Doing well in the PSLE of Singapore

PSLE. Primary School Leaving Examination are the first educational hurdle of all Singapore students and has been a staple of our enduring educational system since its inception. So what’s all the fuss over the PSLE’s? First and foremost, it dictates the secondary schools that a child can go to. Secondly, it dictates the stream that a child will be studying as well. The current secondary school streams are Express, Normal Academic and Normal Technical.

So how do you support your child in this endeavour?

I’ve been tutoring kids for the last 15 years and there are 4 main categories that characterizes a successful PSLE candidate.

  1. Intelligence
  2. Gumption
  3. Stamina
  4. Determination

Intelligence

Developing the intelligence of a child. What are the do’s and don’t’s? The first thing I find that a child do very well is the ability to acquire information. Their rate of learning is ferocious as compared to us adults. I always find that the weaker students has parent’s who underestimate the learning velocity and potential of their child. Quality of information, and the rate of disbursement of information to the child are important for the development of the intelligence of the child. Useless information leads to refuse in the brain. And a slow learning rate makes them lag behind their peers. Things parents need to avoid like the plaque. The PSLE score is heavily linked to the intelligence of a child. And rightfully so.

How do we develop the intelligence of a child?

  1. The simplest and cheapest ways to teach a kid is to go to a library. Instill the virtues of the public library system. This old school method still has a few tricks up its sleeves and are still a viable way of acquiring superb materials. Enrol your kids in interactive courses organized by the library. They generally have reading classes for kids, or introduces new interesting books to make a bookworm out of your child. These classes also tend to involve socializing for your child, and that is an awesome by-product of making more friends and learning social skills.
  2. Read to your child every night. By far, the most effective way of disbursement of information. Take 20 mins out of your hectic lifestyle. Pick any topic and start reading. Your child will learn diction, as well as gaining knowledge in the process. Therapeutic, and bonding with your child as the by-product which works in your favour far down the path of a healthy relationship with your child. What else can you ask for?
  3. Games. I have always heard parents tell me that their kids play too much games and not studying enough. True enough. But I have to say, in moderation, games does provide an intelligence boost that cannot be acquired otherwise. Games can be divided into three distinct forms. Traditional board games, computer games and physical games like basketball. They all have their merits and again, used in moderation, gives an edge to children both mentally and physically. Games teaches kids a passion to persevere, to win or to lose gracefully, to solve problems, to improve hand-eye coordination, etc. The list is too long to talk about here but I think you get the picture.
  4. IQ tests. These are the tests administered by MENSA. We don’t need to test our kids IQ, we just want them to acquire a love for solving IQ tests. Just like in the show “The Da Vinci Code” where Dan Brown weaves his tale out of codes and IQ type of quests, the mystery and intrigue can be intoxicating to your child. IQ questions tends to develop a heuristic skill that requires out of the box solutions. Again, we are living in a highly paced evolving society that requires this skill set to properly survive as we can never anticipate what will happen tomorrow. So, definitely a worthwhile skill to have for you child.
  5. Music and the arts. I have never once thought that music nor the arts can be bad for anyone. Economically, it might be a challenge. But intellectually, it can be stimulating and promotes creativity. Singapore have invested heavily into the arts in recent years. New museums, galleries, art schools as well as a budding local arts community are starting to transpire our 20th century Singaporean hardwork into a 21st century First World culture. Take your child to an art museum, go for a musical, enrol in an arts class. Get the creative juices going and maybe find a hidden Michelangelo or Yo Yo Ma in our midst.
  6. The News. How current is your child to the news? Current affairs are an important but often neglected development in a child’s scope of education. Ask your child what happened today and involve them in the latest developments of the world. In this decade, the internet has linked our lives into current affairs that we cannot let our child be ignorant in this topic. Twitter and facebook dictates so. Social networks are abuzz with the latest news and links people tighter than ever. If we don’t know what happened today, we are just simply a non-participant in the society. And that is where our child needs to be. To be a participant in our society and have a voice in this world. It is simply not enough to just exist anymore with our global connections.
  7. New technology. Ever heard of first adopters? These are a bunch of people who live to buy the latest technology. It is obvious how techonology can help making your kid smarter. The latest technology always creates high interests in the minds of children. Since kids are pretty new to this earth, its only natural that they should get the latest. They also seem to get it faster than we do don’t they? As in, kids always seem to get a gadget running in no time, whereas adults takes forever. Now how do we switch this on again? Buying the latest technology and making it available for children to use creates a culture of always knowing what is the latest. Having the latest technology always creates winners, and don’t take my word for it, most wars are won by countries that have the latest technology of their times.
  8. DIY. Do-It Yourself. How many times have you let your child do something and you not interfere? For example, get an order at McDonalds for the family? Sometimes, parent’s have a tendency to over-protect their children. You have all the right to, but draw a line to where that should stop. One day, your child will be a father/mother. How do we teach them to become one? By letting them do things on their own. And insist that they finish the job. But start them off slow and only on the right attitude. Don’t make them do things they don’t like. Dishes, laundry, taking the rubbish out. Or things that are dangerous. Boiling water, drilling, sharpening the knife are a definite no-no. That’s just counter-productive. Let them do things that make them feel like they are adults. Children loves to be mini-us, and takes pride when we approve of it and respects them as one. Let them order what they like, give them tasks that makes them excited. They might not do it well right off the bat, but hey, its their first time so give them some slack. They’ll get it right soon enough. And yes, they’ll turn out to be excellent parents because you showed them how to be one.

