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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Saturday, December 4, 2010

How to Access My Other Blogs

Please visit my other blogs:

1.  http://nekosan-nekosan.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's Hq / Literature Hq
2.  http://kuronekosan-nekosan.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's second Hq
3.  http://nekosansclassroomlessons.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's lower secondary literature Hq
4.  http://kuronekosan-eigo.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's reading comprehension Hq
5.  http://kuronekosan-summary.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's summary writing Hq
6.  http://kuronekosan-eigo-w.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's writing Hq
7.  http://kuronekosan-no-hashi.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's vocabulary Hq
8.  http://eikaiwa-oral.blogspot.com/ - nekosan's el oral Hq

Thank you for your time.

                      My highly energetic Siamese friend - Sammy. 1999 - 2010.

Monday, November 8, 2010

2011 - Calendar Dates for English / Literature in English (Correct as at 4 November 2010)

01. EL MRL Week 28 March - 1 April [5 days]
02. EL O Level Preparatory Oral Examinations - 18 April to 20 April [3 days]
03. EL Normal Academic / Normal Technical Preliminary Oral Examinations - 21 April [1 day]
04. Review of English Preliminary One - 1 June to 3 June [3 days]
05. Secondary 4/5 English Revision Programme - 6 June - 7 June [2 days]


06. English O Level Preliminary Oral Examinations - 8 June [1 day]
07. Secondary 3 English Revision Programme - 9 June to 10 June [2 days]
08. English N Level Oral Examinations Hot-housing - 8 July to 15 July [6 days]
09. English O Level Oral Examinations Hot-housing - 11 August to 25 August [10 days]
10. English Secondary 3 Oral Examinations - 12 September [1 day]


11. English Secondary 2 Oral Examinations - 15 September [1 day]
12. English Secondary 1 Oral Examinations - 16 September [1 day]
13. English Secondary 1-3 Oral Examinations (make-up) - 22 September [1 day]
14. Public Speaking / Oracy Workshop and Invitational - 31 October - 4 November [5 days]

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Terms 3 and 4.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

REMEDIATION LESSON RECORDS OF KURONEKOSAN 2010

Term 2 week 10.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 9.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 8.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 7..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 6..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 5..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 4..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 3..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 2..2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 2 week 1.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 10.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 9.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 8.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 7.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 6.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 5.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 4.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 3.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 2.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Term 1 week 1.2010 English and Literature by Yeo Yam Hwee

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Feasting at Home 9 September 2010


    Yes, even my cats know how to wait for their turns to feast. Dolly is seen here waiting patiently as always. She is by no means meek, in case you try to nail this now to personality.

    Dolly keeps at it, even when her bowl is idlely awaiting her.  Sometimes, cats are unpredictable.

    Finally Dolly begins her feasting. 

                      She nibbles and nibbles as she feasts...dainty as ever.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Remembering SNOWY


    There was always the other perspective...

    My friend

Movie Time - The World According to Garp


                             Watch the movie instead by Robin Williams and Glen Close

Monday, September 6, 2010

The Kuroneko Icon

                                                                    When you are a student, studies always comes first.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

At the Reception Hall of the Black Box - 3/4 September 2010

    An island is born...the hard work of the MRL students.

                      "Monster" Gerald and Shi Jin -  putting their acts together to repair the brown
                      pillar.

                      Serious Reading for Fiona? 



    The MRL team which has created something from nothing.
    Louis, Hafeezan, Monster Gerald, Monster tamer Eunice, Fiona and Shi Jing. 

More snapshots at the Black Box - 3/4 September 2010


    The flurry of activities at the entrance of the cargo lift - Black Box, NLB Bras Basah.


                      What goes in first and what's next to maximise the use of space in the lift.

    Caught the MRL people in the midst of all the actions after the unloading of the cargo?

    MRL members begin their setting up of the display items in the display / reception hall. 

                      The attention paid to making the details look appealing to the visitors. 

    Louis and Hafi  landed with the Quality Control task - they have to make sure that all the pillars are completely draped with cloth.  "Finished by 2 p.m. sharp!" 

                      Eunice has to make sure that the black and brown buns of rocks are all checked,
                      taped and then to be stucked onto the surface of the ROCK CASTLE. 

    Easy to make.  Easier to put together.  Easiest to make attractive.  And then...the best part is...minimum cost.  

Mad About Drama - MRL's Reduced-Recycled-Reduced Exhibit Display at Black Box - 4 September 2010

       One for the album. 
    Attention and attraction from the audience.

    Seriously...I am quite excited about serious visitors to the exhibition area. 

    The neglected angle... a new perspective.

                      Island trip dry please

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

1127 Preliminary Examinations 2.2010 Paper 2 by Ms Lim Soo Heng on Shark Conservation by Gruber and volunteers

Kuronekosan's Suggested Summary for Question 13:

Gruber and his team of volunteers at his research centre [A1] perform shark research and conservation. [A2] The volunteers execute most of the grunt work and hands-on research, [A3] spending long moon-lit nights, rescuing netted lemon sharks at Bimini’s North Sound. [A4] They cautiously untangle sharks and [A5] quickly deposit them for examination in a pen [A6] by weighing, measuring, tagging and snipping their dorsal fins for DNA studies [A7] to chart their pedigree. [A5] Then they are released. [A8] For some twenty-five years, Gruber [A9] has amassed the largest and most detailed database. [A10] He learns how sharks affect their environment and [A11] what they need from it confirms the life-giving nature of mangroves. Gruber is concerned with [B3] the complete destruction of mangroves via [B1] a controversial on-going North Bimini Island mega resort construction [B2] of condos, a marina and a casino, and proposals for a waterside golf course. [B4] Prized primarily for their cartilage-ribboned fins, [B5] approximately 73 million sharks perish annually as [B6] finners remove their fins and [B7] discard them callously in the ocean. [150 words]

Monday, July 12, 2010

Perthian Sean Ng makes his presence felt at St. Hilda's


Ummairah hard at work and really going on out for the paper.

