Don't quit. You are already halfway there.
If you want to quit, you should have quitted in the first few months. Definitely not now! You have already been promoted. Take a breather. Give credit to yourself. Oh anyway, congratz on your promotion.
Take the mental and physical pain like a warrior, it will end. Remember, tough time don't last, tough man do.
And private is not cheap, make use of your status as a singaporean in singapore school enjoy the benefits.
Always believe in yourself.
Originally posted by Luleil:I just got to know my results yesterday and I promoted, however I was thinking about dropping out and taking private Alevels instead. JC1 have been an extremely unhappy year for me, because we go home at 4+pm every day and if there’s CCA we go home at 7pm. I take around an hour to get home and I can only manage to finish my homework and there is honestly no time to study if I want a decent 5 hours of sleep to keep me awake in school the next day. CCA made me very unhappy and it feels like I’m just wasting time, but I can’t quit to go home early to study. I learn slow and I need a lot of time to study but I don’t even have that time (most of our time this year was also used on PW). In the end, I got a promo grade of UUS/UD and an overall grade of DDE/EC. I’m very stressed up and upset, so much so that I would go to the toilet to cry when I really can’t take it in school.
Would it be better for me to drop out of JC so that I have a lot more time to study? I can readily get notes from my seniors who will be finishing their Alevels soon.
I am a student Currently taking my GCE A level exams. I sense your agony.You want to do well but time is always against you. Maybe I can share with you my experience.~
I started taking up Gp tuition outside my jc,during my school days. There was much apprehension within myself that Gp is a tough subject that everyone faces.That much,is true. Teachers in my school tend to give little practices,I have source for Gp materials outside school and during tuition.
Also,I have two cca days during my school time,life is struggle. However,I keep telling myself to perservere,even if the odds are never in my favour.I relied on friend support in class and cca.We help each other out in different subjects.
Similar to your situation,I too,take 50minutes to travel to school. I daresay,it's a time constraint but I have to say that it did not hinder my learning so much. I come to school at 7.10am,school starts at 7.35am. This 25 minutes,I will put in the effort. 1 hour break,30 minutes eat,30 minutes revise.
Discipline got me very far. Usually,I sleep at 11.30pm,worth the hardwork I put in throughout the day.
Find out your learning technique,Night vs morning vs afternoon vs evening + quiet/noisy + solo/pair/group revision. A little goes a long way in determining your results.
I didn't do well for promos, BBE/EE,but I survived.
Well,I am not encouraging you to go back to jc route.
Of course, sometimes your classmates are rowdy or your teachers cannot seem to teach you effectively(poor communication/too much scolding/too slow/too fast),you can go ahead to private tuition,which is a better alternative.
I have to say that J1 is really a cheesecake,compared to J2. You may want to consider poly route if you don't like the academic rigour of National Exams. After all,I too detest national exams. I can't wait to go overseas prior to Ns and pursue my career pathway
Commitment is a big part of what I am and what I believe. How committed are you to winning? How committed are you to being a good friend? To being trustworthy? To being successful? How committed are you to being a good father, a good teammate, a good role model? There's that moment every morning when you look in the mirror: Are you committed, or are you not?
Lebron James
Originally posted by Luleil:I just got to know my results yesterday and I promoted, however I was thinking about dropping out and taking private Alevels instead. JC1 have been an extremely unhappy year for me, because we go home at 4+pm every day and if there’s CCA we go home at 7pm. I take around an hour to get home and I can only manage to finish my homework and there is honestly no time to study if I want a decent 5 hours of sleep to keep me awake in school the next day. CCA made me very unhappy and it feels like I’m just wasting time, but I can’t quit to go home early to study. I learn slow and I need a lot of time to study but I don’t even have that time (most of our time this year was also used on PW). In the end, I got a promo grade of UUS/UD and an overall grade of DDE/EC. I’m very stressed up and upset, so much so that I would go to the toilet to cry when I really can’t take it in school.
Would it be better for me to drop out of JC so that I have a lot more time to study? I can readily get notes from my seniors who will be finishing their Alevels soon.
I'm currently also in the midst of my A levels (urgh right) and personally for me, JC2 was beyond horrible. Work on a daily basis was monotonous, meaningless and draining and there were so many times when I question myself why the hell am I studying all these useless stuff for. Dragged myself to school daily, and I literally wished for this whole ordeal to be over asap everyday. Worse still, I could barely cope, and was at the bottom 10th percentile for almost all of my subjects. When A levels drew near, it became even more intolerable as my teacher would pile us up with essay questions every week (I took history), to a point where I felt like just heck it la, what's the use anyway. Plus together another bunch of other problems, I was sure that I would at some point in time collapse. But honestly that was what made me feel extremely proud of myself for surviving this whole year.