Disclaimer: The above can be applied to any child doing PSLE in Singapore. When I am talking about intelligence, I am not talking about gifted children whom are naturally intelligent. There are such kids but I have often been asked why some gifted kids don’t do well in the PSLE, and some do pretty well. I shall explain this later but the intelligence I am talking about are more generalized.

Meaning, any child who are capable of solving mathematical sums, understand scientific fundamentals and are capable of holding a conversation with their peers in a common language. This generally means almost 95% of PSLE participants will have the intelligence to pass the PSLE well. However, in the last 15 years being a tutor, I have seen these 95% and there are a wide varience in the ability to perform well due to external factors that are beyond their scope of intelligence. These variance can be due to parent’s educational background, the way they are brought up, their peers and simply, the schools that the child attend and the culture of their schools plus teachers and principals.

Gumption

Initiative and resourcefulness. These are the qualities that will create intelligence in a child. Students that show gumption generally do much better in their PSLE. Simply because they seem to find out more than their peers, as well as makes the best use of their time. Initiative creates students who study by themselves, find the relevant information by themselves and start their own studying when the need arises. Autonomy to operate before you tell them to do it. Resourcefulness on the other hand is to find what they need by themselves. Or make things happen with whatever resources they have. A real life MacGyver.

So how do we cultivate gumption in students?

We create a reason for them to start being serious with their studies. Prompt them of what they need to do. Give them a timeline of when they should start. I got a new Primary 5 student a year back. She had a bad mentality towards studies. When I asked her how come most of the question she did was wrong, she replied, “You mean I must get them all correct?” She did not care if she did well in her studies and had no idea what PSLE entailed. As far as she was concerned, computer games was her be-all-and-end-all. Then slowly, I slid in reasons why students should do well in PSLE during her classes. How a failure could mean a disastrous career in Singapore. And most importantly, what Primary 6 students do to get good grades in PSLE (meaning, 6-10 hrs of studies a day is a normal occurance) and when will they start preparing to do so much work. That was one year back. So its January now and she is still a student of mine. Guess what? She put her hand up the other day, and asked, “Can you print out more questions for me to do and I do it with my friend? And can I come over to ask questions if I don’t know how to do the sums?” And guess what? She did come back for extra lessons with me this week. Very encouraging indeed.

So what transpired? She woke up somewhere down the line last year and said to herself that she needed to do something about it. I am pretty sure she put a time she started to work harder. All I did, was to seed that thought that she needed to do something and a timeline of how it should be done. Very Inception indeed. But it worked. I don’t think there is a point in telling off children if they don’t study. They respond much better if they saw the need to do it themselves. The fire within will always burn hotter than the fire without.

