

When Tee herself went for a mammogram recently at the University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC), she was startled to hear from a nurse at the Radiotherapy Department that nine out of 10 patients undergoing chemotherapy at the hospital were teachers.

“Do you think it’s caused by stress?” she asks.

I found her question disturbing to say the least. Can it be?

Blank expressions

“You know,” she tells me, “I also find myself thinking a lot about my students these days. Sometimes, when I see ‘blank expressions’ on their faces, especially from those who are academically weaker, I wonder to myself ‘Why are they here? What do they feel about having to learn something that is not relevant to their daily life?

“For some of them, Mathematics is such an alien subject that even I begin to wonder what I am doing with them. On top of that, I feel that students today have to learn too many subjects and this makes life very challenging for the weaker students.”

Tee is of the opinion that the Government should set up more vocational schools to provide living skills training to this group of students.

“At least then we can help produce our own skilled workers, rather than having to import them.”

Tee feels that these days, she is more like a clerk doing paperwork instead of spending time giving personal attention to her academically-challenged students.

“Just think. Each class has about 30 to 40 students, so to be efficient, one has to have classroom management skills too. With the type of students we have, it is no easy task managing them. Many young teachers are afraid when they have to enter a classroom.”

Tee also regrets that with her increasing workload, she has little time to mentor and guide young teachers at her school.

“These teachers lack experience badly, and I feel they need to be guided for at least a year.

“With senior teachers being bogged down with non-teaching duties, there is hardly any time to develop a young teacher’s potential, or help boost their self-confidence.

“Often, they just get thrown into the deep end of the pool and unlike us — the teachers of the older generation, who had so much more grit and resilience — this group of young teachers take a longer time to adjust and cope.”

Tee tells me that despite being graduates, many of them lack communicational skills.

“For the teaching of Science and Maths in the higher forms, young teachers simply aren’t competent in the language of instruction.

“Students then start complaining and parents start calling up the school demanding an explanation.”

Tee shakes her head. “If I’m given the choice today, I don’t think I’ll choose to be a teacher anymore. I’m not against teaching; I enjoy being with my students. In fact, I’m at my happiest when I’m in the classroom. But our job today isn’t just to teach and deal with students, is it?”

“Don’t get me wrong. In class, I still do all I can for my students. I know they view me as a stern person because I follow the rules and I mean business when I am teaching them. I’m a hardworking and responsible teacher.

“I do sometimes crack a joke or two, and we all laugh together. Sometimes I tell them stories about my difficult childhood and how I had to be like a mother to all my younger siblings — how I had to act responsibly even when I was just a teen and the amount of housework I had to do and how difficult life was for me.

“I know my students admire me for the determination I have shown through the years to make something of myself. We have a good relationship – my students and I. I am firm but kind. I even treat them with sweets and chocolates.”

Tee also shares with me what she thinks about her relationship with her students.

“Oh, without question - they are very bold, talkative and not as disciplined. They want to be treated as friends rather than as students. In class, they are quick with their comments and remarks.

“In fact, I get aggravated when my students are rude or indifferent.

“But, personally, I’m a cheerful person so I do let down my guard once in a while and have some fun with them. As a teacher, I realise that they have needs that I must meet.

“For their sake therefore, I have to be prepared mentally and emotionally, as well as be sound in my own knowledge, especially in the subject that I teach. So far, that has not been a problem with me.

“When they tell me that I’m the best Additional Mathematics teacher they’ve had, I feel truly rewarded.

“When they get good results in Maths, some of them have even hugged and thanked me for being their teacher.

“I like getting positive feedback from my students, and I must admit that I feel young because I’m always surrounded by them.

“So, you see, it’s not the teaching part I don’t like. It’s the other chores that get me down.”

I ask Tee what is the best compliment she has received as a teacher. She is wistful, but her answer moves me as it still does her.

“One of the happiest moments in my life was when a mother thanked me for helping her son to be a cheerful, confident young man.

“The mother told me that her relationship with her son had improved tremendously because of me. It felt very good that I had such an effect on someone’s life.”

Does Tee have any advice for young teachers?

“Be committed, be knowledgeable and be prepared for what you are supposed to do. Always remember that if you want your own children to be taught by good teachers, then be a good teacher to the children of others. What goes around comes around.”

