About Me

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I have been involved in the teaching of English for more than 35 years. Along the way I have encountered many challenges on how to deal with approach and strategies in the field. Having also involved in a few action researches I have the intention of improving the teaching of English on learners who are non speakers. I hope to find some effective ways to deal with them.

Saturday, 29 August 2015

STUDENT INNOVATION SHOW (S.I.S.)

STUDENT INNOVATION SHOW
DATE: 29 TO 30 AUGUST 2015
VENUE: PERDA CITY MALL
PARTICIPANTS: SCHOOLS,COLLEGES
AND
UNIVERSITIES

SMKA AL-IRSHAD IN THE LIMELIGHT
won Special Award, Gold Medal Award and Jury Medal Award (all the three categories)



"Proud of the school", said our representative
 


Grateful to Allah!
 
 
Puan Ruslina Ramli, the science teacher
behind this project
 
 
The Chocomo exhibits
 
 
Chocomo, the most delicious anti-cancer medication in the world!
 
 
 
Explaining the making of...'Chocomo'! to visitors
 
 
 
Sir Rosli, proud with the Al-Irshad team


Celebrating our success! 
 
 
Sir Rosli attended the Student Innovation Show
as a jury had presented his Jury Medal Award to
MRSM Langkawi for their
outstanding project
'Parchment paper from durian skin'
 
 

Sunday, 25 January 2015

News/international Links - monitored by Madam Norlilawati Mohd Noor from SMKA AL-IRSHAD PENANG, MALAYSIA



A Visit from a Friend
-Mr Sam from Korea
23 January 2015
from 8.00 am to 12.00 pm
at the 
Conference Room

Mr Sam at the Principal's office
from left: Madam Norlilawati, Mr Principal, 
Mr Sam and Senior Assistant of Administration



Mr Sam from Korea enjoying breakfast at the school cafeteria



Mr Sam in Baju Melayu
on Friday!



Sam attending to Al-Irshad students in the conference room




Sam answering some questions from students




Wednesday, 21 January 2015

The World Scholar's Cup

World Scholar's Cup Seminar







http://live.scholarscup.org/





Daniel Berdichevsky conducting the seminar
at SMKA AL-IRSHAD Hall


Information:

Date: March 11, 2015
Day:  Wednesday
Venue: SMKA AL-IRSHAD HALL

A briefing on the World Scholar's Cup--an international  co-academic competition and how it complements learning for high-achieving students.






Guests:

  • Mr Daniel Berdichevsky
  • Mr Jeremy Chumley
  • Mr Moustafa (Malaysia Institute of Debates & Public Speaking MIDP)
  • Mr Darren Lim Jen Zen (The Prince of Wales International School, Balik Pulau)

Invited Schools:
  • Kepala Batas Science School (HPS)
  • MRSM Kepala Batas
  • SMKA(P) Al Mashoor, Penang
  • SMKA(L) Al-Mashoor, Penang
  • SMK Dato' Onn, Butterworth

Events:
  • Team Debate
  • Scholar's Challenge
  • Collaborative Writing
  • Scholar's Bowl


Information:

WORLD SCHOLAR'S CUP REGIONAL ROUND, PENANG
4 - 5 APRIL 2015
GLOBAL ROUND
JUNE 22 - 26, KL


Read Ahead

Get real to get the job done in 2015














Friday, 16 January 2015 | 
Filed under Education, Innovation, Nation Building


Already devastated by the twin aviation disasters of MH370 and MH17 in the first half of the year, we were dealt two more double whammies at the end of the year - the unprecedented floods in the East Coast and the crash of Air Asia 8501.

The floods - the worst in over 40 years saw the evacuation of over 100,000 people with many going days without food as rescue efforts were hampered by bad weather. The Air Asia crash - though a subsidiary of the parent Air Asia company born in Malaysia - cost 162 lives.

While there is no upside to these tragedies, what it has uncovered is that under duress, the fundamental values of the people who built this country - of helping each other - remains very much a part of who we are.

