Political change with pen and paper
26 05 2011Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: Politics, Writing
Categories : Uncategorized
Characteristics of Singapore: A foreign perspective
22 03 2011I am in the Gan Eng Seng Primary School in a middle-class neighborhood of Singapore, and the principal, A. W. Ai Ling, has me visiting a fifth-grade science class. All the 11-year-old boys and girls are wearing junior white lab coats with their names on them. Outside in the hall, yellow police tape has blocked off a “crime scene” and lying on a floor, bloodied, is a fake body that has been murdered. The class is learning about DNA through the use of fingerprints, and their science teacher has turned the students into little C.S.I. detectives. They have to collect fingerprints from the scene and then break them down.
[...]
This was just an average public school, but the principal had made her own connections between “what world am I living in,” “where is my country trying to go in that world” and, therefore, “what should I teach in fifth-grade science.”
I was struck because that kind of linkage is so often missing in U.S. politics today. Republicans favor deep cuts in government spending, while so far exempting Medicare, Social Security and the defense budget. Not only is that not realistic, but it basically says that our nation’s priorities should be to fund retirement homes for older people rather than better schools for younger people and that we should build new schools in Afghanistan before Alabama.
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Explained Ravi Menon, the Permanent Secretary of Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry: “The two ‘isms’ that perhaps best describe Singapore’s approach are: pragmatism — an emphasis on what works in practice rather than abstract theory; and eclecticism — a willingness to adapt to the local context best practices from around the world.”
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Full article here.
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Tags: Education, Foreign perspectives of Singapore, Politics, Singapore
Categories : Characteristics of Singapore, Education
Heroes of the environment
27 09 2009In 2007, TIME shone the spotlight on the Earth’s four key groups of environmental heroes: leaders and visionaries, activists, scientists and innovators, and moguls and entrepreneurs.
This topic was revisited in 2008 and 2009, and appears set to be an annual feature in TIME.
Question:
Without scientists and innovators, our environment is doomed. Discuss.
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Tags: Activists, Entrepreneurs, Environment, Politics, Science
Categories : Environment
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