On a serious note, Tee is already thinking of applying for optional retirement next year simply because of the ever-increasing non-teaching chores.

The Star




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Study Tips

Always remember that time is a critical resource that you can't replace when it's gone. Smart students use their time wisely so that they won't complain of not having enough time when exams or assignment deadlines are around the corner. Stick a large calendar up on your wall, behind the door, on the wall of a cupboard etc and look at it daily so that you always know the number of days you have before the exam or assignment deadline.


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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Tip Jantung Sihat




1. Ketahui Sejarah Keluarga Anda


Ketahui sejarah perubatan keluarga anda dan beritahu doktor anda tentang sebarang risiko-risiko keturunan.



Jika salah seorang daripada datuk nenek, ibu bapa atau adik-beradik anda pernah mengalami penyakit jantung sebelum berusia 55 tahun, maka anda turut cenderung untuk turut mendapatnya.

Mengetahui maklumat sedemikian akan membantu anda mengambil langkah-langkah yang sepatutnya untuk mencegahnya daripada berlaku.

2. Di Meja Makan

Makan diet yang seimbang yang terdiri daripada buah-buahan, sayur-sayuran, bijirin penuh dan makanan tenusu rendah lemak. Amalkan masa makan yang tetap pada setiap hari dan elakkan dari terlebih makan.

Kesemua lemak mempunyai kalori yang tinggi dan akan meletakkan anda berisiko untuk mendapat kolesterol dan darah tinggi, jadi anda perlu mengehadkan pengambilannya. Jika anda mesti mengambil lemak, maka pilihlah lemak-lemak tidak tepu. Elakkan makanan yang mengandungi lemak tepu, asid lemak trans dan kolesterol.

3. Serat Larut : Senjata Rahsia Anda

Serat larut (terutama sekali beta-glukan) adalah karbohidrat kompleks yang sangat bermanfaat terutama sekali untuk kesihatan jantung. Ia telah terbukti secara klinikal akan menurunkan kolesterol darah dengan menggabungkan asid-asid hempedu (yang mengandungi kolesterol) di dalam saluran pencernaan anda.

Ia kemudiannya akan dikeluarkan bersama bahan buangan badan anda dan ini bermakna kolesterol akan diserap dengan lebih sedikit ke dalam aliran darah anda. Ini akan membawa kepada paras kolesterol darah yang lebih rendah serta mengurangkan risiko penyakit jantung.

Oleh kerana serat larut (seperti beta-glukan) merupakan makanan rendah GI (Indeks Glisemik), maka ia juga berkesan untuk menstabilkan paras glukosa darah anda. Ini dilakukan dengan memperlahankan pencernaan serta penyerapan agar glukosa (gula) akan mengambil masa yang lebih lama untuk memasuki aliran darah anda.

Ini akan mengelakkan paras glukosa darah naik secara mendadak.

Oleh yang demikian, memasukkan lebih banyak serat larut serta makanan karbohidrat rendah GI ke dalam makanan seharian anda adalah suatu langkah yang bijak. Sesetengah contoh makanan rendah GI termasuklah barli, beras perang, muesli dan roti rendah GI yang telah dirumus khas.

4. Mengawal Tekanan Darah

Tahukah anda bahawa hanya 6 daripada setiap 100 rakyat Malaysia dapat mengawal tekanan darah mereka? Jangan biarkan diri anda menjadi salah seorang daripada 94 orang tersebut!

Periksa tekanan darah anda sekurang-kurangnya 2 kali setahun dan pastikan anda mengekalkannya pada paras yang rendah (130/80 mmHg atau lebih rendah) tanpa mengira usia anda.

5. Awasi Berat Badan

Lakukan senaman selama sekurang-kurangnya 45 minit pada kebanyakan hari dalam seminggu (atau lebih baik lagi, lakukannya pada setiap hari).

Walau bagaimanapun, jika anda mempunyai berat badan yang berlebihan atau obes, maka anda perlu lebih kerap melakukan senaman (dan dalam tempoh yang lebih lama) untuk menurunkan berat badan yang berlebihan.

Secara amnya, anda perlu mengekalkan Indeks Jisim Tubuh (BMI) pada lebih kurang 18-23 kg/m2. Bagi orang Asia, ukur lilit pinggang yang kurang dari 90sm bagi lelaki dan kurang dari 80sm bagi wanita adalah ideal.