Stamina

Stamina refers to the ability to put in the miles. Psst, the secret to awesome PSLE scores? 6-10 hours of pure studying. No complaints. No discomforts. Full focussing. So how does a child sit there relentlessly for the whole Primary 6 and knock in 10 hours of studying time? By starting them off young. The analogy to a marathon makes this easy. No one can run a full marathon without training and gaining stamina. This accumulation of stamina comes about by running 1km, increasing it to 2km, and then 3km, gaining higher endurance along the way, over months and years, and keep on moving the ante up till you hit the full monty. There’s is no other way of saying this but, for any child to do well in PSLE, they need to put the miles in. And the magical number is 10. 10 hours of studies every day. So start with 1-2 hrs during their Primary 5 holidays, then move it up to 3-4 hrs and keep on increasing this till it hits 10. Here’s a warning, don’t expect this to happen every day. Have some rest days and keep their mind fresh by doing something fun. They are afterall kids. They do much better if you start this regime earlier, during Primary 2-3. As with more practice and consistency, they tend to get better at keeping their energy high when they reach Primary 6 and need to clock in the hours.

Determination

All the above comes to naught without determination. The belief that it is possible to score high in PSLE is more important than everything that I have said so far. I have taught students that are very determined and some that aren’t. The first group tends to score higher, with all other factors being equal. Children tend to do well in things that they can believe in. They see a reason to aim higher. Nevermind if they don’t hit the mark, but aiming high at least gets them a better grade than one that aims low or worse, don’t have ant aim to begin with. So we have to be careful of the things that we say to them. Positive reassurances are a must. Its not good enough that we say it, we have to actually believe in it too. Optimism always trumps pessimism when it comes to studies.

So how do we instill determination in a child?

2 important skill sets has to be introduced to the child. A challenge. And the need to complete the challenge. Again, the methodology is much like the same as the stamina methodology. Start off with small challenges. But make sure the child does not give up. When they succeed, acknowledge them. If they fail, analyze the reason with them too. The important thing is not to give up till they suceed. Move up the ranks to harder challenges and soon enough, they will be determined enough to make sure they complete their own challenges.

In summary, the PSLE awards those who deserves it. With proper preparation and planning, it can be triumphed. I do believe all candidates can achieve a good PSLE grade. The reason for any divergence can only come from a lack of those qualities mentioned above. Of course, there are some factors beyond control, but I have seen students who started off wrong but finishing strong for the PSLE. Proper guidance and advice where it is needed is important to correct what is wrong.

What else?

We can help by making the environment conducive for the child to study in. A well lit, quiet and ventilated room. A properly organized study with all materials in easy reach. When every second counts in Primary 6, efficiency is everything. Keep a healthy diet and before you know it, the PSLE’s over.

Tutor Punggol English Mathematics Science Tuition
Our Punggol Tutor at eduKate SG Small tutorial classes for Primary School English, Math and Science tuition.
Punggol Tutor Primary English Math Science Tuition
Tutors marks students work and makes sure they are correct.

Punggol English Math Science Female tutor Tuition Small Group

edukate punggol tuition english science math psle
Punggol English Tuition Dunman High School IP Programme Singapore

the 4 pillars of learning

So with the need in the 21st Century to be highly educated comes the need to provide an education that befits the dynamism of such an aim.

Society changes rapidly, with the industrial revolution going the way of the dinosaurs, the digital revolution maturing and now, the social revolution is upon us with Facebook, Twitter and forums gathering no moss with such an aggressive momentum onto our current lives. Everyone is a friend of someone now, and information travels around the globe faster than the blink of an eye.

Students are starting to mature in this age as well, incorporating digital elements early in life to be social individuals, exchanging thoughts and communicating with these tools. No longer are we surprised that our students approach us and know so much more than yesteryear. No longer are we surprised that they gulp information and understand the intricacies of the fabric of life.

So what do we do with such changes? It would be foolish not to keep up and make changes that would take advantage of these changes. Never sit still and let technology overcome us, and turn us into the relics that would make age gaps look ominous, outcast adults from their children and have our society alienate itself between the young and poor. This is where a page from United Nations website started looking very relevant to our lives, which I have included in this article as follows:

The following are an extract of an outline with regards to education as stated in United Nations website:

http://www.unesco.org/new/en/education/networks/global-networks/aspnet/about-us/strategy/the-four-pillars-of-learning/

“The four pillars of learning are fundamental principles for reshaping education:

Learning to know: to provide the cognitive tools required to better comprehend the world and its complexities, and to provide an appropriate and adequate foundation for future learning.

Learning to do: to provide the skills that would enable individuals to effectively participate in the global economy and society.

Learning to be: to provide self analytical and social skills to enable individuals to develop to their fullest potential psycho-socially, affectively as well as physically, for a all-round ‘complete person.

