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I Am a Believer In Education

Illiterate, Granny did not know it was a school. When it was mentioned by the neighbours and she finally understood what it was, she called it, in Hainanese, the school with the three dolls. The boys who passed through its gates wore white shirts and pants and a striped green tie.

Today, the 'three dolls' - the statue of St John Baptist and the two children continue to welcome boys through its gates.
My boy is now in the last year of his 4 years of secondary education here.

The culture and tradition of a school play a big part in forming our worldview and the kind of adults we become. The songs we used to sing, the school cheers we used to chant on the sports grounds, the performances and plays we put up and watched, and of course the crazy hours put in for exams- these things give shape and texture to our younger days.Although it was madly competitive, the routines of school gave me a sense of calm and stability that was sorely lacking at home.

Now that the boy is in his final year, he is spending more time preparing for his exams. The O Level Chinese Exams have started. His teacher spent at least two weeks doing 'night study' with the boys, and as it was during the lockdown period, this was done online from 8 pm to 9.30pm after the daily lessons. Throughout, she was sending texts to encourage her pupils and even being present on the morning itself to do last-minute coaching. Having been a school teacher myself, it is a very intense process, almost akin to sending kids into battle. We want to equip them as thoroughly as we possibly can.

The other teachers sent words of support in the class chat. I do not remember having the luxury of my own teachers doing that. Maybe it was harder to be personal and comforting in an age when written word technology was practically non-existent.

I was touched by his teachers' dedication. I have heard about the nurturing culture of this school and how boys who pass through its gates become real gentlemen, but now I see it and feel its warmth. For once, I give thanks that he is not in any other school (not even Raffles Institution). There is indeed something here that cannot be replicated elsewhere.
Cierzo · M
I have been teaching for more than twenty years. I have often heard or read false comments about lazy teachers having three months of holidays. Even these days I have read we are on holiday since online teaching here started by mid-March. Those critics used to infuriate me, now I don't care, only the way some people flaunt their ignorance sometimes saddens me.

Those teacher's dedication is really admirable. And I think, at least according to what I see here, that it is the rule rather than the exception. Sadly, not all teachers are like that, and these days students have shared me their complaints about teachers who just sent them pdf files and assignements. That is not being a real teacher. But I do not think we deserve blunt generalisations about being a bunch of lazy bums.

I really like that schools have their personality there, and having being a student at a certain institution becomes a part of who you are. It is not the same here, sadly. In small cities like mine you cannot choose, and in bigger ones family usually send kids to the closest school to home, unless they are really well-off and can choose an elite school.
novembermoon · 51-55
@Cierzo we should do a comparative study of schools across the world....or maybe just start with Singapore and Spain.
I do see that teachers across the world have the same grouses and complaints about workload. Many are burnt out. And home based learning makes it harder. It forces teachers to learn new technology. And I see teaching having to evolve. There will always be black sheep in the teaching field but the public must also know that the work is overwhelming at times.
Cierzo · M
@novembermoon It is true teaching has to evolve. I just wish its evolution was planned thinking on what is better for students, and not improvised (we have had to adapt to online teaching in a fast sloppy way), or based on stupid but fashionable ideas of some smart-ass guru.
novembermoon · 51-55
@Cierzo understand. And probably every country's priority is also different. Everything here is driven by economic objectives. And sadly, teachers do not have a lot of say in educational matters too. Literature has lost its place in the curriculum in a lot of schools here.
That name holds a very special place in my heart too. 😇💙

I couldn't agree more with you on how much a good school, discipline, wearing a uniform, and following a certain way can bring out the best in kids.

Most of my classmates are extremely well placed in their life...some are innovators too. And we all owe it to our prestigious school that molded our characters and made us what we are today.

Beautiful post, my friend! 💙🤗👍
@novembermoon always a pleasure to find your lovely posts, November. 😘💙🤗

Yes, thank you. I've been fine and busy with my son graduating high school this year...lol

How's you? Hope everything is fine at your end! 😇💞
novembermoon · 51-55
@Vivaci yes. Schools re-opened two weeks ago and now he has tests and exams to contend with. Our kids grow up so fast. 😌
Please stay well and happy always. Happiness is a busy solitude sometimes 🍁🌺🌻🌹
@novembermoon I wish your son all the best in his exams. 🙏💛 I'll pray for his success. ☺️🌟

Thanks, sweetheart. So beautifully put...indeed..you are right! I wish you love n happiness too. Stay safe...💐🤗😇😘
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novembermoon · 51-55
@SW-User if we give credit where credit is due and not taint everything with the same brush, maybe the world will be a better place?
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