6. Berhenti Merokok

Tembakau dalam rokok akan mengakibatkan saluran darah anda menjadi sempit serta mengurangkan bekalan darah ke jantung dan organ-organ penting anda yang lain. Jadi, hentikannya sekarang demi kebaikan jantung anda.

7. Jangan Lupa Berjumpa Doktor!

Dan akhir sekali, jangan terlepas daripada menjalani pemeriksaan kesihatan tahunan anda. Pemeriksaan yang kerap akan dapat mengesan serta merawat kes-kes awal penyakit jantung dan juga diabetes.





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Thursday, April 8, 2010

When Parents Meet Teachers




SUBANG JAYA, April 6 (Bernama) -- Schools nationwide have reached their first quarter of 2010 and many have started to call for their respective Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) annual general meeting (AGM).

At these meetings, parents are given the opportunity to air their views and grievances apart from also voicing their concerns over issues that cropped out in their children's schools.

The AGM is certainly the right time to get ideas and support from he parents.

According to a parent who wished to be known as Usha, she attended the AGM as she wanted to know her daughter's school better.

"I got here early and have no regrets attending this healthy discussion. I met many other parents and I believe those who came along to be with the teachers and other parents on a weekend morning are seriously committed and willing to contribute for the school," Usha told Bernama while leaving the SMK USJ12 school hall with her newfound friends.

PTA AGM

Many schools including that in the Klang Valley held their PTA AGMs in March, before the first term school holiday.

Parents and teachers, undeniably, have a great role to play for the school-going children. They spend important time with this generation, imparting knowledge and care, which can easily influence children within this age group in determining their future.

However when placing high hopes on their children, parents inevitably pass the bulk of these responsibilities to the teachers.

PARENTS AND TEACHERS ARE EUALLY IMPORTANT

"I believe that teachers and parents are equally important in the pursuit of their children's excellence and wellbeing in education," said the father of three primary school going children, identified as Abu Haziman.

Abu Haziman sends all his children to a Chinese school near his house in Subang Jaya.

"I neither understand nor speak Mandarin, so when I attend the PTA AGM meetings, I have to accept that the meeting is conducted in Mandarin almost its length. However, when they passed out documents including the account statements on expenditure and income in figures, I am able to comprehend it," he said.

On the other hand, a mother of two, Amy Rosley, thinks the otherwise.

"I have not been attending these meetings of late.

I find there is too much talk and very little done after making the necessary suggestions.

It is frustrating after attending and placing your hopes too high for some changes," she said.

PARENTS' CONCERNS

Some parents refrain from making comments and suggestions, which may sometimes flare into unnecessary complaints and arguments. Parents are concerned that their children may get 'blacklisted' by the school because of their openness of both mind and expression.

Although these concerns turned up as mere 'false alarms', people naturally are susceptible to be offended when negative remarks are made against them.

The writer had attended the 9th PTA AGM session 2010/2011 at a secondary school held recently. Despite having a student population of 2,280, the turn up was not a full house from the parents attendance list.

There are more than 2,280 students, and only a small percentage of the parents attended the meeting.

The 2010 PTA AGM saw parents sending in their suggestions and motions for the improvement and betterment of the secondary school, way in advance.

Some of these parents had written to ask for extra classes to assist students sitting for the PMR and SPM exams, especially during the school holidays and Saturdays.

The teacher in charge of curriculum explained that such classes would only be held a month or two before the examination period and that these classes have been conducted regularly throughout the years to improve the weaker students.

"So far, the students are responding well to the school's system.

Teachers are parents too. We too have children.

We know the importance of education to these children.

"Parents are definitely concerned about their children's performance. We all want the best for the children", said an English teacher, fondly known as Lucille.

The PTA is certainly an important link that will make the relationship between the client and the school more interactive, proactive and most definitely pleasant, as well as long lasting.

This will benefit the students and children of Malaysia in the long run, especially when the bond between their parents and educators know no boundaries.

-- BERNAMA

<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>

Study Tips

Review reading assignments and exercises
just before class, or before preparing
your school bag.
Then, review what you have
learned immediately after class,
or
on the same day when you get home.
This way, you will be better
prepared to absorb lessons
during class,
and will remember
what you have just learned.


