Monday, October 22, 2012

Nov & Dec Holiday HW 2012


TA1
Language Arts
Nov & Dec Holiday Homework 2012
Choose ONE from Section A and ONE from Section B.
Section A:
1)      Read 2 novels OR 2 plays OR 2 poems and write a 300 to 500-word review comparing various aspects of the novels (e.g. the writer’s handling of themes/ character portrayals/ literary techniques/ plot devices).
2)      Read a series of short stories on a particular genre (science fiction, fantasy, gothic, detective  and other genres of fiction) and come up with your own short story of 300-500 words as well as a short prologue that explains how you are inspired by the short stories.
3)      Read a play and write a play of your own. Include a short commentary that explains how you are inspired by the other play.
Section B
1.       Visit 2 restaurants and write a 300-word review comparing your experience (of the food and service).
2.       Watch 2 plays and write a 300-word review comparing them.
3.       Go to 2 exhibitions and write a 300-word review of the differences and similarities between them.

UPLOAD your REVIEWS as comments on the Lang Arts Blog using the following format by latest 31 December 2012:
Jiang Zhifeng of 1C/12: A3) A Play on Singapore Politics

A3) Play that inspired me is ______________________ which I watched on ____. Details can be found at www.aslkflaasdlkfaslj;fl.com

Play Title:
Play:

Jiang Zhifeng of 1C/12: B2) a Review of 2 Restaurants

B2) The 2 Restaurants are Gunther’s at Club Street and  Zhi Char Store at Bedok Blk XX  which I visited on ____ and ____ respectively.

Review:  

Note: The total of time taken for planning and writing is likely to take not more than 5 hours.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Essay questions (not CA)

Dear students

Choose one question. Do it well. 

Print out in Arial font, Font size 12 and 1.5 line spacing. Include Name, Class and Question no. and Question at the top.

Questions: 
1) "Man is a knot into which relationships are tied- friends or family". Discuss. Refer to your text and the real world in support of your answer. 
2) "All that glitters is not gold". How true is this proverb based on your understanding of the real world and your reading of the text?
3) " The quality of mercy is not strain'd.../It blesseth him that gives him that gives and him that takes" -Act 4, Sc 1. Do you agree? Refer to your text and the real world in support of your answer.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Question: Write your intro now!

Question: We should look to the mind, and not to the outward appearance. Do you agree with this statement? Refer to the text and the real world in support of your answer.

Please post your MODEL introduction in response to this post.

Images

Start your essay with an image.

Quotes

Put in your quotes in response to this post.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Paraphrasing Week 10 Mon to Fri

If You Read This Book, You Will Not Get Married

Aug 11, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

A new memoir about divorce is so powerful, dark, and raw that you will run away from marriage just reading about it. Melissa Holbrook Pierson on the radical honesty of Rachel’s Cusk’s Aftermath.

MON
We bought the old farmhouse a decade ago, when we were a new family, buoyed on that promiscuous hope peculiar to young couples: everything will be all right as long as we have each other. And to not have each other was inconceivable.
So when I heard the whispers about the woman who sold us the house—her husband met someone online, leaving her with their 5-year-old and a court order to sell their home, such a shame—I thought it must have something to do with her, this person whose desperate anger roiled the very air of the bank’s closing room. I was in the presence of something so dark and disheveled it repelled me, and I found its manifestation in the garden the next week: a chaos of weeds that, pulled apart, revealed stunted annuals planted in the promise of spring but now forgotten, all but dead. Who would allow things to come to this? I sniffed.

Six years later, it was me sobbing through the exchange of papers and checks in the same room. I understood now, suddenly and quite well. My garden had gone untended for months. Its heedless growth in directions I had not planned stood for the terrible waywardness of everything I had once thought predictable. A relentless carousel started revolving in my mind; if only I could find the explanation for what had happened, the infernal thing would stop and I would finally have some peace, finally eat again and sleep. One night I believed I had caught the ring at last: it was the house itself that had delivered to me and our 7-year-old the identical fate I had so sanctimoniously dismissed years before.

It was not the house. But the garden still represents something in the world-eating passage that is divorce: I met it again in Aftermath, the British writer Rachel Cusk’s brutal evocation of her divorce. “Lately our garden had become overgrown. The beds were drowning in weeds. The grass was long, like hair.”