Learning to live together: to expose individuals to the values implicit within human rights, democratic principles, intercultural understanding and respect and peace at all levels of society and human relationships to enable individuals and societies to live in peace and harmony.”

That is where we have to take note, to participate in the global economy and society, we have to keep ourselves not only mentally challenged, but physically fit as well. To keep upgrading ourselves to the new tools and skills, and never to stop changing ourselves, i.e to move with the times. Evaluation is the reset button of our lives. Re-evaluating our worth, our knowledge, and what new skills we need to keep ourselves relevant are the important points of what is written above.

So what are we doing at eduKate? We have never once stopped evaluating our skills and upgrading our techniques and tools. In 2014, there will be another suite of changes that will be implemented from Nov 2013 all through to Feb 2013. These comprises with a move to a new premise, new equipment for the students, and also new ways of teaching. Again, evaluation is the reset button we have, which means, we will move ahead with what works, and delete those that don’t, which was exactly what we have done in 2013. With positive outcome for our students and resulting with a group of positively happy parents.

Of course, the academics are not the be-all and end-all of a holistic education, which we are all too aware of. That is where we strive to keep our students well rounded and relevant, for the future is a constant question mark, and the best the students can do, is to be fleet footed and all ready for what is about to happen.

A sign of things to come. The Primary Levels

This is the new website of eduKate, revamped and all out to improve students. But before we start the next season, we shall wrap up this year with this article.

2014 is coming, and we will have some changes to our classes. This is in relation to the outcome of the classes that we had in 2013. The most important change will be to organize our  classes to fit the characters of the students. Amongst the changes, we will also be improving and implementing new techniques in our teaching. For English, prototype learning from tablets, increased exposure (reading more books, acquiring more knowledge) to classical writing with emphasis on literature structural fundamentals and application to creative writing. For Mathematics, heuristic applications for word problems will be taught with the use of logical deduction. Speed training when attempting sums with the use of stop watches. For Science, there are no changes except for a higher usage of videos to show experiments and application of knowledge gained.

Lessons learnt from 2013:

Primary 1-3 levels

The lower primary levels are consistently scoring in the 80-90++ bracket for their classes. Their classes are based on 5 pillars of fundamental education.

  1. learning
  2. repeating
  3. memorizing
  4. categorizing
  5. and finally, an evaluation of these skills in the next lesson.

In 2013, the biggest problem was to make the students memorize their lessons. No surprise as the 21st century is inundated with new technology that distracts children. Playstation, xbox, internet, iPhone and all the new apps that makes games easily accessible robs studying time from students. The concentration levels are lower now then the last decade in children between the age of 7-11, with so much things to distract them and children now are more social than before.

How do we counter that? We use the same technology that gets them distracted to become tools of learning. We have iPads, iPhones, kindle, AppleTV, computers and full internet connectivity incorporated into our teaching.

But of course, once we have their attention, nothing beats the age old ways of learning. Teaching from fundamentals, full use of assessment books, and when exam time approaches, judicious use of past year exam papers.

Primary 4 levels.

Our primary 4 class did very well this year. Their median score are within the 78-82 range for English, 80-85 for Math, and 79-82 for Science. This result comes from two reasons that we strove very hard to incorporate right from the start of the year.

reason 1:

The classes were tailored to the nature of the students. They were grouped into two main groups. First group are predominantly made up of students that are constantly participating in class activities. The second group are made up of students that are quiet but worked hard when we give them their tasks. The first group would prefer learning by talking with the tutors. The second preferred learning from doing more sums. This we tailored our classes to and the results were astounding. New comers at June 2013 had their results from a score of 60-65 jump to a score of 80-85. What to learn from here? Not every student responses the same way to one way of education. That does not mean they aren’t any good, it just means that there are classes that we need to tune to make them perform. custom classes are the way to go for 2014.

reason 2:

As the school term is getting shorter and exams are happening earlier, we changed our strategy from 2012 to 2013. We got the students to learn their syllabus faster and earlier in the year. We also changed how our information is delivered. Instead of just getting the students to do more sums and more homework, we made them strategize their thought process into two main processes. 1) the reason they are learning that skill, and 2) remembering what they learnt so they don’t have to revise it again and waste time relearning. this is inline with the curriculum of the ministry, based on the premise of learning it once, and moving onto harder, more proficient skills next.

