OGL Titan’s chalet

30 04 2009

Blog Post by PS0801

After the long and tiring days of orientation, the Titans organised a chalet to celebrate the successful organisation of the freshmen orientation. Most of the OGLs were enjoying themselves together with the gamemasters, as the gamemasters also played a major role in making the orientation a great success.

During the Leadership Training Camps(LTC) and OGL training, the students have learnt the importance of corperating with one another, as this is the key to perfecting the freshmen’s orientation 2009.





Attachment to Jiangnan University in China

28 04 2009

Blog Post by Pou Lijuan, FS0703

Photobucket

Not a temple but a school. JIANGNAN UNIVERSITY, located in Jiangsu province, Wuxi.

This is where Kimmy and I, Lijuan are attached to for our 3 months attachment, from the 9th March till 29th May 2009. We are already halfway through and slowly, we gain a better understanding in the Chinese language and environment.

The school compound is relatively clean and well maintained, as they have only moved to this campus a few years ago. Since we are from the Food Science course, we are posted to their School of Food Science. Both of us decided to work on their Bakery and Ingredient Research Department. We are to work with the Year 4 students who are graduating research students. Kimmy’s project will be on Angel Cake while mine will be on bread. Both of them will be having additional ingredients added.

Photobucket

After staying here for the past 6 weeks, we are always looking forward to the weekend outings that consist of a 45-minute bus ride to Wuxi downtown. It is a place where you can find shopping centres, and it resembles Singapore’s Orchard Road.

A Chinese student, who welcomed us from the airport when we arrived, introduced us to a few Indonesian friends. The hostel we are staying in is especially for international students, and over here, we get to meet and make new friends. Our new Indonesian friends introduced us to the shopping area during our first official Sunday outing.

Saturdays have become our cleaning-up-the-room cum laundry-wash days, while Sundays become our outing days. Even though it is always the same walk to the same place and same route every weekend, we are not bored of the place at all, as it is better than cooping ourselves in the hostel room for the whole day. Also, it is only during the weekends when we get to eat REAL GOOD FOOD as compared to what we eat during the school days! We could not accept their type of food initially. However, eventually, we have found food that suits our taste buds but there are limited choices. Surprisingly, they do not eat with a spoon but with a pair of chopsticks or a fork. Most importantly, their food is really very cheap! An average meal would only cost S$1.50. Although it does not look appetizing, it is actually rather edible.

Photobucket

Delivery can be ordered through phone calls to restaurants and they would send it to your doorstep, without any delivery charge!

Many of you should have heard of the astounding amount of pirated items sold in China, such as CDs, VCDs, and branded goods. Guess what? We learnt from my partner that real computer CD-ROMs are hard to get! At only S$1.25 each, these pirated stuffs are super cheap!

Complaints of the unruly China Chinese are commonly heard but when we meet them individually, they are actually polite, friendly, helpful and easy to get along with. Sadly, when we are walking on the road, people of all appearance and ages clear their throats loudly and spit onto the ground. Littering is also a common sight. On one occasion, while we were waiting for the traffic light, a woman who was right in front of us flung her tissue paper up the air and pretended to tidy up her hair.

The weather here is unpredictable. It can be scorching hot one day (29˚C), with its heat stronger than Singapore, and freezing cold the next day (11˚C), with wind blowing at full blast, so strong that we have problem walking. When it rains, it rains the entire day. Nevertheless, we have grown accustomed to the coldness here. It was actually extremely freezing cold on the day of our arrival with us having only a plain jacket on, thus we were asked to shop for warmer pieces of clothing, and we bought a coat each.

In China, with Chinese as the main language, English being uncommonly spoken, our Chinese has improved tremendously, and may unintentionally bring their accent back to Singapore, therefore spreading the use of perfect Chinese…





MB0702 Class Outing to the Fuji Ice Palace

23 04 2009

Blog Post by Norbert Ha 075302H, MB0702

During the term break, the class met up for an outing. Instead of sticking to the old-fashioned way of having chalet and barbeque; we did something different, something new.

 

On a sweltering afternoon, we met up at Jurong East mrt station and headed to Fuji Ice Palace. A sweet escape from the humid weather outside!

 

Upon putting on our iceskating shoes and gloves, we proceeded to the ice rink. I witnessed by classmates promoting, from clinging onto the handrail to ‘walking’ on ice without any support to sliding unsteadily and finally skating. Everyone had a whale of a time!