So don't give up. Since you've made it past promos, try again for another year, and if nothing works out, you can still apply to a private institution. I believe that you can do it. Be prepared for the road ahead though, and trust me you'll emerge stronger than ever before.
Btw I'm considering private uni after A levels as well since I don't have high hopes for my A levels. Abit silly right, but that's ok because whatever route we take,we will all still end up in the workforce (unfortunately working our butts off for the next 40 years).
wish you all the best!
Originally posted by a mugger:I am a student Currently taking my GCE A level exams. I sense your agony.You want to do well but time is always against you. Maybe I can share with you my experience.~
I started taking up Gp tuition outside my jc,during my school days. There was much apprehension within myself that Gp is a tough subject that everyone faces.That much,is true. Teachers in my school tend to give little practices,I have source for Gp materials outside school and during tuition.
Also,I have two cca days during my school time,life is struggle. However,I keep telling myself to perservere,even if the odds are never in my favour.I relied on friend support in class and cca.We help each other out in different subjects.
Similar to your situation,I too,take 50minutes to travel to school. I daresay,it's a time constraint but I have to say that it did not hinder my learning so much. I come to school at 7.10am,school starts at 7.35am. This 25 minutes,I will put in the effort. 1 hour break,30 minutes eat,30 minutes revise.
Discipline got me very far. Usually,I sleep at 11.30pm,worth the hardwork I put in throughout the day.
Find out your learning technique,Night vs morning vs afternoon vs evening + quiet/noisy + solo/pair/group revision. A little goes a long way in determining your results.
I didn't do well for promos, BBE/EE,but I survived.
Well,I am not encouraging you to go back to jc route.
Of course, sometimes your classmates are rowdy or your teachers cannot seem to teach you effectively(poor communication/too much scolding/too slow/too fast),you can go ahead to private tuition,which is a better alternative.
I have to say that J1 is really a cheesecake,compared to J2. You may want to consider poly route if you don't like the academic rigour of National Exams. After all,I too detest national exams. I can't wait to go overseas prior to Ns and pursue my career pathway
I t Originally posted by chwh96:I'm currently also in the midst of my A levels (urgh right) and personally for me, JC2 was beyond horrible. Work on a daily basis was monotonous, meaningless and draining and there were so many times when I question myself why the hell am I studying all these useless stuff for. Dragged myself to school daily, and I literally wished for this whole ordeal to be over asap everyday. Worse still, I could barely cope, and was at the bottom 10th percentile for almost all of my subjects. When A levels drew near, it became even more intolerable as my teacher would pile us up with essay questions every week (I took history), to a point where I felt like just heck it la, what's the use anyway. Plus together another bunch of other problems, I was sure that I would at some point in time collapse. But honestly that was what made me feel extremely proud of myself for surviving this whole year.
So don't give up. Since you've made it past promos, try again for another year, and if nothing works out, you can still apply to a private institution. I believe that you can do it. Be prepared for the road ahead though, and trust me you'll emerge stronger than ever before.
Btw I'm considering private uni after A levels as well since I don't have high hopes for my A levels. Abit silly right, but that's ok because whatever route we take,we will all still end up in the workforce (unfortunately working our butts off for the next 40 years).
wish you all the best!
---
Which JC and what CCA are you in? As far as my understanding and experience goes, SGC is only important when you apply for scholarships etc, and when you are appealing/interviewing for a certain university course. So, grades are the very main criteria university look at. But even so, I wouldn't reccommend you to drop because CCA only eats into the march/april period at most.
Some of my personal tips:
1) Managing to finish tutorials is already very good enough for me in those hectic days. Extra practices are meant to reinforce what you are weak in.
2) Stop practicing what you are already good at.
3) For any homework in humanities subjects (I took H1 econs), write in point form at most. Most of the times, I don't even do it but I have the thought processes going.
4) The grades in promos, march test and prelims don't mean shit to me, be it good or bad. I create my own plan for A lvls, think far. A lvls is the deciding exam.
5) I seek understanding, not grades and position.
6) The school system or the tutors are there to help you but not control you. Not all of their methods and study plans work for me. I know what lectures are useless and I do other things instead.
7) I do not sacrifice my sleep in exchange of wanting to complete some extra work.
8) I know what I will forget and will make annotations for it, and will eventually compile them together to relook conveniently.