Divorce is the mother of metaphor. It cannot be met head-on; describing that which it is like offers the only chance to grasp it. Alone, raw, it is a broken egg that drips through your fingers. (See? There I go again.) My own metaphor for destroyed marriage was the two-masted schooner suddenly requiring one to mind tiller and wheel, run up the sails and read the charts, all at once. Hence an impossibility whose only result could be insanity. For Cusk, it is “a jigsaw dismantled into a heap of broken-edged pieces.”

TUE
However it is imagined, it remains one of a few seminal events in life that perfectly cleave the world in two: either you are inside, or out. Either you have experienced its shuddering immensity, or it is still invisible, the crevasse that reveals its depths only after you have fallen in and now wait for the smack that signals bottom. It resembles childbirth, except that when you have a baby you climb, toward a peak obscured by clouds. All you know is that it is apparently endless, a walk of miseries and wonderments admixed.


Cusk took on the mountain first, in 2001’s A Life’s Work. I read it shortly after I, too, had had a child, and doing so was like finally letting go of a breath I had held for a year. Ostentatiously smart, fearless, the author displayed what almost seemed a compulsion to yank the threads of that impossibly pretty doily tatted by convention around motherhood. Of the common advice to “get in touch” with one’s unborn baby, she rejoins, “As my stomach gets bigger I realize that getting in touch with it is about as useful as a field getting in touch with the motorway being built through it.” No sentimental muck here; she forthrightly observes those minute sensations we dismiss as insignificant but are in fact the only truth we have.

Her memoir of divorce displays the same ferocity of intellect, humor, and occasional bad mood. Sometimes, it seems, this woman is simply in a nasty frame of mind. Her litany of complaint and fault-finding (“The blackness of hate flows and flows over me, unimpeded”) becomes tiresome, but so did my own to me over the first year when its whirlpool circled endlessly, reluctant to go down the pipes. Reading Aftermath is like having a flashback to the freakish experience of living through your own death.

Here we go, deep into the vertiginous spiral where the author seeks understanding of something that in its nature resists comprehension: good for phenomenology, not so good for narrative. Cusk knows this, of course; she is of the cerebral breed that is used to thinking their way out of any situation. “If someone were to ask me what disaster this was that had befallen my life, I might ask if they wanted the story or the truth.” Divorce, however, is no philosophical or literary construct: it is an animal one. It is not reeled back into painlessness if only your reconsideration of The Oresteia is especially brilliant, or if the poetry of your description of the bizarrely changed everyday (visit to the dentist, first attempts at dating, search for a nanny) is notably transcendent. That these all appear unhappily transformed does not mean the new world order is a profoundly broken one. Aftermath acutely demonstrates, however, that for a long while it certainly feels that way.

A long, long while, for some: Sharon Olds’s poem cycle Stag’s Leap (forthcoming from Knopf) covers many years during which she was stuck in the undried glue of love for the husband who left. PTSD in verse form, the poems consider, in a stunned tone, what was lost from every angle. “And at a party, or in any crowd, years / after he has left, there will come an almost / visible image of my husband… “ One awaits the poem describing a first date in vain; just for a change, it would have been a relief to glimpse someone else’s “cindery lichen / skin between the male breasts.” After all, it is the momentous “first date post-” that represents both our humanity in all its dunderheadedness—we don’t learn too well from our mistakes, eh?—and the vows we take with life itself, from which love is indivisible.

To the consummate writer (as Cusk spectacularly is), events like divorce issue a challenge: Own me, comprehend me—write me! The first year after my separation was spent feverishly endeavoring exactly that. “Oh, good,” friends said; “this will help you work through the trauma.” No, I thought, that’s what my therapist is for. I know the difference between “working through” and “making literature.”

It turned out I knew nothing of the sort. Only after I read another divorce memoir, Suzanne Finnamore’s Split, did I feel deep gratitude for my editor’s failing verdict on what I thought would be my own metaphysics of divorce: the lava had not yet cooled. Finnamore—who had also written about motherhood, making the two of them possibly the only authors of Nutshell Libraries for the Fifty Percent—waited years before approaching the subject that when fresh is simply too molten.

