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154th: Sg Newspapers Help Sporns Think Critically!

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Newspaper way to boost critical thinking
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Malini Nathan
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Teachers attending the forum held at the Singapore Flyer's premises on Saturday were treated to a free ride on the flyer. -- PHOTO: KEVIN LEONG FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
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<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->A GROUP of 189 primary and secondary school teachers attended a Straits Times (ST) forum on media literacy and how to use newspapers as learning tools on Saturday.
Then, as a treat for Teachers' Day today, and as a gesture of appreciation for their continued use of the newspaper in the classroom, they were given a ride on the Singapore Flyer.
The forum, held on the Flyer's premises, was the fourth ST has held for teachers. Copies of the paper going out to primary schools subscribing to it are bundled with Little Red Dot on Tuesdays, while those for secondary schools are packaged with IN on Mondays.
Forum participant Chee Bee Phaik of Loyang Secondary School said: 'The forum was very helpful and I learnt a lot about critical thinking.'
Panellist Soo Kim Bee of the Education Ministry's Gifted Education Branch said Little Red Dot and IN sharpen students' critical thinking and creativity. She also urged teachers to develop a newspaper-reading habit among their charges.
In the forum for primary school teachers, three teachers - Da Qiao Primary's Ms Ng Sai Choo, and East View Primary's Madam Kamalnoorzaman Osman and Mrs Monica Berger - discussed how they used Little Red Dot in English lessons.
Ms Ng showed how her pupils used the newspaper for writing reflections and role-playing; Madam Kamalnoorzaman showed how issues raised in the news could be used in problem-based learning.
At the session for secondary school teachers, IN journalist and former teacher Lim Pow Hong said newspapers could be used to teach media literacy and to raise awareness of current affairs.
ST's associate editor Bertha Henson said that with such skills, 'students can discern the 'con job' from real content on the various media platforms they go to, especially now that they are bombarded with information and views from all directions'.
To subscribe to The Straits Times' Little Red Dot and IN, please call Ms Angeline Ng at 6319-1005 or Ms Shahrena Hassan at 6319-5097 or e-mail [email protected].
For inquiries about The Straits Times Media Club and its events, please call Ms Shahrena or e-mail her at [email protected]
 

myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Yeah! I was shocked they are trying to test their first step of discrediting internet. Ironically, newspaper reporters often come in here to dig news too. Without internet, reporters are all dead with nothing to write.
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Learn from the newspaper??? The educated ones will not try to trust the newspaper too much. What is there to learn from a newspaper that ranked 154th in media freedom? Learn how to lie? or distort the truth?
 
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