In times of national tragedy we see the coming together of Malaysians. What that reveals is that while some extremists revel in stoking a growing racial and religious divide - the silent majority remain steadfast in rejecting them.

While these people remain a thorn in the side of kind-hearted, peace-loving Malaysians of all faiths and races, we must remain vigilant against those who seek to divide us. The wedge they drive has socio-economic repercussions that could set back all that we have achieved socio-economically. We have been an Asian and multi-racial success story to the world for decades… so let’s not lose sight of what’s gotten us this far.

If we are to keep pace with the frantic pace of change, we must keep our eye on the ball, and run with others so that we are not left behind.

Stay focused on designing the best future



In March of 2013, four economics researchers from the New York Federal Reserve published a report that about half of the current occupations (47%) are at risk of being obsolete within the next decade or two. Economic efficiency, they said, will be the driver adding that “the social consequence is that good-paying jobs will be increasingly scarce.”

“Only the best-educated humans will compete with machines,” said internet sociologist Howard Rheingold.

The experts also noted that education systems remain mired in an industrial era mode.

“Education systems in the US and much of the rest of the world are still sitting students in rows and columns, teaching them to keep quiet and memorise what is told them, preparing them for life in a 20th century factory.”

In Malaysia, 3.3 million new positions are expected to be added to the workforce by year 2020 and at least 46% of this placement will require training to vocational of certificate standard whereas only 22% of the new job created will require university qualification.

How do we create curriculums that are future ready when much of curriculum development is designed by those whose jobs are to follow the rules?

How do we get our children to ask questions and be creative, when they are groomed to conform in school, and penalised for being different?

How do we change education that is still largely designed for the left brained and make it more holistic and inclusive for the creative, artistic types?

How do we innovate a new kind of examination that is aligned with a collaborative - even global - workplace compared to the industrial era model still being practiced?

Are these questions even being asked by those tasked with aligning our formal education system with the needs of the future.

                                     Show leadership through ASEAN

This year, we officially take leadership of the Association of South-East Asian Nations. It is a dynamic part of the world, with over 600 million middle class consumers. ASEAN is also in the neighbourhood of India and China, the world’s giant economies of the near future.

As Chairman of ASEAN, we are in a perfect position to bring wealth and social justice to the people of this region. Our Malaysian story is a strong one and we must do all we can to show our nation as a stable, peaceful and modern nation so that others can emulate our success.

We are at a fork in the road socio-economically, and there is no time to waste because we simply cannot afford it. After a tough year, we need to be hopeful for the new year. Malaysia has a lot of work ahead of her to build this country so that it remains ever competitive in the region and globally.

We know where the weak points are, and it’s time to get real to get the job done. If we don’t no amount of good intentions will stop us from losing valuable time and being left behind when others are racing ahead.




 About Tan Sri Lim

Tan Sri Dato’ Sri Paduka Dr Lim Kok Wing, the Founder and President of Limkokwing University of Creative Technology, does not fit into any ordinary mould that would describe most entrepreneurs.His journey has been closely linked with the economic and social development of Malaysia.


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Consumerism is Dead. Is Producerism the Behavior of 2015?

Geoffrey Colon
Strategic Growth Hacker, Design Thinker, Social Metrics Scientist @ Microsoft

Consumerism is Dead. Is Producerism the Behavior of 2015?
Jan 8, 2015
I have always loved five things the most in my life. My family, soccer(futbol!), reading, learning and broadcasting on the radio.

From 1990 until 1996 I produced a radio show on 91.3 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. WLVR were the call letters on the FM dial and I hosted a weekly show called "Furthur." I loved the show and every week for four hours I played some of the top on the edge tunes from around the globe for an audience that could hear the signal (which was very small, maybe around 800 people tuned in).