WED
It is a testament to Cusk’s talent that she was able to make something of it that would not set fire to the reader, only raise the occasional blister; it was she, the newly divorced, who was rendered ash. That is how it always is. But sometimes a phoenix rises. Sometimes the bird takes the shape of a book.


Paraphrasing Practice Week 9 Mon to Fri

Syria’s Rape Crisis about 7 hours agoby Jamie Dettmer Aug 13, 2012 2:58 PM EDT

Jamie Dettmer reports from inside Syria on allegations of vicious sexual violence by the Syrian Army.

She speaks haltingly. Telling the story isn’t easy for the 38-year-old Syrian Sunni Muslim, and she won’t be explicit about the physical details that suggest her friend had been raped before dying. Coaxed by her husband, and with her 4-year-old daughter fidgeting by her side, Saima talks quietly of the slaughter of her husband’s first wife, of her own near-death, and of the rape of a friend in their hometown of Homs in west Syria.

MON Her story adds to mounting allegations that Syrian forces—most especially the pro-government Shabiha civilian militia, the ultraloyal enforcers of embattled President Bashar al-Assad’s regime—are using sexual violence and rape to terrify and punish rebels, adding to the cruelty of an 18-month-long conflict that has seen the government shoot unarmed civilians, including children, and shell populated areas, and has seen the rebels torture and execute captured Shabiha militiamen.

“Syrian government forces have used sexual violence to torture men, women, and boys,” says Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “Soldiers and pro-government armed militias have sexually abused women and girls as young as 12 during home raids and military sweeps of residential areas.”

TUE The stigma of sexual assault runs deep in Syrian culture as it does across the Middle East; rape is shaming and casts dishonor, and it is especially difficult for Salma to speak of such things with a male stranger, making her testimony that much more significant and plausible.

Dressed in black, her head covered by a hijab, Saima displays her scarred hand. She’d raised it instinctively as bullets were flying to shield her daughter when the Shabiha stormed their home and started shooting randomly.

In a house just north of the city of Aleppo where the family has taken refuge, Saima grimaces as she recalls Feb. 11, the day that regular Syrian Army soldiers had come to their pro-rebel neighborhood in Homs. The soldiers searched the houses, smashing furniture and beating the men with rifle butts. That was merely a prelude for the raid an hour later when the Shabiha arrived.

Drawn mostly from Syria’s minority Alawite sect, the thuggish militia has been blamed for many of the worst excesses in the conflict. “I recognized some of them. They were from Alawi districts nearby. They were our neighbors, too,” she says, shaking her head in disbelief. “I was sitting with my ‘sister-wife’ and a friend and our children. The Shabiha ordered us to stand, screamed at us and started to fire wildly.” The assault left the sister-wife dead, as well as all of her four young children. Saima survived along with her own three children (who range from 4 to 10 years old) thanks in part to a militiaman who was sent back to kill them, but who instead rattled off rounds harmlessly into the ceiling

That evening when the Shabiha had moved on, she saw her 26-year-old pregnant neighbor on the street outside. She was dead. “She was naked and had been raped,” Saima says firmly. Saima names the dead neighbor but declines a family name. “It wouldn’t be right, I don’t know what her family would want, they might not accept it,” she pleads. Her husband immediately stresses that their own family name can’t be used either—he fears reprisal, if the rebellion against President Assad should fail.

How did she know her neighbor had been raped? Saima shudders, replying, “It was obvious,” gesturing weakly toward her groin. She doesn’t want to be explicit. She says she doesn’t think her friend was the only woman raped and killed that day. “They raped teenage girls,” she says almost in a whisper, claiming that the next day, she saw naked girls in the hospital piled up, dead and bearing obvious signs of sexual abuse.

WED Last month, the human-rights group Women Under Siege said it had documented 81 instances of sexual assault in Syria since March 2011, with 90 percent of the women assaulted suffering rape and 42 percent being gang-raped. Nearly a quarter had been killed after being raped.

THU Most of the attacks the group recorded occurred in pro-rebel Homs, where the government’s brutal suppression of anti-government protests triggered the rebellion. But rape allegations are more widespread and have been heard in other towns and cities across Syria, including Aleppo, where Free Syrian Army rebel forces have been locked in a savage fight with government forces for control of Syria’s second largest city.

