Monday, January 3, 2011

PEI HWA Secondary School

Part of the program Straits Times (ST) The schools they go home, said parents at a forum organized in the newspaper on Tuesday.
ST deputy editor Bertha Henson said there are plans in the new financial year of teaching e-mail to newspaper articles based on reader interest, which are paid directly.
Details and pricing are being finalized, but the proposal, two types of activities - both for the parents of pupils in primary and secondary schools - you can do at home.
The ST-School Program now reaches students in their journals: The High School student and Little Red Dot (DRL) for those at primary level.
Subscribe schools, benefits, including access to the media activities of the club events, take the sheet as Big Day Out LRD and competitions for readers under way.
"Many parents are familiar with our curriculum asked if something similar on a smaller scale and can be directed to households, so that they get involved in their children's education," said Ms. Henson. "We have to implement the program for five years and have a variety of teaching materials that we think could be shared."
These tools include spin-off publications such as Page 2 manual, Eureka! and The Little Big Book of Stories, all developed by the school program.
These funds were more than 200 parents, the parents, the first forum Street in Central News in Toa Payoh North attended Tuesday raised. For more than three hours, listened to the suggestions of the editors of T in the use of the sheet to take control of their children's English improved.
She also heard from Professor Tan Aik Fong Pei Hwa Secondary School on the use of paper for oral exams and education consultant Sonia ST NSE, which show how different species are used on stationery, in order to help grow has views of young readers and critical questions .
Alvin chick string stretcher spirit schools, also spoke of how to expand the use of existing facilities to the level of learning. "To academically brilliant, can be carried only so far. No man is an island and must be able to connect the world," he said.
Parents told The Straits Times that he wanted to teach their children interested in reading newspapers.
A mother, wife Tseng His Fernando, 36, wanted to try the Straits Times use to her daughter, Elsa, seven, better to train in English. Meanwhile, Mrs. Kelley said Sim, 43, mother of two girls, between 13 and 16: "The language carries the heaviest weighting in the PSLE and O level, it is important that children read a lot, especially newspapers."
Veeraya teacher Uma, 33, who visits the forum, said that the Council has taken, can inform appropriate for small children.
Ms Serena Garcia, Director of the IN and LRD, was funded by the enthusiasm of the parents.
"There is nothing like hearing feedback from users of our equipment to keep thinking about how to improve constantly, what we do," he said.

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