Friday, August 27, 2010
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Thank You 3A
Dear 3A,
Thank you for being a wonderful class. You have been a joy to teach! Thank you for being so co-operative and engaged. You were always very willing to learn and to enjoy your lessons.
Here is a link for you, for the topic of volume. This link brings you to a webpage where you can download a virtual measuring cylinder. Try it out when you have time.
http://nationalstrategies.standards.dcsf.gov.uk/node/47798
Take care and have a good year ahead. Study hard!
Regards,
Miss. Sindhu
Thank you for being a wonderful class. You have been a joy to teach! Thank you for being so co-operative and engaged. You were always very willing to learn and to enjoy your lessons.
Here is a link for you, for the topic of volume. This link brings you to a webpage where you can download a virtual measuring cylinder. Try it out when you have time.
http://nationalstrategies.standards.dcsf.gov.uk/node/47798
Take care and have a good year ahead. Study hard!
Regards,
Miss. Sindhu
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Learning Journey to Kampong Glam: Jocelyn's Journal
On 26th July 2010, 3A and 3B went on a trip to Kampong Glam. On the bus, our tour guide, Ms Suzanna, told us a lot about Kampong Glam.
She told us that in Malay, the word "Kampung" means "village or settlement" and "Glam" is the name of a particular tree, which grew in abundance in the area in early Singapore. In the beginning, Kampong Glam was a fishing village situated at the mouth of Rochor River. It became more populated and grew into prominence after the Sultan of Singapore, Hussein Mohammed Shah and the Temenggong signed a treaty with the East India Company in 1819.
Tengku Ali built Istana Kampong Glam in 1840 at Sultan Gate. Tengku Ali was only recognised as Sultan of Singapore by the British, in 1855. By 1911, Singapore’s population numbered over 185,000 with nearly three-quarter of those Chinese; men outnumbered women 8:1. Kampong Glam, during that period was swallowed up as a city with vibrant commerce, but lawless attitudes and a money-making fervour where wealth was more admired over scholarship. It had become, as Raffles had predicted, "the emporium and pride of the East".
In nineteen century, Kampong Glam remains an ethnic district with a strong Malay-Arab influence. It is a place where one will patronise for their Arab-Muslim traditional foodstuff and merchandise. In 1822 "Town Plan", Sir Stamford Raffles allocated Kampong Glam to the Malays, Bugis and Arabs. As trade flourished, Farquhar preferred the business quarter to be centered here at Kampong Glam. Rough justice, robberies, street brawls and stabbings were common.
What we see today in Kampong Glam is a variety of rich heritage passed down from generation to generation. Some of these long enduring traditions are in the form of monuments, trades, cultures and practices. Conservation of places of worship, old school, old dwellings, some of which are still in their original form while others have been refurbished. These rich remains give a hint of the architecture and life style of the early days. Such diverse rich heritage can only come about through a sense of tolerance, sharing and bonding, all encapsulated in the Kampong Glam spirit.
I hope that the tour guide can talk more about Kampong Glam so that I can write more about Kampong Glam, but, it is also a nice trip, because I can learn a lot about the Malays.
She told us that in Malay, the word "Kampung" means "village or settlement" and "Glam" is the name of a particular tree, which grew in abundance in the area in early Singapore. In the beginning, Kampong Glam was a fishing village situated at the mouth of Rochor River. It became more populated and grew into prominence after the Sultan of Singapore, Hussein Mohammed Shah and the Temenggong signed a treaty with the East India Company in 1819.
Tengku Ali built Istana Kampong Glam in 1840 at Sultan Gate. Tengku Ali was only recognised as Sultan of Singapore by the British, in 1855. By 1911, Singapore’s population numbered over 185,000 with nearly three-quarter of those Chinese; men outnumbered women 8:1. Kampong Glam, during that period was swallowed up as a city with vibrant commerce, but lawless attitudes and a money-making fervour where wealth was more admired over scholarship. It had become, as Raffles had predicted, "the emporium and pride of the East".
In nineteen century, Kampong Glam remains an ethnic district with a strong Malay-Arab influence. It is a place where one will patronise for their Arab-Muslim traditional foodstuff and merchandise. In 1822 "Town Plan", Sir Stamford Raffles allocated Kampong Glam to the Malays, Bugis and Arabs. As trade flourished, Farquhar preferred the business quarter to be centered here at Kampong Glam. Rough justice, robberies, street brawls and stabbings were common.
What we see today in Kampong Glam is a variety of rich heritage passed down from generation to generation. Some of these long enduring traditions are in the form of monuments, trades, cultures and practices. Conservation of places of worship, old school, old dwellings, some of which are still in their original form while others have been refurbished. These rich remains give a hint of the architecture and life style of the early days. Such diverse rich heritage can only come about through a sense of tolerance, sharing and bonding, all encapsulated in the Kampong Glam spirit.
I hope that the tour guide can talk more about Kampong Glam so that I can write more about Kampong Glam, but, it is also a nice trip, because I can learn a lot about the Malays.
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