Sunday, August 7, 2011

BOARD AND NOT BORED GAMES

The 25 Squares Game - Don't be trapped by the barricades!

You need to solve your clues before being declared a winner for this game

Get more culturalised with our game!


Up and Down, Left and Right - Any Way To Win


Move on when you can answer a question


Chee Kiong judging the board games


Students playing the games designed for them


Oral presentation skills required to explain the game to the visitors


One of the games that needed some strategic moves


Everyone had a field day at the game booths


Motivating students to give their best shot for the judging


Differrent races come together for a common goal


Bonding with each other through designing the game


Playing with my ex-student Ravin, who now teaches with me


We learn to resolve conflicts amicably in the process of designing the game


One of the games that drew a large number of audience


Through our research we learnt a lot about the different races
Our creativity and innovativeness are put into coming up of this game

Makan Poly is about the different dishes found in Singapore


Students trying out the game on multi culturalism



Thanks for this project! It brought us closer.


Tightening the social cohesion in Singapore through playing of games




UNITY IN DIVERSITY BOARD GAME


As part of the Racial Harmony Day Commemoration, the Character Education and Pupil Welfare Department organised the Character Development Lesson (CDL) Board game demonstration. Students from Sec 3 classes together with their CDL teachers and friends had a field time playing the games designed by the students for the students.

Students had to apply creative and critical thinking skills as well as foster collaborative learning skills and Social Emotional Learning competencies in coming up with the projects.

The message behind designing the games is for students to realise the importance of preserving racial and religious harmony and through many races, religions, languages and cultures, we will pursue one destiny; for Singapore's prosperity and stability. This is also a topic they do in Sec 3 Social Studies on Bonding.

The 15 board games demonstrated were given creative names like 'Makan Poly', 'Wheel of Harmony', 'Culture Starz', Cultural Devotional Challenge', 'The 25 Squares', 'We're One S'pore', "Footprints of Singapore', 'Top Game', Racial Boo', 'Slopes and Valleys' etc.

Let's hear some comments of the participants and those present:

"I bonded closer with Jie Ming in the process of designing this game."
- Fazira (participant)

"The project allowed us to come together, work together and discover more about each other."
- Yong Sheng (participant)

"We learn about time management and why it is important to prepare early, especially for exams."
- Jia Min (participant)

"By working in group, we learnt how to manage our differences and came up with the best solutions for all."
- Denise (participant)

"We did research work on the internet and interviewed our friends from different races to know more about their culture. It was very useful."
- Cherry (participant)

"My team members had fun together in coming up with the format of the game and the interesting questions on the different customs and traditions." - Hanis (participant)

"Our level of awareness and knowledge of the different races, customs and culture has increased through designing the board game."
- Rachel (participant)

"It was fun playing the games. I learnt more about others by answering the questions posed to me."
- Hidayat (visitor)

"I enjoyed myself playing the games. Some of the games were unique and creative."
- Niresha (visitor)

The teachers also gave the thumbs up for the games demonstrated.

"The games are really interactive and I enjoyed playing them. The students were confident in their presentation skills"
- Mr Ong CK

"I played a very innovative game. The students had applied a high level of creativity into designing the game."
- Ms Amanda Wong

"There are so many good games showcased today. I am amazed."
- Ms Nur Kamilah

As for me, I felt great crafting the lesson and designing the board game requirement and coordinating such a fun-filled, hands-on, values-education activity. The colourful work of the students added colour and vibrancy to the whole atmosphere in the canteen on that Friday. The students took great pride in demonstrating their work. This platform was indeed a great effort to round up the RHD celebrations too.

The support given by the teachers and students for this project was superb!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

FRIENDS FOREVER

CELEBRATE FRIENDSHIP
Click to play this Smilebox slideshow




Thanks Ann for my St John's Island escapades

A reunion to remember for a long time

Asni and Balkis

Sheefah and Aindon

Thanks Kamariah for the invitation

Fatimah (in black) joined us later

Another meeting soon for the golden gals

The friends I grew up with - Ann, Zaleha, Hong Choo and Asni

St John's Island with its present beach and its new jetty below


WHAT ARE FRIENDS FOR

We met again after forty years of going our own way. The reunion during the wedding dinner brought fond memories for us about our hockey days time and weekend escapades together.

Back in the 60’s there was no Orchard Road for me. No Peninsular Shopping Centre and I never dreamt of roaming at Shenton Way either. To add to the list of ‘No-Nos’ would be Capitol, Lido, Orchard, Hoover and Queen too. These are off course the movie theatres during my growing up time.

That was my restrictive life in the late 60s. I was still a secondary school student and dad was rather strict during those days. The moment he glared and stood still with his 6’ 2” frame at the door every evening after work was a clear signal for me and my siblings to keep a ten mile distance away from him. I am not complaining about not stepping my feet at those must-to be-seen around places at that time for I had and still have very good school friends who would invite and drag me over to their homes come every Saturday and school holidays.