This was during an era where the producer tools were in the hands of big companies who could afford the technology. The cost was ten of millions of dollars for entry. Fast forward to 2006 while working for a startup in New York City I discovered a company out of San Francisco called Podsafe Music Network. It was a podcast hosting and discovery network prior to the mainstreaming of podcasts on iTunes. They hosted and promoted hundreds of podcasts that replicated radio shows like the one I had produced in the 90s during my non-commercial radio tenure. However the tools to produce a podcast were still not simple and had a high cost barrier to entry. I loved listening to some of those early podcasts but didn't have all the technology required to get back into the broadcast booth to produce my own. Fast forward to 2012 and a startup called Spreaker emerged allowing anyone to use their tools to create and distribute podcasts. The barrier to entry was practically a few hundred dollars and whatever I could make up in my creative mind.

As a result of this new level playing field I did what all people who love broadcasting would do. I started recording a podcast called Disruptive FM. I tried to do it every week but sometimes I would miss a week here or there. I eventually then moved into recording myself on video and would edit both for distribution across social networks. Spreaker gave me the creation tools, social networks gave me the distribution, my creativity gave me the ideas for programming and content. Instead of reaching 800, I could reach 8 million or more. The world was my audience. I also learned something from those early days of experimental production on radio. Like all good startup thinking goes, I ripped the template of my old analog radio show to apply to the digital transformative world of now. Instead of cutting edge music, I started focusing on the cutting edge businesses of the startup economy. Instead of a Top 5 tunes of the week, I talked about the Top 5 startups of the week to watch. Instead of giving out a number to reach me on, I told people to connect with me on Twitter. Business shows that exist on CNBC, Bloomberg and Fox Business are still produced with an older demo of Wall Street investors in mind. It's doubtful those in Silicon Valley or Silicon Alley who are in their 20s have any interest in said content offerings. However, like all disruptive ideology, there is a whole area of commerce to be discussed and covered beyond what appeals to that demographic. This was my niche and my long tail. Because the cost of production was low, it was worth the risk of producing the content I enjoyed that others may enjoy as well.

In the past if I didn't have access to media creation tools, I couldn't take action. I couldn't produce anything. I simply had to consume what outlets wanted to push on me. That all has changed. In 2015 it will tip even further (no pun intended). We no longer are simply consumers. We are also the producers. The best term to help describe this human behavior? Producerism. Producerism is the ability of anyone to create anything as long as they have the creativity and willingness to do so. Productivity technology exists in so many shapes and sizes now that it's up to the individual to take action. It also represents a pitfall for brands and mega corporations. Self-made content and controlling the market isn't the theme anymore. The ability for people to create on your behalf is the new behavior to tap into. Marketing now opens up to the masses rather than the boardroom where employees ran all the messaging and produced all the content and products.

Some examples of what we will see more of in 2015 include: 1. Companies that crop up in a matter of days, not months, due to the power of cloud computing 2. Short form videos and commercials produced by people, not professionals or agencies 3. Fashion design that is replicated via 3D printing 4. New food sourcing opportunities that tap into natural ingredients and not chemicals 5. Broadcasts created and distributed by anyone who has something creative to say or showcase 6. Self-published books that incorporate embedded Vines and Instagrams 7. The first mobile social network that goes beyond "sharing" and gives one the tools for actually "creating."

Instagram, one of the fastest growing social networks is more than a distribution platform but also about creation. From this platform sprung the popularization of the "Selfie" behavior. Although weird sounding, the term ultimately became the word of the year in 2013. In 2016 will we be looking back at 2015 and saying the same thing about "Producerism?"

Geoffrey Colon is a Group Product Marketing Manager at Microsoft. Follow his left-of-center business thinking on Twitter or listen to his weekly podcast DISRUPTIVE FM on the Spreaker app where he talks business in the era of the startup economy, digital trends, social media technology, disruptive innovation, digital transformation. Broadcasting from Seattle on the world wide mobile web.
























Tuesday, 20 January 2015

The Differences between E-books and books designed for prints

WHY CAN'T I USE A PDF? – THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN EBOOKS AND BOOKS DESIGNED FOR PRINT

What exactly is an eBook? What does it look like? And why do PDFs need to be converted? If you've found yourself asking these questions, you're not alone – Publish Green can help clear up some of the mystery for you.