Paraphrasing Practice instructions

Dear 1Cians I've already put up the article. You may wish to do the paragraphs that are in bold and for which the days are indicated at the start. (MON/ TUE/ WED/ THU/ FRI). When you respond with your practice paragraph, please make sure that you indicate it's MON/ TUE/ WED/ THU/ FRI and attach the original paragraph and the paraphrased one below it. Sign off with your name. Do not do all 5 and put it in one response.

Paraphrasing Practice Week 8, Mon to Fri

Sikh Temple Shooting Returns Attention To Military’s White Power Problem by Jesse Ellison Aug 13, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

Researchers and analysts who’ve studied the ties between military service and right-wing extremism weren’t surprised by Wade Michael Page’s attack on a Sikh temple in Wisconsin. Jesse Ellison reports.

New Saxon calls itself a “social networking site for people of European descent”; others have called it Facebook for neo-Nazis. It claims to host 8,436 blogs. There are at least four separate groups intended for current or former members of the U.S. armed forces. On one user’s profile, a list of “dislikes” begins with: “hajis, (aka sand niggers, durkas, arabs.... sure they have many names dirty fuckers.)” His “hobbies” section concludes: “Also working on my fitness/health, as any good WHITE male it is my duty to be ready when the time comes. Luckly I started off a Infantry Marine.”

After last week’s mass shooting at a Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wisc., those words seem even more chilling. The shooter, Wade Michael Page, was a “frustrated neo-Nazi,” turned cold-blooded killer of six, the perpetrator of what the FBI declared was an act of “domestic terrorism.” He was also a veteran of the U.S. Army.

In the days that followed, some of those who had been stationed at Ft. Bragg with Page in the mid 1990s came forward to say that even then he had openly espoused his allegiance to the white-power movement, and that if anything, his time in the military had made him more deeply committed to the cause.

For some of the researchers and analysts who’ve studied the ties between military service and right-wing extremism, the story was hardly a surprise. Daryl Johnson, who until 2010 tracked domestic terrorism for the Department of Homeland Security, told news outlets last week that when he heard early reports of an attack on a temple, he turned to his wife and said, “This is likely a hate crime perpetrated by a white supremacist who may have had military experience.’”

In 2009, Johnson authored a DHS report outlining how “[t]he economic downturn and the election of the first African American president present unique drivers for rightwing radicalization and recruitment.”

MON The report included a section about “disgruntled military veterans,” warning that they were an appealing group to extremists, in part because of their military training. “The willingness of a small percentage of military personnel to join extremist groups during the 1990s because they were disgruntled, disillusioned, or suffering from the psychological effects of war is being replicated today,” it read, citing Timothy McVeigh, the veteran of Operation Desert Storm who killed 168 people in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, as an ominous example.

The report set off a firestorm on the right, with pundits calling it an attempt to smear or even criminalize right-wing free speech. Republicans in the House of Representatives called for Janet Napolitano to step down as head of the DHS. And House Majority Leader John Boehner said, “I just don’t understand how our government can look at the American people and say, 'You’re all potential terrorist threats.’”

Eventually, Napolitano withdrew the memo and, Johnson says, later disbanded his unit, which studied domestic terrorism, neo-Nazis, and white supremacists.

That report was spot-on,” says Mark Potok, a Senior Fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a non-profit, left-leaning civil-rights organization that monitors extremists and militias. “Janet Napolitano, in an act of political cowardice, pulled back that report without any justification. What it said was unquestionably true.”

Asked about the connection between the military and extremists, Potok rattles off a history that goes back decades. In the mid-1980s, the SPLC went after Frazier Glenn Miller, a former Green Beret at Fort Bragg who was running a training camp for members of the Ku Klux Klan. Many of those involved in the camp, which focused on armed combat training, were active-duty Marines and soldiers, and Miller eventually went to prison for having stolen missiles, rifles, plastic explosives, mines, and some 14,000 rounds of ammunition from the military for use by the KKK.

In 1996, the organization reported on what Potok calls a “hive of neo-Nazis inside Fort Bragg,” after a black couple were murdered just outside it by skinheads who were in the military. At the time, a billboard outside the base advertised and gave contact information for the National Alliance, a white supremacy group. It had been rented by Robert Hunt, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division who was actively recruiting for the alliance while stationed at Fort Bragg. (Wade was stationed at Fort Bragg at the same time.)