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Wednesday, April 7, 2010

We don't talk anymore.....................








pertemuan

dengan banyak cara

sengaja

atau

tidak sengaja

ada yang menggembirakan

ada yang menyakitkan

ada yang membosankan

ada yang mencetuskan

emosi kepelbagaian

apa yang pasti

emosi

tetap bermain

pelbagai prasangka

tetapi

fikir positif

apakah hikmahnya??????

terlalu menyakitkan

memedihkan

melukakan

hati yang parah

bertambah parah

tanpa bicara

hanya lirik mata

pengganti

bicara

wajah yang tidak ingin

berada di lintasan

mata mahupun hati

telah dibuang jauh

tiba-tiba

wajah itu

muncul kembali

untuk apa

menatap wajah

yang memang jelas

mencerminkan hati dan budi

manusia.....

semua manusia tidak sempurna

termasuk diri sendiri

tapi

pertemuan tidak disangka

tidak dirancang

Allah swt yang merancang

apakah hikmahnya????????

hari ini tidak nampak

apa-apa

yang pasti

apa yang terlintas di hati

maksud

tersirat dan tersurat

menyembunyikan niat sebenar

publisiti

war-warkan diri

entahlah......

Sesungguhnya.....

Pertemuan dan Perpisahan

Rencana Allah swt

Kutiplah hikmah

disebalik setiap kejadian

sama ada

pedih

atau

menceriakan...............

yang pasti

aku tidak ingin

berbicara denganmu

aku tidak ingin

menatap wajahmu

aku tidak ingin

turut serta dalam

prasangkamu!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

jangan kau gugat

ketenangan

tasik hati ini...............................




===============

MUSABAQAH TILAWAH AL-QURAN

ZON KLUANG BARAT 2010

3 April 2010 - Sabtu




Semoga

adik lebih maju jaya

dan

cemerlang

dalam pertandingan

yang akan datang.




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Friday, April 2, 2010

H1N1 HIGH ALERT



H1N1 HIGH ALERT: Pupils of Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Tamil) Kuala Kubu Baruwearing face masks as 59 schoolchildren have shown influenza A (H1N1) symptoms since Tuesday. The Health Ministry is on high alert as fresh cluster cases have been detected throughout the country. — NST picture by Sairien Nafis
Apr 2, 2010 8:29 am

Alert over new cluster cases


KUALA LUMPUR: New influenza A (H1N1) cluster cases have been detected throughout the country, putting the Health Ministry on high alert. And for the first time, staff of a government hospital were also infected.


Between March 21 and 27 alone, 83 people in Selangor, Malacca and Terengganu were found to have the virus.

Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican said these cluster cases indicated that the H1N1 virus was still active. He, however, said the situation was under control.

Of the 83 people, 15 were staff of Hospital Serdang in Selangor, Sime Darby Merlimau Estate in Malacca (16), Madrasah Tahfiz Raudatul Muslihin Masjid Tanah in Malacca (31), IKM Jasin Malacca (7), Rumah Anak Yatim Vidyalaya Kuala Kubu Baru (9) and Sekolah Menengah Agama Rantau Abang in Dungun, Terengganu (5).

Dr Ismail said clinical analysis of throat swabs taken from confirmed victims of the disease showed no signs of a second wave.

However, the risk of a second wave among the people was still high due to them being susceptible to the infection.


On March 27, 371 people were admitted to 38 government and seven private hospitals nationwide with influenza-like illnesses. Of the total, 25 were found positive for H1N1 and eight are in the intensive care unit.

No new deaths have been reported.

Dr Ismail also called on the people to alert the nearest district health departments if they know of individuals or cluster of people with symptoms of the disease.

On the Kuala Kubu case where 59 pupils of Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Tamil) Kuala Kubu Baru were placed in home quarantine after 47 were found with H1N1, he said only one was confirmed positive.

Two pupils are waiting the outcome of laboratory results while another 15, who were admitted with influenza-like illness, were discharged and were now in home quarantine.

Thirty-five other pupils have recovered from their illness but have been told to return to hospital if they had a recurrence of the symptoms.

"Parents of these pupils have been told to closely monitor them."

