Monday, April 29, 2013

No. 3 dan Tiga perkara.

No. 3
Feng Shui

Tiga perkara yang tidak boleh ditarikbalik.

1. Waktu
2. Kata-kata
3. Kesempatan

Tiga perkara yang menghancurkan.
1. Kemarahan
2. Keangkuhan
3. Dendam


Tiga perkara yang tidak akan hilang
1. Harapan.
2. Keikhlasan
3. Kejujuran.


Tiga perkara yang membuat sukses.
1. Tekad
2. Kemahuan
3. Fokus

Apaaila kita percaya kita mampu melakukan sesuatu, kita mula menggunakan kemmpuan diri kita untuk mencapai apa ynag kita mahu!

Sebaliknya, jika kita memikirkan sesuatu perkara itu mustahil dicapai,aka kita tidak akan berusaha untuk mencapainya.

Satu-satunya orang yang gagal ialah orang yang memikirkan dia tidak mampu melakukan?
Satu-satunya orang yang tidak melakukan kesilapan adalah orang yang tidak melakukan apa-apa!

(Vip speech by Mr. Ajis Jimi)
30.4.2013
Preuniversity assembly.

Kombura Discovery:
No. 3 ini bagi saya adalah nombor yang sangat banyak makna.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Peperiksaan Akhir Penggal 2 STPM 2013

SMK Tambunan - Kampus prauniversiti melaksanakan penilaian khir penggal bagi pelajar prauniversiti senior bagi penggal 2 tahun 2013. Antara subjek yang ditawarkan diuji dalam prnilaian ini ialah:
1. Pengajian Am
2. Biologi
3. Kimia
4. Matemtik T
5. ICT
6. Sejarah
7. Geografi
8. Bahasa Melayu
9. Ekonomi
10. Pengajian Perniagaan
11. Sains Sukan
12. Seni Visual

Subjek-subjek berkenaan ditawarkan mengikut pakej seperti berikut:

Pakej 1
P.Am, Biologi, Kimia, Matematik T dan ICT

Pakej 2
P.Am, Sejarah, Geografi dan B.Melayu

Pakej 3
P.Am, Ekonomi, P.Perniagaan dan Sejarah

Pakej 4
P.Am, Sains Sukan, Seni Visual dan Bahasa Melayu

Selamat berjaya dalam penilaian ini khas untuk semua calon!

Selepas penilaian ini, ambillah masa untuk membuat refleksi diri.

Selamat Maju Jaya!

Penggal 2 Pengajian Am sistem baharu


Terdapat 2 perkara penting berhubung dengan Pembinaan Grafik  (Bagi Tajuk 3 (SP) dan Bahagian B Kertas Pengajian Am 900/2 dalam Penggal 2) 

1.  Tajuk Utama hendaklah semuanya dalam HURUF BESAR sahaja.  Tidak dibenarkan huruf kecil.
2.  Gunakan teknik WARNA sahaja untuk semua grafik (termasuk Graf Garis).  Tidak dibenarkan lorekan, simbol atau pelbagai bentuk corak.t

,

Markah untuk Bhg Grafik ini(Alih Bentuk) =20m
PA=5
KT=5
KI=5
KJ=5
Manakala pemarkahan untuk bahagian Esei pula seperti berikut: (25m)
I=5
H=15(5X3m)
B=4
F=1(Format ganti Impak.  Esei mesti lengkap dengan Intro dan Penutup baru dapat markah format. Jika penutup tiada, F=0)

Monday, April 15, 2013

Gift, history & mystery

Pelajar prauniversiti dingatkan sekali lagi agar menerapkan ciri-ciri kendiri yang pantas untuk ditiru oleh murid-murid di tingkatan 1 hingga tingkatan 5. Perkara ini ditegaskan semula oleh En. Sillis Stimin dan Penyelaras Hal Ehwal Pelajar prauniversiti En. Larry Charles semasa berucap dalam perhimpunan rasmi prauniversiti, pagi tadi. 

Sementara itu, dalam perkongsian profesionalnnya En. Francis Philip menkankan tiga perkara penting dalam kehidupan seseorang. Tiga perkara itu ialah 'history', gift dan mystery. Anugerah sebenarnya wujud dalam diri soetiap orang. Nyawa dan sedang bernyawa adalah anugerah terbesar. Sedang melanjutkan pelajaran di prauniversiti juga adalah anugerah. Begitu juga dengan kemudahan-kemudahan yang dikecapi. Begitu juga doengan keamanan yang dinikmati pada masa kini. Kecantikan dan kesihatan pula adalah ift yang setiap individu inginkan. 

History adalah perkara yang tela b erlalu. Ia tidak mungkin ditarik balik! Tetapi history yang tidak baik danmenyakitkan hati boleh diubah. Kerana itula setiap insan diberi anugerahuntuk meneruskan kehidupan yang lebih baik. 

Mystery adalah sesuatu yang skan datang. Apakah kejadian pada masa hadapan adalah suatu mystery..

Mystery itulah yang wajar kita tentukan hala tuju dan ciri-cirinya. Apa yang kamu fikirkan adalah apa yang akan kamu jadi...uruskanlah gift, history dan mystery dengan baik.