JC 2 was very much more relaxing for me; because there are no more graded assignments like PW except for SPA, so I can have my own flexible schedule outside school. School timetable gets shorter too (no more PW and MTL afterall).
p/s.I also watched Kevin Wee's videos and it's a really depressing case.
You're most welcome. In my opinion, I don't think it is wise to compare or compete with your friends because ultimately everyone has their different aims (like he/she may wish to enter law/medince hence they have to get 90rp, but maybe your aim isn't one of those high-end courses, so while it is still important for you to aim as high a rp as possible, there's no need for you to be on par with them in terms of results because you're not really vying with them for a spot in uni), and doing so will only make you more stressed up than you already are. Just try your hardest will do (:
Btw I wanted to take geog haha but the last time I took it was in lower sec so I didn't have the courage to take it again.
One of the reasons why Singapore's current cirriculum is bad is because the focus is on passing exams rather than understanding the topic. No understanding is in fact required, but simply rote learning, so it will definitely be very boring and hard for some. It does not motivate anyone to be the best that they can be, which is the sole purpose of education
Originally posted by qdtimes2:Which JC and what CCA are you in? As far as my understanding and experience goes, SGC is only important when you apply for scholarships etc, and when you are appealing/interviewing for a certain university course. So, grades are the very main criteria university look at. But even so, I wouldn't reccommend you to drop because CCA only eats into the march/april period at most.
Some of my personal tips:
1) Managing to finish tutorials is already very good enough for me in those hectic days. Extra practices are meant to reinforce what you are weak in.
2) Stop practicing what you are already good at.
3) For any homework in humanities subjects (I took H1 econs), write in point form at most. Most of the times, I don't even do it but I have the thought processes going.
4) The grades in promos, march test and prelims don't mean shit to me, be it good or bad. I create my own plan for A lvls, think far. A lvls is the deciding exam.
5) I seek understanding, not grades and position.
6) The school system or the tutors are there to help you but not control you. Not all of their methods and study plans work for me. I know what lectures are useless and I do other things instead.
7) I do not sacrifice my sleep in exchange of wanting to complete some extra work.
8) I know what I will forget and will make annotations for it, and will eventually compile them together to relook conveniently.
JC 2 was very much more relaxing for me; because there are no more graded assignments like PW except for SPA, so I can have my own flexible schedule outside school. School timetable gets shorter too (no more PW and MTL afterall).
p/s.I also watched Kevin Wee's videos and it's a really depressing case.
Originally posted by kooldog59:One of the reasons why Singapore's current cirriculum is bad is because the focus is on passing exams rather than understanding the topic. No understanding is in fact required, but simply rote learning, so it will definitely be very boring and hard for some. It does not motivate anyone to be the best that they can be, which is the sole purpose of education
Rote Learning is applicable if you have access to well written essays, case studies answers, excellent lecture notes, mindmaps that linked up everything. However, to excel in H2 Econs, you need to be able to apply the knowledge to the questions with good examples and explanation. Essays need to be in the format of GIST, PEEL and SR and Case studies in the format of SQ3R.
If you need help in Physics. Do look for me
Just find something to cheer you up, like drinking an milk shake, watch Mr Bean (I heard that there is even an Mr Bean's theme cafe in Marine Square right now!) or Youtube like this : http://youtu.be/T24DPU-hkJM
Is Accelerated Learning Possible? : http://masterthepowerofthemind.com/intro-distilled-learning-method
110 Self-Improvement Boosters : http://valhallamind.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/110-Self-Improvement-Boosters.pdf
The Science Of Success : http://www.behaviouralconsulting.com/index.php/articles/sustainability/71-the-science-of-success
Living A Purposeful Life : http://global1.com.au/content/living-a-purposeful-life
Secrets For A Happy Soul : http://www.guyfinley.org/free-content/writings/special-lessons/2060
You're Your Own Rocketfeller! : http://blog.subliminalmp3s.com/youre-your-own-rockefeller
Eh guys I have a stupid question ☺� Coz I'm not sure of it lol . In Jc , GP = English ? So there is no "English" as a subject itself but only GP ? Or wrong oO
Originally posted by YctLeong:Eh guys I have a stupid question ☺� Coz I'm not sure of it lol . In Jc , GP = English ? So there is no "English" as a subject itself but only GP ? Or wrong oO
You either take H1 General Paper or H2 Knowledge & Inquiry (KI). Not all JCs offer KI. To take KI, you usually need to pass an interview and also have distinction in English at O Level. So most people take H1 GP
Some students also take H2 English Language and Linguistics, but that's not a compulsory subject. It's more suitable for those who want to study English in university