Grouping these classes to suit students’ personalities created a group camaraderie. Meeting up for lessons week after week fostered bonds between students and we encouraged the brighter students to help out, and the weaker students to ask. We always found that the first (most important) thing to do in any class, is to ask. Once students gets past the fear of raising their hands, they will improve tremendously. Clearing doubts and gaining confidence are right up the tree of learning.

At Primary 4, students are caught between gaining confidence and also being socially accepted by their peers. That’s two opposing problems that any child can have. Without confidence, they might end up being an outcast with their peers. This age are critical ages where students feels aware of their surroundings. Capable of having great friends and socializing. They are like mini adults, a bit insecure of what next and hoping what they do will be acceptable to everyone.

Primary 5 levels

The Penultimate year. And the lead up to their first biggest obstacle. Primary 5 levels has always been the year where students start developing problems in their studies. There are a few reasons for this. Foremost being the jump in curriculum requirements, being the preceding year to PSLE. It has to naturally be harder than Primary 4, and a need to shift the gears to get ship shape in preparation for Primary 6 and the forthcoming PSLE. It is also the year that students have to start maturing and getting their focus on the essentials. But on the other hand, the distractions comes in thick and fast. Their CCA’s will take up a bigger chunk of their activities, a wider social network, more distractions and the mentality that this is the last year before they have to sit down and study hard for PSLE.

So how do we tackle these problems next year?

The first biggest change will be to make sure that our students feels that Primary 5 is definitely harder than the previous year. They have to feel that their stresses are building up and suddenly, have to wake up and not take things for granted. Introduction to harder sums and harder concepts immediately will set off that tone. The game is on.

Our students are divided into two distinct groups. The first are our senior students that have been with us longer than 1 year. The second are the new students that joined in within the last 6 months. The senior students will always get a pep talk before Primary 5 starts, of what to expect, of the differences between Primary 4 and their need to up their game for Primary 5. These students would be quite tuned to our ways and being on the same frequency, they will be able to get a foothold on the new requirements.

The second group, the new students, are the ones that will take a longer time to get up to the higher speed. Mainly because they are still not fully prepared for the change, plus not familiar with our methods of teaching. Of these students, we identify again two main types of students. Those that have a firm grasp of the fundamentals, and those that lack it. The latter being the ones that will find it an uphill battle throughout Primary 5 if not dealt with properly. So again, we have to tackle this group with a custom way of teaching them. We always identify this group very on in their lessons with us. Once identified, they are required to stay longer hours than the norm. They are also given extra classes, with the tutors’ priority of getting their problems resolved, instilling fundamentals that they lacked from previous years and the third most important resolution, being taught in front of their class.

Primary 6 levels.

The senior year. And PSLE. This is where our hard work with the Primary 5 students pays off. Our senior students are the examples for newcomers and set the tone for hardwork, total concentration, and hours behind the books to achieve their grades.

This year’s Primary 6 have taken up the above and did their utmost. They started the year off with extra lessons. Within a short span of 3 months, their lessons went from 1.5 hours to 4 hours of constant lesson time. They went from learning new topics to doing the complex problem sums from those topics. The newer students felt the heat from the senior students and upped their game, and most importantly, put in the effort to sit themselves down and stretched their brains. They were given assessments, then on to time trials and finally, full exam papers. Way before any real exams even began in school. To be ahead of the curve is the aim.

So what new things do we do for the new Primary 6?

Next year, there will not be much changes for both Mathematics and Science. Our programmes are pretty solid for these two subjects at Primary 6 level.

However, for English, we will be aiming to improve one aspect that we have not been happy with this year. The knowledge that we could impart to the students can be improved. For example, our lessons are now based on four main components of grammer, vocabulary, creative writing and comprehension and a smaller component of knowledge. We have always wanted to cultivate knowledge in our students. Reason? Because English is a communication device. It is not useful until it becomes a tool for communicating. But one cannot communicate when one does not have knowledge. A sentence is useless if it does not contain information.

The more knowledge acquired, the more can be communicated. With this, we would like to improve the general knowledge of students, and with the knowledge, appreciate the use of English to tell their peers what they have learnt. With communication and constant socializing, their English will improve.

Wong Kin Leong

eduKateSG Tuition Centre

Tampines St73

The Sail Marina Bay