And in 2006, the SPLC published “A Few Bad Men,” which argued that Pentagon efforts to crack down on extremism within the ranks following the scandal at Fort Bragg had fallen short. Instead, the report claimed, the military—concerned with keeping its enlistment numbers to maintain the troops needed to serve in our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—began to turn a blind eye toward the issue. It quoted Scott Barfield, an investigator at the Department of Defense, who claimed that he had identified and provided evidence on 320 extremists stationed at just a single base—Fort Lewis in Washington State, where, following the 1996 scandal, some 19,000 soldiers had been strip-searched and inspected for tattoos—but only two had been removed.

“Recruiters are knowingly allowing neo-Nazis and white supremacists to join the armed forces, and commanders don't remove them from the military even after we positively identify them as extremists or gang members," Barfield told the SPLC.

According to Potok, the Pentagon repeatedly refused to acknowledge the SPLC’s research and warnings. Potok says the group presented bound volumes of evidence showing specific people’s profiles on social media sites like newsaxon.org, and got 40 congressmen to join them in an appeal to the Pentagon.

“We were shot down each time,” Potok says. “The Pentagon essentially told us we were full of it. There was no problem.”

TUE But in 2008, an unclassified FBI intelligence report, “White Supremacist Recruitment of Military Personnel since 9/11,” warned that white-supremacist leaders were encouraging sympathizers with no documented white supremacist history or tattoos to infiltrate the military as “ghost skins.” The report identified 203 people with military experience and affiliations with extremist groups.

WED In 2009, the Department of Defense quietly reworked its policy, clarifying what, specifically, was banned when it came to shows of support for extremist groups. Where it had previously prohibited “active participation,” phrasing which left a lot of room for interpretation on the part of commanders, it was re-written to say that active participation meant everything from recruitment to online postings.

That report was spot-on,” says Mark Potok, a Senior Fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, a non-profit, left-leaning civil-rights organization that monitors extremists and militias. “Janet Napolitano, in an act of political cowardice, pulled back that report without any justification. What it said was unquestionably true.”

Asked about the connection between the military and extremists, Potok rattles off a history that goes back decades. In the mid-1980s, the SPLC went after Frazier Glenn Miller, a former Green Beret at Fort Bragg who was running a training camp for members of the Ku Klux Klan. Many of those involved in the camp, which focused on armed combat training, were active-duty Marines and soldiers, and Miller eventually went to prison for having stolen missiles, rifles, plastic explosives, mines, and some 14,000 rounds of ammunition from the military for use by the KKK.

