The Anti Neo-Democracy Theorist

Entries from April 2008

Cheers to a liberal arts education

April 30, 2008 · 6 Comments

My college featured in the Straits Times

The Straits Times (Singapore)
April 30, 2008 Wednesday
Cheers to a liberal arts education
BYLINE: Sandra Davie, Senior Writer
LENGTH: 1009 words

WITH her A-level results, Raffles Junior College student Nazish Zafar could have easily attended any big-name American university.

But she surprised friends and family by choosing Carleton College in Minnesota.

The liberal arts college is consistently ranked among the top five in the United States, but is not a familiar name here.

‘Why is it called a college, not a university?’ some asked her.

But Ms Zafar, 24, who graduated last year with a Bachelor of Arts majoring in sociology and anthropology, is glad she stuck with her choice.

A generous four-year scholarship from Carleton was a reason she went there, but she was also sold on the broad-based curriculum and intimate learning environment promised by the college.

And Carleton did not disappoint.

Her courses ranged from Russian language, culture and society to Middle Eastern social theory, and women and the Islamic construction of gender. She did courses in computer science, qualitative thinking, statistics, and video production and editing.

It all added up to a grounding in varied disciplines and taught her to see issues from various perspectives.

Her invigorating undergraduate experience is what liberal arts colleges are known for, and Singapore will be offering the same brand of education through a liberal arts college of its own.

She says she liked the fact that her courses traversed two or three discipline areas, showing students the connections across different areas of knowledge.

For example, National Identity In Israeli And Palestinian Literature - a course she did in her first year - meant reading novels and poetry, watching documentaries, and analysing articles expressing views from both sides of the conflict.

‘It gave me a refreshingly nuanced, multi-dimensional understanding to the region,’ she recalls.

In Year 2, she visited Moscow for three months, living with a Russian family. Her Russian language skills improved by leaps and bounds.

She added two months to that trip to be a volunteer at a community of foster families caring for orphans.

In her final year last year, she and a college mate won a $10US,000 ($13S,600) grant to launch a health education project in Fortaleza, Brazil.

Their Napkin Project aimed to educate women on the benefits of breastfeeding through messages printed on napkins handed out by street vendors.

Ms Zafar, who hopes to work in the social-humanitarian field, says the six-month stint gave her valuable on-the-ground experience.

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Categories: Education · World

Hillary Clinton’s victory speech at Penn

April 28, 2008 · No Comments

Her victory speech after winning Penn with a 9 points victory over Senator Obama: 

Categories: Uncategorized

3 Quick Musings - Wong, Clinton & SDP

April 23, 2008 · 1 Comment

What surprises me not the most are the calls (and counter-calls) for Minister Wong to resign over the MKS incident but more that PM Lee actually actively pursue that line in parliament. By even rhetorically mentioning it, does it only show that PM is trying to actively quell the online cries?  Or could it also be a rhetorical form of (hidden transcripts of) power struggle within high politics in Singapore? How can we read between the lines unless a PAP insider spills the beans? Also, LTK’s silence, while interpreted by PM Lee as an assent to the point that WKS should not resign, was quite indicative as usual. The silence speaks volumes of the contradictions within the very viable opposition Workers’ Party (will my calling for resignation set a precedent for the WP to resign if we do badly in the future)?

Clinton’s convincing victory at the polls in PA have not be celebrated much by the American press. The NYT downright criticized her negative tones and columnists have been hinting that she should go. Quite a wonderful representation of what the press would be when she becomes President or when Obama becomes the nominee. “Hail McCain and Obama, the two honest maverick independent candidates that would restore America’s greatness!” Says the CNN, foxnews and MSNBC. Now, that’s scary.

The SDP’s revamp of its website in terms of design and accessibility is really quite good for a political party. Almost comparable to my favorite political website of the British Conservative Party (But their standards seem to also have decline quite a bit) Maybe the PAP and the NSP needs to up their web design skills a bit?

Categories: Uncategorized

Home School Education and The Reach of the State

April 18, 2008 · 4 Comments

Random Thoughts on Home School Education & Reach of the State

I read with fascination on the phenomena of home schooling as reported in the Straits Times today. Home schooling, as with many things in Singapore, have their own share of critics and myths. Home schooling often does not entail merely studying at home - in America, home schoolers often form their own community, with group activities stressed even as individuals study at home. Many home schoolers attend enrichment classes such as piano and not surprisingly many of them are involved in community and political outreaches to broaden their social circles. The church often becomes a focal point for home school kids - and considering that many students today do not consider their friends in school as the people they necessarily hang out with (think stereotypical church kids, temple kids, street kids, arcade kids, sports kids, gyms kids, game kids, hang out at the mall and waste time kids) ,I wonder how problematic will it be for a Singapore kid about not going to a formal school in light of the former situation.

And the advantage of being a home schooler in Singapore is that unlike suburban America, Singapore is a place where it is very compact, forcing individuals to interact with each other on a daily basis. Of course, this doesn’t mean that home schoolers will interact with their neighbors and street kids, but this is based on the assumption that all home schoolers are introverts because of their educational socialization, which I am not sure whether it is true. With rising concerns of social problems in our education system, I wonder if more Singaporeans will home school their kids.

Yet, the most interesting piece of information for me in the ST article was this section:

“They are also required to clear the National Education quiz, a test of their knowledge of Singapore’s history and the challenges facing it.”

It really opened my eyes to the idea of burden of citizenship. While many people will argue that the burden of citizenship includes paying taxes or serving the nation service, in actuality, the burden of citizenship begins with formal education, where students are supposed to imbue the qualities of a model Singaporean citizen.  It is akin to working on a blank slate. And even home schoolers cannot escape the everyday levels of “orthodoxing” in formal schools. Despite not investing in the same common space in schools, they are subjected to the state’s discipline. They have to internalize the party-state discourse of the past and “the challenges facing it.” They have to become model economizing citizens in their studies and while the state allows the citizen to perform private acts of education upon their sons and daughters, they realize that these home schoolers might forget they are Singaporeans. For education, just as freedom can be stretched and appropriated in Singapore, but please, please, for the sake of Singapore, remember to take your NE pills before heading to the age of 13.

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Categories: Education