 

I was later told from some of my friends who work in FIP that the rink was gonna be closed for renovation in the next few days. An Olympic sized rink would then be built in the next 2years. All of us felt lucky that we could skate there for the last time before business stop, especially for the first-timers. People who wish to iceskate can still do so at the one in Kallang, unfortunately a much smaller rink.

 

After circling the ice rink for hours, all of us were pooped and famished. We trained down to City Hall and scouted for a place where we could fill our stomachs. It was not a difficult task. With our stomachs grumbling away, we settled down on the first steamboat restaurant we saw.

 

We cooked and ate and talked and joked and teased and laughed and took pictures and cooked and ate some more. All of us walked out feeling bloated and satisfied.

 

This outing gave the opportunity for us to know each other to a deeper level, strengthening the bond amongst us. I personally enjoyed myself and I’m sure the rest did too! Now, dudes, let the pictures do the talking!

4
1
2
1





Open for Registration: 2009 Intake – Specialist Diploma in Immunology and Infectious Diseases

21 04 2009

For more information, please refer to our website or click on the e-brochure below.





Dinner & Dance 2009 (D&D)

13 04 2009

Blog Post by Francisca, SCL Club

Dinner and Dance 2009 (D&D) was held on the 13th and 14th of March 2009, for the year 3s of SCL(C) and SCL(LS) respectively. This year the D&D was held at Suntec City Guild House and it was a blast. Everyone really had a lot of fun and and was really a memoriable night.




For more pictures of D&D click here:
http://s568.photobucket.com/albums/ss124/sclclub/DnD_09_SCL/





OGL Training 2009

13 04 2009

Blog Post by Francisca, SCL Club

OGL Training was held on 10th and 11th March 2009. It was an event specially to train and prepare a group of people who will be the Orientation Group Leaders (OGLs) for the Freshemen Orientation 2009  which will be held from the 6th to the 8th of April 2009. This group of people were selected during The Leadership Training Camp (LTC), as they really outshine and prove themself that they deserve this role.




During the Training the OGLs played a lot of leadership and bonding games. They even came up with their own oath which they had to follow. The training was a success as the OGLs bonded well, especially with their cheers and they even adopted the name “TITANS”. With Ayyub (CPT 0704) as their OGL king they will surely succeed to be the most enthusiatic and enjoyable bunch of people, which can really promote our school’s name. The TITANS are simply the best!

Click here for more pictures of the OGL training.





NYP-Xinmin Science Mentoring Project

8 04 2009

Blog Post by Cherine Tan, staff

Four students from Xinmin Secondary school participated in a project entitled ” Detection of Genetically Modified Foods of Plant Origin sold in Singapore ” as part of the NYP-Xinmin’s Science and Mentoring project. NYP is proud to mentor these students for the period of 1 year which culmulated in a poster presentation in Xinmin First Science & Technology Symposium and a Bronze award in the 2009 SSEF competition organized by A*Star.

Read the rest of this entry »





Leadership Training Camp 2009 (LTC)

1 04 2009

Blog Post by Francisca, SCL Club

Leadership Training Camp (LTC) is an event held every year in March, where we look for students from our school to become the Orientation Group Leaders in other words OGLs, the Game Masters and also the Registration People for the Freshmen Orientation. This year’s LTC, held on the 5th to the 6th of March, was different as compared to previous years. This time round, we came and stayed one day earlier on the 4th of March for the CMs Bonding. This day was to help bond the EXCOs and the Communitee Members (CMs) of SCL club before the actuall day. This was a very important day as we invited new members to our club and helped to ensure that the bond of our friendship was strong before the campers came in.

During the bonding sessions, we played a lot of fun games from passing food using our mouths to sticking balls on our bodies using kaya to passing the water bomb and many more. Everyone had fun on that day and we really bonded at the end of the day. After all the fun and enjoyable games we headed back to prepare for the camp the next the day.

LTC began on the 5th of March 2009, it was a memorable event as we could see students from different courses interacting with each other. The day started off with the registration followed by the ice breakers where the campers in the group got to know each other better. They also played a lot of fun games like the Da Vinci Code and also the Amazing Race.

Overall it was a fun experience and I really enjoyed myself during the event. Many of the other campers did too.

Click here to see all the other photos for the CMs bonding and LTC