WHAT ARE EBOOK FORMATS AND WHY DOES MY PDF NEED TO BE CONVERTED?

If you have a PDF, this means that you already have an electronic version of your book. It seems like this should be all you need, right? Unfortunately, it’s not. A PDF is actually very, very different from an eBook. A PDF is the file used to design your book for print; an eBook's main purpose, on the other hand, is to be read on an eReader. eBooks have a very different internal structure, and are meant to be manipulated. In fact, that's one of the biggest draws for people who use eReaders. Users can choose their own font, change the size of the words, increase line spacing, margins and more. Unlike a PDF or a print book, the two major eBook formats, MOBI and EPUB, are designed to allow this level of flexibility. For your eBook to take full advantage of an eReader's capabilities (and for it to be sold through the major eBook retailers) it must be available in one or both of these formats.

WHAT MAKES AN EBOOK DIFFERENT FROM A PRINT BOOK OR PDF?

Unlike a printed book, an eBook is “flexible,” meaning that it can be manipulated in many ways. Print books and PDFs, on the other hand, are essentially immovable. We like to use the comparison of a rock and a piece of clay.

The rock – in this case, the print book or the PDF – cannot be altered in any way unless it is physically damaged. The contour of the rock will always be the same, no matter how hard you try to change it. Similarly, the layout of a print book or a PDF will always be the same. You cannot move the pages around. If chapter 4 starts on page 16 in the print book, it will start on page 16 in the PDF, and there’s nothing you can do to change it. If chapter 8 in the print book uses a special font for a section of a chapter – perhaps a handwritten note by one of the characters in the book – then chapter 8 of the PDF will display the same “handwritten” styled font. It is not so in an eBook.

An eBook, or the clay in this analogy, is much more malleable. Font size and style can be changed by the reader, as well as line spacing and "page" margin. Adjustments to these settings will affect how the words flow and break onto the next "page." Screen size affects how many words appear on the screen at a time, as well. An eBook displayed on the Kindle may contain more individual screens of text than one displayed on the iPad, since the screen size is so much smaller. Because of this "flowing" nature of the text in an eBook, each screen or "page" of text will never have a set page number, though some eReaders may automatically assign "page numbers" to each screen. These numbers will not match up with your print book, nor will they be the same from one device to another. They may even change on a single device if you adjust your settings. Like clay, your eBook will change and "re-shape" itself with every adjustment the reader makes.

E-Books!



Books or E-books?



What are Ebooks : Electronic Books?

The official definition of an ebook is:

“ebook. noun a book composed in or converted to digital format for display on a computer screen or handheld device” – Merriam-Webster.com

“e-book. noun a book that is published in electronic form, for example on the Internet or on a disk, and not printed on paper” – Cambridge.org
At least two well-known spellings ebook and e-book and countless other versions (eBook, Ebook) exist but the term ebook now is often used when referring to the methodology of reading just about any mid-to-long-length electronic document that is viewable on a screen, including research papers, short stories and even magazines.

For the purposes of this guide we’re going to talk about ebooks in their pure version: the electronic equivalent of any book or novel formatted for on-screen reading.

Why aren’t ebooks more Popular? Tactile loss And the eBabel Problem

Why aren’t ebooks more popular? The arguments seem to fall into three categories:

Tactile loss : I like the feel and smell of paper / I can’t read on a screen
Lending loss : I want to lend my books to who I want
Library loss : I want a library that will last forever

While the first two are considerable arguments, the tactile loss argument is probably the most obvious and passionate argument longtime readers have, but the least serious technologically. I also feel that it’s getting outweighed by the convenience factor and the fact that we are reading more and more material everyday on a screen.

We all remember the discussions when mp3s started becoming popular and people insisted “they’ll want the album notes – they’ll want the physical CD.” Then Apple came along and introduced the iTunes Store and multiple copycats followed so buying electronic music was even easier and became mass-market through support of major record labels.

