Unlearned skills.

…while the school girls in this country are learning that mylonite is a breccieated metamorphic rock frequently found in a fault zone (to recycle a phrase), they are learning nothing about how to keep their future marriages intact.

Likewise, the little boys in this country are learning nothing about how to be better future husbands and fathers.

Kids also learn nothing about the importance of a positive outlook, especially how it affects other people. They don’t learn about setting goals, or managing risk, or discerning the difference between truth and lies in the media and in person.

— Scott Adams, Unlearned Skills.

What do you think? Does it hold true for Singapore?

Why I am in favour of code-switching.

I’ve been tossing these ideas around in my mind for awhile about the place of texting in school. Now that I have the opportunity to use chat rooms and discussion forums in my high school English classroom, the thoughts have skyrocketed! If I allow text-ling (sic) and lowercase proper nouns and smileys and unconventional punctuation, am I doing a disservice to my students?

— Ruth, Standard English vs. Texting.

This is something that most teachers of English/Linguistics grapple with most of the time.

The writer provides the answer and its justification somewhere in her post, so be sure to read it. In any case, it fits in with my own gut feeling about code-switching, and making students aware of the need and necessity to use appropriate forms of English at distinct moments e.g. writing a formal letter to request for employment versus ordering food at the canteen.

What time should school start?

As far as I know, that discussion never went anywhere. Parents and teachers said a lot about it; a few doctors chirped up about the importance of adequate rest; some principals were interviewed for their opinions; and a few eccentric people even talked about the necessity of the hardship of getting up early as an essential character-building tool. But in the end most primary schools continued to start at the traditional time 7:30 am.

Back to the future. Recently my wife and I attended the orientation programme of my son’s primary school (he begins Primary One next year). We learned that while the school officially started at 7:30 am, all the kids were to be in school by 7:10 am sharp.

— Mr Wang Says So, The Little Kiddies and their Beauty Sleep.

Personally, I believe school should start later, and my belief is backed up by scientific evidence:

However, this whole debacle about school start times can be (again) effectively eradicated if the idea I proposed yesterday kicks off.