Friday, March 27, 2009

Gangsterism Among School Students

Today we find disciplinary problems and gangsterism among school students. We find young adults breaking laws and many Malaysians generally have a lack of regard and respect for the law.

Although the Ministry of Education viewed the matter seriously and had been seen taking stern action against students involved, steps like expulsion and disciplinary action were not effective or thought students a lesson.

Lately in Kuantan, a Form Three student was kicked by four senior students for not getting drinks while in Kuching a Form Three student was kicked and beaten, including with a kettle, by students still in school uniform in a hostel room.

In Kuala Lumpur, a Form Four student died in hospital after four days in a coma as a result of a vicious beating near his Cheras School due to a tussle over a girlfriend.

Shall we discuss this issue?


Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Best Way to Study by Clifford Morris


Over the past fifty years, there has been an ever-growing body of qualitative and quantitative research evidence suggesting that we do not study in precisely the same way. While this common sense approach towards studying represents a welcomed message for parents and students, numerous teachers continue to teach a large number of their pupils in similar ways, more often than not, by using traditional teaching styles that might appear to be successful for the teacher but unsuccessful for a large majority of the youngsters seated in front of them. I now believe that this is incorrect teaching -- proof that common sense continues to be not all that common within today's classrooms.

My following commentary attempts to address this key issue, while at the same time, to offer suggestions for possible classroom improvement. If teachers require their students to receive domain-specific information in a way that does not correspond with their dominant learning modalities, to perform under classroom conditions that interfere with their preferred learning, or to demonstrate learning in such a way that fails them to use their more dominant intelligences, then such teachers create within their students forms of artificial stress, reduced motivation, and repressed performance. Along this same line of thinking, there is a considerable body of research evidence suggesting that many special education students who have been formally categorized, for example, as learning disabled (LD) are, in fact, not LD students per se but assessed and taught incorrectly in terms of their dominant learning style. Perhaps a more positive way of describing their LD is that they simply learn differently!

And now, after painting a negative but realistic image of numerous contemporary classrooms ... the good news, and the good news is indeed promising! An efficient classroom teacher will tend to teach in many different ways in order to reach all of her/his students. Teaching something only one way (such as lecturing to one's auditory learning channel) will miss all the students who do not learn best in that manner. Simply put for this web comment, good teaching is teaching through a variety of learning channels. Most students can learn the same content. But how they best receive and then perceive that content is determined largely by their individual learning styles. Simply defined, a student's studying style is the way a student processes, concentrates, internalizes and retain novel and often difficult bits of domain specific content knowledge, usually for testing and examination purposes. And as is the case with how one best learns information, many of the same elements, emotional, environmental, biological, sociological, and physiological must also be taken into account when studying.