The one big difference between the music and ebook markets is there is no “mp3″ of ebooks – there is no universal ebook file format, what is often referred to as the “eBabel” problem, much like the Tower of Babel. So unlike when you bought .m4p files from Apple (their proprietary format), you could also load in mp3 files from other sources and create mp3s from your own CDs. Devices just had to read .mp3 and perhaps an additional proprietary format. With ebooks we’re still playing a format-device game and there will be no way to load in electronic versions of paper books you already own.

Lending loss is a problem that I feel less as I didn’t and don’t often exchange books with friends. In fact, I often re-read books I like so I appreciate keeping them in my library. But for other people, the fact that they can’t lend paper books to other friends, re-sell or even buy used books is a disadvantage. In some cases ebooks can be authorized for more than one device, so perhaps you and your best friend can still share books, but for now ebook sellers are determined to keep you from sharing your ebooks.

We’re in an exciting and ugly time for ebooks. There are so many formats, and each one is determined to succeed. Remember the VHS and Beta fight in the 1980s? Only one survived. This time, there are more than two major players so not only must the author and publisher decide which format(s) to publish in, and they rarely choose all formats available, now you as a consumer are forced to make a decision about where to get your content and which format to buy it in.

And what if you’re wrong? You could lose your library.

Underlying all of this is the major problem of DRM – Digital Rights Management, which I’ll talk more about when examining the ebook formats available. That’s a risk everyone is taking now buying formats that are tied to specific devices, or even a particular format in general. Almost all major books are being released with some DRM attached to them. Some format providers are seeing the benefit of being separate from a device, and are offering cross-compatibility on several devices.

Ebooks are Great! Here’s Why : Advantages of ebooks

So are there any advantages to ebooks? As I mentioned in my editorial announcement about this ebook guide, I love ebooks for several reasons: mobility, saving space, convenience, saving money and time, and ease-of-use. Here’s why:

Mobility

Carry your entire library in your pocket: With disk space quickly becoming a commodity, and the size of portable device hard drives getting bigger and bigger, it’s conceivable to think that you could have your entire library with you and have it accessible to your fingertips.
Backup a copy of your library with an online backup service: Backing up your entire library online or locally won’t require much space and it’s something that would be impossible with a physical library, and no more worries about fire-proofing your books.

Saving Physical Space

Your Library is as Big as your Disk Drive: As a bit of a nomad, I’ve changed house several times in my life, and each time I’ve had to give away parts or all of my library. Your library can grow as big as the disk space you have available and will be relatively small compared to walls and walls of bookshelves. And, due to disk space becoming a commodity, it’s safe to say you’ll probably never run out of space to store your library in your lifetime.
Convenience

Keep it? Throw it Away? It’s just Bits: Ever read a book you hated so much you wouldn’t even recommend it to your worst enemy? Now, you won’t have the guilt of having to give away or throw out that paper book you couldn’t finish. Keeping an electronic book will take up so little space you’re allowed a few mistakes, and hopefully it will allow you to experiment with different types of authors and genres.

Your Next Book is just Moments Away: Bringing hundreds of books with you wherever you are means you never have to plan ahead for that long trip or even the bus ride across town. When you’ve finished one book, quickly browse your library and start another!
Saving Time & Money

No Shipping Costs or Wait Time: This is a much easier argument for me to prove living as an expat with book prices being astronomical in a non-English speaking country. But, remember that when you eliminate the need for shipping that book to where you physically are, there will be some cost benefits.

Save Gas, Save Time: Also, buying electronically will inevitably save you gas by not going to a physical bookstore, and time as from selection to purchase and reading an electronic book can be done in mere minutes.

Ease-of-Use

Not all ebook software is exactly the same, but many of them have similar settings and features that are common:

Adjust Font Size for any Eyes: Adjust the font size, type and background color of your electronic book per your preferences.
Add Notes, Bookmarks or Highlight: Instead of earmarking pages or marking up your paper copy, electronic copies allow you to add and delete bookmarks and notes at will and as many as you see fit.
Searchable and Linkable Text: The text is searchable and can be hyperlinked, you can jump back-and-forth between chapters or the glossary.