sleep debt and more sleep debt. i can't seem to shake it off.
i think if we didn't have the need to sleep our days would have so much more time. but that's just leaving in an unrealistic world so oh well.
time is really man's most scarce resource.
i thought the whole debate on Chinese education in Singapore recently was very interesting. how often do you see people rising up to defend the Chinese language? i just think that not very many bother about the language or even bother to speak it for that matter anymore, so indeed it's heartening to see such a response from the public. and i do stand on the side of "no reduction in weightage of Chinese in PSLE". Chinese is already generally viewed poorly in the country now and if it's put down any further in its status in the education system we can say goodbye to the language permanently tens of years down the road.
to be honest, the benefits (to us anyway) of our ASL project isn't about the end product. it's more of the process...i think interviewing members of the public is a rather insightful thing to do. and it really puts you out in the open to experience the bigger world. sometimes school does things to you by confining you to a rather limited environment sheltered and if i would say quite radically different from the real world. we need exposure, yes we do. it's probably the only way we can grow.
brain has exhausted for today (must be due to sleeping at 2am yesterday), timeout for now!
i think if we didn't have the need to sleep our days would have so much more time. but that's just leaving in an unrealistic world so oh well.
time is really man's most scarce resource.
i thought the whole debate on Chinese education in Singapore recently was very interesting. how often do you see people rising up to defend the Chinese language? i just think that not very many bother about the language or even bother to speak it for that matter anymore, so indeed it's heartening to see such a response from the public. and i do stand on the side of "no reduction in weightage of Chinese in PSLE". Chinese is already generally viewed poorly in the country now and if it's put down any further in its status in the education system we can say goodbye to the language permanently tens of years down the road.
to be honest, the benefits (to us anyway) of our ASL project isn't about the end product. it's more of the process...i think interviewing members of the public is a rather insightful thing to do. and it really puts you out in the open to experience the bigger world. sometimes school does things to you by confining you to a rather limited environment sheltered and if i would say quite radically different from the real world. we need exposure, yes we do. it's probably the only way we can grow.
brain has exhausted for today (must be due to sleeping at 2am yesterday), timeout for now!


<< Home