NST



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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

30 Pelajar Terbaik SPM 2009 Terima Biasiswa Nasional



KUALA LUMPUR, 31 Mac (Bernama) -- Seramai 30 pelajar paling cemerlang dalam peperiksaan Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) 2009 yang mendapat "A+" bagi semua mata pelajaran Rabu diumumkan sebagai penerima Biasiswa Nasional 2010 yang diwujudkan buat pertama kali.

Mereka akan berpeluang untuk melanjutkan pengajian ke universiti terkemuka dunia dalam bidang-bidang pilihan mereka yang telah diiktiraf oleh kerajaan.


Senarai penerima biasiswa itu diumumkan oleh Pejabat Perdana Menteri dalam satu kenyataan petang Rabu.


Mereka ialah Gladys Tan Yee Kim (SMK Green Road, Kuching) yang merupakan pelajar terbaik SPM 2009, Grace Kiew Sze-Ern (SMK Perempuan Sri Aman, Petaling Jaya), Khadijah Ahmad Jais (SM Agama Persekutuan, Labu), Akmal Hidayat Sabri (SMK Derma, Kangar), Syamilah Mahali (Kolej Tunku Kurshiah, Seremban), Amelia Lee Wei Ling (SMK Taman Melawati, Gombak), Nur Syuhadah Muhamad (SM Sains Tengku Muhammad Faris Petra, Kota Baharu) Lai Yin Kwin (SMK Tinggi Melaka), Corinne Gunn Huey Min (SMK Taman Melawati, Gombak), Hu May Khei (SMK Convent, Taiping);


Muhammad Amal Aiman Mohd Yusof (MRSM Kota Baharu), Kuah Jia Ying (SMK Bukit Jambul, Pulau Pinang), Chean Chung Shen (SMK Methodist (ACS) Sitiawan), Ahmad Zhafir Zulkfli@Zulkifli (SBPI Temerloh), Goh Diangde (SMK Derma, Kangar), Ameenah Azman (Kolej Tunku Kurshiah, Seremban), Erin Chuah Wei Yen (SMK Seri Bintang Utara, Kuala Lumpur), Mohamad Syukri Azmi (MRSM Kota Baharu),Muhammad Syafiq Kamarulzaman (SBPI Selandar), Neelam Devi Nath (SMK Buloh Kasap, Segamat);


Ooi Hui Lynn (SMK Convent Green Lane, Pulau Pinang), Nurliyana Sanusi (MRSM Kota Baharu), Gan Li Fang (SMK Tun Mamat, Tangkak), Muhammad Sallehuddin Mansor (SMK Matang, Perak), Muhammad Izzat Solihuddin (MRSM Tun Ghafar Baba), Nurizzati Zainal Nazeri (Kolej Yayasan Saad, Melaka), Khairunnisa Che Bahrun (Maahad Ahmadi, Tanah Merah), Nurulaida Mohd Darus (SBPI Jempol, Negeri Sembilan), Loh Sook Yin (SMK Tinggi St David, Melaka) dan Malathy a/p Balakrishnan (SMK Ibrahim, Sungai Petani). Biasiswa itu diperkenalkan oleh Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak semasa membentangkan Bajet 2010 di Parlimen pada Oktober lepas sebagai ganjaran untuk pelajar yang cemerlang.


Perdana Menteri juga berkata pemilihan adalah berdasarkan merit dan penerima biasiswa akan dapat melanjutkan pelajaran ke universiti terkenal dunia.


Menurut kenyataan Pejabat Perdana Menteri itu, pelajar-pelajar yang ditawarkan biasiswa itu akan mengikuti kursus persediaan di pusat-pusat persediaan dalam negara yang telah ditetapkan oleh kerajaan.


Setiap pelajar dikehendaki mencapai tahap kecemerlangan yang ditetapkan semasa di peringkat persediaan bagi melayakkan mereka meneruskan pengajian di luar negara.


Mulai tahun ini, kerajaan telah memutuskan untuk menaja pelajar lepasan SPM yang paling cemerlang mengikuti pengajian ke universiti-univeriti terkemuka di peringkat ijazah pertama di dalam dan luar negara.