Thank God Dad didn’t mind my weekly rendezvous for he knew who my company was. Having come from a girls’ school, my friends were only of one gender - girls, girls and girls. The unwritten statement was that I had to deliver my results came each term for out like magic would appear the thinnest rotan with its menacing swish in the air if as the eldest, I did not set the right tone for my younger siblings. See how heavy my responsibility was back then. I catapulted into maturity beyond my years of innocence too soon. I owe this to Dad a lot for instilling in me the right values as the eldest child in the family.

I would never forget my trips to Pulau Sekijang Bendera or St John’s Island. My girl friend Aindon grew up on the island before moving to Bendemeer Road. Came Saturday morning or Friday evening, we would board the ferry from Clifford Pier to St John’s Island and stayed over at her sister’s house. Perched on a hill, the house offered a commanding view of the island and you could see the frothy waves lapping against the cliff from the kitchen window. On clear days, you could even see the Indonesian island shore line. We would wake up to a beautiful sun rise scene by the beach and a stroll along the island shoreline. The air was laden with salt spray and I was lost with the serenity and respite of the beautiful and quiet island. Steaming hot coffee and nasi lemak would await us when we were done with our gals’ morning gossip.

The island was known as Pulau Sakijang by the Malay locals, which can be literally translated as the Island of a barking deer. One account states that when the British sailors arrived in Singapore, they fiddled with the name of the island to make it more pronounceable among themselves, hence the name Sakijang was alleged to be anglicized to Sin Jang Island to suit the English tongue. Subsequently Sin Jang Island became St John’s Island over time. The island was also a former quarantine station for leprosy cases and a penal settlement for political prisoners and ringleaders of secret societies.

We left no part of the island untouched. We orientated the beach picking up interestingly-shaped shells for making into necklaces or bracelets. And where there were cliffs replacing the sandy or rocky beach, we had to make our stop for it was impassable to go beyond. Being resilient and not bowing to failure easily, we would wait for the next low tide to continue our outline walking of the island. It was such a terrific feeling to walk and feel the sand with your sole while the waves and the foam kissed your feet. St. John’s natural shores are ringed by coral reefs with a variety of hard and soft corals. Commonly encountered animals included an unusually number of hermit crabs and sea cucumbers.

At times we would jump into the sea giggling and laughing like little girls having their first ride on a carousel. The sun could be baking hot and our complexion would be at the mercy of the fiery red ball but we didn’t care. It was our bonding time and such pleasures should be enjoyed while it last before development and the tractors rob them away from us. I would always return to the mainland as red as a lobster.

We transected St John’s Island hoping for more discoveries. We came across structures of demolished houses, an abandoned cemetery and an unused concrete jetty which had seen its better days. We would utter some prayers whenever we walked past the jetty for it possessed the notoriety of being haunted. Islanders claimed of hearing cries of baby in the middle of the night from the jetty. According to Aindon, nurses working on the island hospital would wheel unclaimed placenta on the jetty into the sea. I must also add that one of the holiday bungalows on the island is also reputed to be haunted. It is right on top of the hill, standing on its own with a sprawling compound.

Bright yellow allamanda, pastel pink hibiscus and royal purple bougainvillea would catch our attention on our scouring trip of the island. They grow wildly on the island but when you lay your eyes on them, you simply want to bring them home. We would place them in empty jam or Green Spot bottles (we started recycling a long time ago) and help to add colour to our host’s living room or kitchen.


We even boatpool and rowed to Pulau Sekijang Pelepah or Lazarus Island, just a few minutes away from St John’s Island. Without fail, the island boys would line up at the jetty and entertain us with their acrobatic somersaults and fancy free fall jumps into the water. The sea was their playground and it was astounding to see young boys having no fear of the deep sea.

Our island home stay ended when Aindon revealed that her family had to leave St John’s Island forever. The island was transformed into a tranquil getaway with swimming lagoons, trekking routes and camping grounds for nature lovers in 1975.

Thank you my friends. I will not forget Jalan Muallaf, Kg Woodleigh, Punggul End, Kolam Ayer Quarters, Genting Lane, Circuit Road, Merpati Road, Lorong Tai Seng, Lorong 27 Geylang, Jalan Pipit, Jalan Pasir, Lorong Engku Aman, Paya Lebar, Toa Payoh and most of all St John's Island.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

JAKARTA FAMILY

LOVE BINDS

Nazhan and his lovely bride, Nurhidayah
Mum looking as preety as ever

With Cikgu Zaharah Salleh

With Tante from Jakarta


Kak Warni, Abang Amir and Cikgu Zaharah Salleh


The Men In Batik


Immortalising the moment of meeting up together


With my cousins Sap, Lin, Janah and Ratna




Click to play this Smilebox slideshow

We met with Abang Amir and Kak Warni again during a wedding invitation. We stayed over at their house during our last December trip to Jakarta. It was where I first tasted ketoprak and bubur ayam. We owe our gratitude to them for the warm hospitality showered upon us. We were glad to meet up with them again during the wedding invitation of Cik Mamad.




The couple looking their best with the bridesmaids


A family of gathering from Jakarta and Singapore

Thanks for your hospitality while were in Jakarta

When will we meet again Erda?
Ramon Rahmat, a singer and actor in the 1960s

Haji Osman Zailani, a veteran actor of many Malay dramas
Linda and soldier boy Fairuz

We can only learn to love by loving