Jazreel Soh working to stay awake.

The future professor Wong Zuo Wei pondering his next move.



Saturday, June 12, 2010

How to access my other blogs?

These are the web addresses to my other blogs:


[A] eikaiwa-oral.blogspot.com - Paper 3 Oral Communications - Lessons and Notes
[B] kuronekosan-eigo-w.blogspot.com - Paper 1 Essay and Situational Writing
[C] kuronekosan-summary.blogspot.com - Paper 2 Summary Writing
[D] kuronekosan-eigo.blogspot.com - Paper 2.Comprehension
[E] kuronekosan-nekosan.blogspot.com - An extension of Nekosan's Corner
[F] nekosan-nekosan.blogspot.com - The ORIGINAL nekosan's corner since 2007

Please use these addresses with consideration and discretion.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Dunman Secondary School 2008 Passage B

Paragraph One
Many parents feel stressed when their children sit high-stakes examinations like the Primary School Leaving Examination or the O or A levels. They feel responsible for their children’s performance. Even balanced parents, who understand that their role is mainly a supportive one, feel as stressed as though they are taking the test themselves.

Paragraph Two
Schools should be an ally in the grueling preparation for this major race. Unfortunately, many see their role differently. Many schools use shock scare tactics that are remarkably out of date. I am talking about the habit of many schools to set mid-year-examination papers of an unduly high level of difficulty.

Paragraph Three
A friend who is a full-time mother and coaches her son personally was aghast when he scored just above 50 in his Mathematics paper in a mission primary school. However, the teacher assured her that it was a very good score, considering the average score across the entire school was 40-something. In other words, more than half the school failed the paper.

Paragraph Four
Many schools set mid-year examination papers at an unrealistically high level of difficulty, deliberately to “jolt” students and parents into a state of panic to work harder for the PSLE or O level examinations. When the preliminary examinations roll around later this year, the same pattern will repeat itself.

Paragraph Five
Thousands of students will be in tears over unwonted failing grades. Thousands of parents’ stress levels will rise, fearing their children will do as badly in the PSLE or O levels, as they did for their preliminaries. I am not a pedagogist, but it seems sheer bad educational practice to deliberately set an examination paper that seeks to fail most students. That is not education; that is psychological manipulation of a rather negative and perverse nature.

Paragraph Six
This practice of setting punitively difficult examinations in schools has been around for years. Schools justify it by saying that a little bit of failure spurs students to try harder. The practice results in better grades, they may argue. However, people who argue this forget the impact of repeated failure on a child’s motivation and self-esteem. Top students who score 75 instead of their customary 90 in a particularly difficult paper may indeed feel motivated to work harder to bridge the gap. But what about the impact of a repeated failure on the average child? A borderline student who fluctuates between a B and C, is likely to be pushed into a sea of red ink when confronted with an exceptionally difficult examination. Imagine the impact of getting four straight Ds in June, four months before the PSLE examinations. Demoralised, goaded by fear, the child works harder. Teachers raise the spectre of failure to urge the child to try harder. Tutors add on extra sessions.

Paragraph Seven
My question to those principals and teachers out there blithely setting examination papers they know most students will fail in: is the child, in such a state above, in a good frame of mind to take a high-stakes national examination? Some principals and teachers who use this “fail-them” examination scare tactic will point out that it has worked for years, and raises the school’s average scores in PSLE. My retort to that is simple: Your school’s aggregate average grades may improve, but how many vulnerable children’s self-esteem have you destroyed in the process? Just as pertinently, how many children’s zest for learning have you destroyed? How many individual students ended up doing worse, not better, because of anxiety and stress?

Paragraph Eight
The Education Ministry should monitor and discourage this perverse practice. Guidelines should spell out the difficulty level of school preparatory examinations, to align them with the actual standards of milestone examinations. Schools with large numbers of students who consistently fail mid-year and preliminary examinations, but who go on to do well at PSLE or O levels, should not be praised for their students’ “improved” results, but should instead be questioned on why their internal school examinations are so out of whack with the national ones.

Paragraph Nine
Punitive examinations designed to fail students based on warped ideas of human motivation should have no place in Singapore’s education a system today.


The above passage discusses the effects of “sure fail” examinations on students, parents and schools.

Using your own words as far as possible, summarise what the author thinks are the effects of setting “sure fail” examinations and what should be done to discourage such practice.


USE THE MATERIAL IN THE PASSAGE FROM PARAGRAPHS 5 TO 8.


Your summary, which must be in continuous writing (not note form), must not be longer than 150 words (not counting the words given to help you begin).

Begin your summary as follows: One effect “sure fail” examinations bring about is… [25 marks]