"Program penajaan ini bertujuan untuk menyediakan biasiswa yang berprestij untuk pelajar-pelajar lepasan SPM yang paling cemerlang dalam melahirkan modal insan yang berkualiti untuk menjamin kesinambungan keupayaan negara pada masa akan datang," menurut kenyataan itu.


Pelajar terbaik SPM 2009 Gladys Tan, selepas menerima keputusan peperiksaan itu pada 11 Mac lepas, berkata beliau bercita-cita menjadi seorang pensyarah dalam bidang kaji hayat atau yang berkaitan dengannya.


-- BERNAMA



````````````````````


Special Committee Set Up To Study Teachers' Burden

KUALA LUMPUR, March 31 (Bernama) -- A special committee will be set up to study the burden of extra duties borne by school teachers nationwide, Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said Wednesday.

Muhyiddin, who is also education minister, said the government took a serious view of the problem which it feared might affect the performance of the teachers concerned and that of the students in the long term.


The committee would determine whether the duties were an extra burden or were the responsibility of the teachers, he told reporters after meeting representatives of the National Union of the Teaching Profession (NUTP) at the Parliament building here.


Muhyiddin said the committee would be headed by Director-General of Education Tan Sri Alimuddin Mohd Dom, with its members comprising representatives from several relevant organisations including the NUTP and would be given two months to submit its proposals.


The NUTP had complained, among other things, that some school teachers were shouldering an extra burden involving the curriculum, co-curriculum, classrooms and student affairs to the extent that the teaching and learning process in school was affected.


Also raised at the meeting was the issue of weekly rest days for teachers and the NUTP's support for the proposal that each student take up a sport as well as the national key result area (NKRA) to improve access to education for the people.


-- BERNAMA

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Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Kisah Dua Ekor Katak





Pada suatu masa dahulu, ada dua ekor katak yang tinggal di negara Jepun. Seekor tinggal di sebatang longkang berhampiran bandar Osaka yang terletak di pinggir laut, sementara yang seekor lagi tinggal di sebatang anak sungai jernih yang mengalir melalui bandar Kyoto. Dalam jarak yang berjauhan itu, katak-katak ini tidak pernah mengenali antara satu sama lain, tetapi, yang anehnya, timbul pula idea dalam kepala masing-masing secara serentak – katak-katak ini berhasrat untuk melihat dunia ini sedikit. Sang katak yang tinggal di Kyoto ingin mengunjungi Osaka, manakala katak yang tinggal di Osaka pula berhasrat untuk melawat Kyoto, tempat letaknya istana maharaja Jepun.



Maka, pada suatu pagi yang indah, dalam musim bunga, kedua-dua katak itu pun memulakan perjalanan masing-masing melalui jalan yang terbentang dari Kyoto hingga ke Osaka. Seekor di satu hujung dan seekor lagi di hujung yang bertentangan. Perjalanan yang ditempuhi lebih meletihkan daripada yang dijangka kerana katak-katak ini tidak berapa tahu tentang pengembaraan. Di pertengahan jalan, di antara dua bandar itu, ada sebuah gunung yang perlu didaki. Katak-katak itu terpaksa mengambil masa yang lama melompat untuk mencapai puncaknya, tapi akhirnya sampai juga ke atas. Alangkah terkejutnya katak itu apabila terserempak dengan seekor lagi katak di hadapannya!


Katak-katak itu saling berpandangan seketika tanpa berkata apa-apa. Kemudian barulah mula berbual rancak tentang punca pertembungan itu yang berlaku jauh dari kampung halaman masing-masing. Girang rasanya hati katak itu apabila mendapat tahu rakannya juga mempunyai niat yang sama – untuk mendalami lagi tentang tanah air sendiri. Memandangkan katak-katak itu tidak perlu tergesa-gesa, maka kedua-duanya pun merehatkan badan di kawasan yang lembap lagi sejuk, dan bersetuju untuk menghilangkan penat terlebih dahulu sebelum berpisah untuk menuju ke haluan masing-masing.



“Sayangnya badan kita tidak lebih besar,” kata katak Osaka, “kalau tidak, bolehlah kita melihat kedua-dua bandar itu dari sini dan mengagak sama ada berbaloi atau tidak kita meneruskan perjalanan kita ini.”



“Oh, itu mudah diatur,” balas katak Kyoto. “Kita berdiri saja di atas kaki belakang kita dan berpaut antara satu sama lain. Kemudian, bolehlah masing-masing meninjau bandar yang hendak dituju.”