In 1996, the organization reported on what Potok calls a “hive of neo-Nazis inside Fort Bragg,” after a black couple were murdered just outside it by skinheads who were in the military. At the time, a billboard outside the base advertised and gave contact information for the National Alliance, a white supremacy group. It had been rented by Robert Hunt, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division who was actively recruiting for the alliance while stationed at Fort Bragg. (Wade was stationed at Fort Bragg at the same time.) And in 2006, the SPLC published “A Few Bad Men,” which argued that Pentagon efforts to crack down on extremism within the ranks following the scandal at Fort Bragg had fallen short. Instead, the report claimed, the military—concerned with keeping its enlistment numbers to maintain the troops needed to serve in our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—began to turn a blind eye toward the issue. It quoted Scott Barfield, an investigator at the Department of Defense, who claimed that he had identified and provided evidence on 320 extremists stationed at just a single base—Fort Lewis in Washington State, where, following the 1996 scandal, some 19,000 soldiers had been strip-searched and inspected for tattoos—but only two had been removed. “Recruiters are knowingly allowing neo-Nazis and white supremacists to join the armed forces, and commanders don't remove them from the military even after we positively identify them as extremists or gang members," Barfield told the SPLC. According to Potok, the Pentagon repeatedly refused to acknowledge the SPLC’s research and warnings. Potok says the group presented bound volumes of evidence showing specific people’s profiles on social media sites like newsaxon.org, and got 40 congressmen to join them in an appeal to the Pentagon. “We were shot down each time,” Potok says. “The Pentagon essentially told us we were full of it. There was no problem.” But in 2008, an unclassified FBI intelligence report, “White Supremacist Recruitment of Military Personnel since 9/11,” warned that white-supremacist leaders were encouraging sympathizers with no documented white supremacist history or tattoos to infiltrate the military as “ghost skins.” The report identified 203 people with military experience and affiliations with extremist groups. In 2009, the Department of Defense quietly reworked its policy, clarifying what, specifically, was banned when it came to shows of support for extremist groups. Where it had previously prohibited “active participation,” phrasing which left a lot of room for interpretation on the part of commanders, it was re-written to say that active participation meant everything from recruitment to online postings. “The bottom line here is that participation in extremist activities has never been tolerated and is punishable under the Uniformed Code of Military Justice,” said Lt. Col Tom Crosson, a Defense Department public affairs officer. “Simply said, extremism has always been incompatible with U.S. military values.” Tom Tarantino, policy director for the advocacy group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, voiced concern that focusing on issues like these in a moment when thousands of service members are set to return from wars overseas will perpetuate negative stereotypes about veterans, making it more difficult for them to readjust to life at home. “The civilian population doesn’t know us, but they think they do,” he told The Daily Beast, saying the disconnect between civilians and the military is the biggest it’s been since at least the period between the World Wars. Though he admits that recruitment standards dropped for a period, he expressed disappointment at the 2009 DHS report, and thinks that in general, being in the armed forces leads to more open-mindedness, not less. “You leave your politics at the door because you’re there on a mission,” he says. “People who come out of the military have a much broader understanding.” That may not be true for everybody. Tom Metzger, a white supremacist and former KKK “grand dragon,” told The Daily Beast that his views on race took seed during his time in the military in the late 1950s, where he says he first spent time with black Americans. Metzger says that while he used to recommend that his followers join the military to get trained in military operations, he stopped pushing that path as the casualty counts climbed in our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to the SPLC, extremist groups have grown at explosive rates in recent years, and today there are some 1,200 various militias operating domestically, up from just 150 four years ago. But Metzger says he’s pursuing the path of the “lone wolf,” advising his followers to grow out their shaved heads, and avoid tattoos or anything else that might indicate they belonged to an extremist group. “We’re not waving flags, or running for office,” he says. “We’re just quietly digging in. It’s like a war. We’re behind enemy lines—you have to operate like a spy operates. And it works.”

THU
“The bottom line here is that participation in extremist activities has never been tolerated and is punishable under the Uniformed Code of Military Justice,” said Lt. Col Tom Crosson, a Defense Department public affairs officer. “Simply said, extremism has always been incompatible with U.S. military values.”

FRI Tom Tarantino, policy director for the advocacy group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, voiced concern that focusing on issues like these in a moment when thousands of service members are set to return from wars overseas will perpetuate negative stereotypes about veterans, making it more difficult for them to readjust to life at home.

“The civilian population doesn’t know us, but they think they do,” he told The Daily Beast, saying the disconnect between civilians and the military is the biggest it’s been since at least the period between the World Wars.

Though he admits that recruitment standards dropped for a period, he expressed disappointment at the 2009 DHS report, and thinks that in general, being in the armed forces leads to more open-mindedness, not less. “You leave your politics at the door because you’re there on a mission,” he says. “People who come out of the military have a much broader understanding.”

That may not be true for everybody. Tom Metzger, a white supremacist and former KKK “grand dragon,” told The Daily Beast that his views on race took seed during his time in the military in the late 1950s, where he says he first spent time with black Americans. Metzger says that while he used to recommend that his followers join the military to get trained in military operations, he stopped pushing that path as the casualty counts climbed in our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

According to the SPLC, extremist groups have grown at explosive rates in recent years, and today there are some 1,200 various militias operating domestically, up from just 150 four years ago. But Metzger says he’s pursuing the path of the “lone wolf,” advising his followers to grow out their shaved heads, and avoid tattoos or anything else that might indicate they belonged to an extremist group.

"We’re not waving flags, or running for office,” he says. “We’re just quietly digging in. It’s like a war. We’re behind enemy lines—you have to operate like a spy operates. And it works.”