Toi gia?

By Kombura

Sunday, April 7, 2013

What to with your life? Read tis!


What to do with your life? Read this!

April 7, 2013
Pursue your happiness with your heart. Do something that you’re relatively good at, something you enjoy, something that’s meaningful to you.
COMMENT
By Jonson Chong

Most Malaysians are now focused on the 13th general election, easily the most interesting and most important in the history of Malaysia.

What most Malaysians may not realise is that some Malaysians, most of whom can’t vote yet, are now making one of the most important decisions in their lives: What to study after my secondary education? And who should I vote for, can wait.
Before I go on, please let me share a story with you:
A young man, decides that the most useful thing he could do with his life is to help others. He decides that more than anything else, he will be filled with joy if he can always be of help to others, human and all.
First, he thinks he wants to be a doctor because he believes doctors can help people and all.
Then he thinks, “I want to help more than people who need a doctor. What about people who need a shoulder to cry on? What about people who need nursing care for their aged parents? Hmmm… I can’t be all things to all people… but I can change things so that all these people can be helped. Maybe I could Prime Minister.”
And the growing boy decided he wants to be a politician. So that, as he believed then, he can change public policies and human society will change accordingly.
After more than 10 years in full-time politics, and only one year in the education sector, he realised that he was wrong. He realised that education—the art of cultivating hearts and minds—is much more powerful than politics.
Now, he is determined to be the best teacher he can be. No matter what the medium of instruction. English. Malay. Chinese. Classroom. Online. Social media. Graphics. Words. Sound. Arts. Science.
The boy thought studying psychology was the best option because he wanted to understand people’s thoughts, feelings and behaviour. His mother and eldest brother suggested that finance and law (together) was a better option.
He figured that a politician would need to know about money and law. So he agreed. Since graduation, he has been and out of the legal profession at least five times. The only time he used his financial knowledge was to sell unit trust and life insurance. He was in politics for more than ten years of his short life. One quarter, to be precise.
Anyway, he still spends most of his waking hours thinking about policy change.
The boy in the story is me. I didn’t get to study psychology but along the way I learned what Abraham Maslow said about the hierarchy of needs, as described in his book, Motivation and Personality.
Wrong perspective

I agree that most people think that way (the sequence of the pursuit of needs by people, as describe by Maslow). Unfortuntately, most people are often wrong about many things in life. Read Unpredictably Irrational by Dan Arielly, another professor in a top notch US college, if you don’t believe me.

I wonder if Maslow adequately covered the prescriptive part of the equation. I believe that the need, or desire, for self-actualisation began the day we were born. We don’t have a choice but need, and want, to be who we are born to be. Or believe we were born to be. Which is which, only you will know.
Anyway, when parents and elder siblings try to tell young adults what they should or should not study, without understanding the thought process of their children, or sisters, they are doing themselves and the rest of society a great disservice.
As Stephen R. Covey has taught, seek first to understand, then to be understood (read The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People). That is so important, especially for people with power and responsibility.
Why? Because we are wielding great influence over others—humans who want happiness just as we do—who don’t know as much as we do. As Peter Parker’s Uncle Ben once said, “With great power comes great responsibility.”
As I try to counsel parents and young adults these days, I try to understand where they are coming from. I discovered, not surprisingly, most of them are coming from the perspective of preparing their children, or themselves, for the life of work that comes after their life in education.
That’s a correct perpective… but only partially.
What’s the point of work? For its own sake? For the sake of your parents? Or for your own happiness’ sake? A Harvard professor, Tal Ben-Shahar, says that the ultimate currency is not money but happiness. It’s ultimate in the sense that happiness is an end in itself. You don’t want it for something else. You just want it for its own sake.
We work for money. We want money to buy things. We buy things so that we can consume them. We consume things to be happy. When we are happy we are successful. Or is it the other way round. Thus, we think work is for success, which is equivalent to happiness. Is it? I don’t think so. If you really want to know, please read Shawn Achor’s book, The Happiness Advantage.
Coming back, we must remember the ultimate reason we are going to work. If not, if you think it’s all about the money you’ll earn, you might as well marry a really rich woman. The ultimate reason is happiness, not money.
Are we happier being ourselves or being someone else? If we follow Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, we should focus on earning the dough to make the bread first. “Go get a job. Stop mucking about with your silly dreams and ideals. They don’t matter in the real world. You can chase joy and fulfilment later. Happiness is unrealistic.”
Follow your heart

Been there. Done that. Painful. Torture. I forgive. I know the advice given to me was given out of love. I moved on. I decided to give everything I’ve got to the pursuit of helping others. I ended in the education sector.

So, let me tell you what else Professor Tal also said. He said you don’t have to do what you’re good at for a living. You may be good with numbers or words, but you do not necessarily have to use them for a living. The most powerful and important thing to use for a living is your heart.
Pursue your happiness with your heart. Do something that you’re relatively good at, something you enjoy, something that’s meaningful to you.
Joy and fulfilment are essential for real happiness. Transient pleasure is not happiness. Eternal contentment is.
Jonson Chong is a former PKR deputy secretary-general. He now heads the Business and Law School at KDU University College.

Pre-university blog