Katak Osaka begitu suka akan cadangan ini lalu terus membingkas dan meletakkan kaki hadapan di atas bahu kawannya, yang juga telah turut bangun. Kedua-duanya pun berdiri, lalu meregangkan badan sambil memegang erat antara satu sama lain supaya tidak jatuh. Katak Kyoto menghalakan hidungnya ke arah Osaka, manakala katak Osaka pula menghalakan hidungnya ke Kyoto. Tetapi yang bebalnya, katak-katak itu terlupa bahawa apabila ia berdiri, matanya yang besar itu terletak di belakang kepala. Jadi, walaupun hidungnya mungkin menghala ke arah destinasi yang hendak dituju, matanya memandang ke tempat asal perjalanannya tadi.




“Alamak!” teriak katak Osaka, “Kyoto betul-betul seperti Osaka. Sungguh tidak berbaloi perjalanan yang jauh ini. Saya hendak pulanglah!”



“Kalaulah saya tahu Osaka serupa saja dengan Kyoto, saya tak akan mengembara jauh-jauh begini,” teriak katak dari Kyoto.

Tatkala berkata demikian, ia pun melepaskan tangannya dari bahu rakannya lantas kedua-dua katak itu pun terus rebah ke atas rumput. Setelah mengucapkan selamat jalan, kedua-dua katak itu mula berangkat pulang. Sehinggalah ke akhir hayat, katak-katak itu mempercayai bahawa Osaka dan Kyoto adalah serupa sahaja, meskipun pada hakikatnya kedua-dua bandar itu begitu berbeza dari segala segi.

Penterjemah : OMNI- TERJEMAHAN






~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Two Frogs

Once upon a time in the country of Japan there lived two frogs, one of whom made his home in a ditch near the town of Osaka, on the sea coast, while the other dwelt in a clear little stream which ran through the city of Kioto. At such a great distance apart, they had never even heard of each other; but, funnily enough, the idea came into both their heads at once that they should like to see a little of the world, and the frog who lived at Kioto wanted to visit Osaka, and the frog who lived at Osaka wished to go to Kioto, where the great Mikado had his palace.

So one fine morning in the spring they both set out along the road that led from Kioto to Osaka, one from one end and the other from the other. The journey was more tiring than they expected, for they did not know much about travelling, and half way between the two towns there arose a mountain which had to be climbed. It took them a long time and a great many hops to reach the top, but there they were at last, and what was the surprise of each to see another frog before him!

They looked at each other for a moment without speaking, and then fell into conversation, explaining the cause of their meeting so far from their homes. It was delightful to find that they both felt the same wish--to learn a little more of their native country--and as there was no sort of hurry they stretched themselves out in a cool, damp place, and agreed that they would have a good rest before they parted to go their ways.

'What a pity we are not bigger,' said the Osaka frog; 'for then we could see both towns from here, and tell if it is worth our while going on.'

'Oh, that is easily managed,' returned the Kioto frog. 'We have only got to stand up on our hind legs, and hold on to each other, and then we can each look at the town he is travelling to.'

This idea pleased the Osaka frog so much that he at once jumped up and put his front paws on the shoulders of his friend, who had risen also. There they both stood, stretching themselves as high as they could, and holding each other tightly, so that they might not fall down. The Kioto frog turned his nose towards Osaka, and the Osaka frog turned his nose towards Kioto; but the foolish things forgot that when they stood up their great eyes lay in the backs of their heads, and that though their noses might point to the places to which they wanted to go their eyes beheld the places from which they had come.

'Dear me!' cried the Osaka frog, 'Kioto is exactly like Osaka. It is certainly not worth such a long journey. I shall go home!'

'If I had had any idea that Osaka was only a copy of Kioto I should never have travelled all this way,' exclaimed the frog from Kioto, and as he spoke he took his hands from his friend's shoulders, and they both fell down on the grass. Then they took a polite farewell of each other, and set off for home again, and to the end of their lives they believed that Osaka and Kioto, which are as different to look at as two towns can be, were as like as two peas.

[Japanische Marchen.]


p/s : Fikir-fikirkanlah pengajaran di sebalik cerita ini.


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