Newsweek.com

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Recommended Reading List for 2012

Enjoy these wonderful books that are considered some of the best works of English writing. They remain with you for they bring for you the wonderful moment when you connected with who men really are, when you felt, laughed at, cried with and lingered over the words, the characters, the ideas, the story... Share on this blog your thoughts after you've read this. I'm interested to know how you experienced the book. Students who got A & B: George Orwell's '1984' Shakespeare's 'King Lear' & 'Othello' Students wh got C: Shakespeare's 'Macbeth' William Faulkner's 'The Great Gatsby' Martel's Life of Pi Students who got D & E: Ernest Hemingway's 'The Old Man & The Sea' Jonathan Swift's 'Gulliver's Travels'

Friday, June 1, 2012

Thinking about LOTF

Themes: Power Morality Human Nature Democracy X Autocracy Relationships Think about: In General) What are some of the unresolved issues with regards to the themes? Why do they remain unresolved? Power) Power seems to corrupt. Is this always true? How does that happen? Why does it happen? Why can't man prevent that from happening? Morality) It is difficult to get people to behave morally because it is the right thing to do. Why is that so? Is that always true? Human Nature) Humans are products of their situations, their experiences and nothing else. Is that true? Why or why not? Democracy X Autocracy) Why is it that democracy so far from perfect? Why is democracy a difficult model to manage? Relationships) Why do humans need other humans?

Readings that are helpful

Steven Pinker's fantastic book on Human Nature--'The Better Angels of our Nature'-- is really relevant. I'm only 2 chapters into it and his arguments are convincing me. Do check out http://stevenpinker.com/pinker/content/review-excerpts-better-angels-our-nature & http://www.ted.com/talks/steven_pinker_on_the_myth_of_violence.html AC Grayling's books are easily found in your nearest public library. Very interesting ideas. UC Berkley's website has interesting website with an overview/ introduction to the issue of morality. UC Berkley's one of the universities I wish I could go to...http://tigger.uic.edu/~lnucci/MoralEd/overview.html I will continue posting up more as I research more. If anyone finds anything useful, please post it up as well to share with your friends. Cheers Ms Goh

Thursday, April 26, 2012

I am an EXAM SETTER

Dear 1cians Please post up the compre tests you set. Cheers Ms Goh

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Articles that you have found...

Dear 1cians

Please post up the links of opinion articles that you have found interesting and relevant in terms of the ideas and themes and language used.

1) Power, Democracy, Dictatorship
2) Relationships
3) Human Nature
4) Morality
5) Justice, Law and Order

Questions based on Quotes

1) Theme
2) Question a
3) Question b
4) Questions put by the crazy tormentors: ____________________(names)_________

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Message for 1C

Dear 1C

1) Article Responses 2 per week (1 hour in total)

2) Term 2 Week 1 weekend practice of Compre - in Matrix (1.5 hr in total)

3) Term 2 Week 2 practice of Essay questions by Thursday of Week 2 (0.5 hours-each group i/c of one question)

LOTF Q5

Dear 1C

Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:

5) Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it.

LOTF Q6

Dear 1C

Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:

6)Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people by the people for the people.

LOTF Q4

Dear 1C

Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:

4) ‘Standing for what is right when it is unpopular is the true test of moral character’

LOTF Q3

Dear 1C

Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:
3) Humans are born without moral sense.

LOTF Q2

Dear 1c
Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:
2) Humans naturally work together to achieve common goals.

LOTF Q1

Dear 1C

Type in your Topic Sentences for this question:

1) Humans naturally form cooperative relationships.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Current Affairs Examples for Theme: Leadership

Dear students

Please post relevant examples.

Cheers
Ms Goh

Current Affairs Examples for Theme: Friendship

Dear students

Please post up relevant examples.

Cheers
Ms Goh

Current Affairs Examples for Theme: Human Nature

Dear Students

Please post up examples on Human Nature.

Cheers
Ms Goh

Current Affairs Examples for Theme: Power

Dear Students

Please post up relevant examples on Power.

Ms Goh

Welcome!

Dear guys

Welcome to the TA1 Lang Arts Blog 2012.

We'll be using this fo sharing of Lang Arts info across the students populaion and tutors.

Please respect each other and share and love. The World needs YOUR Lurve :)

Cheers
Ms Goh & Ms Cheah