Archive for January, 2007

Mansuh UPSR?

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

Assalamualaikum,

Majlis Guru Besar Malaysia (MGBM) mahu Ujian Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah
(UPSR) dimansuhkan kerana sistem peperiksaan itu didakwa terlalu
mementingkan keputusan akademik dan tidak membantu membentuk sahsiah
diri murid. -Berita Harian, 19 Januari 2007 - http://www.bharian.com.my/m/BHarian/Friday/Mukadepan/20070118235643/Article/

Ana sokong 90% cadangan nie. 90%, sbb perlu kajian terperinci lagi. Pendapat saye, sistem pembelajaran kat malaysia ni terlampau exam oriented. Kalau tak lepas exam maknenye tak pandai, takde future. Kecik2 lagi dah kene ajar supaye dpt A dlm sumer subjek.. parents marah & sedih kalau anak2 tak dpt A. Dari kecik dah kene ajar yg dpt A tu lah tandanye kejayaan. Akhlak & moral diberi penekanan gak, tp jadi no 2. Pendapat ana, patutnye time2 kecik2 ni lah senang budak2 tu nak dididik dgn akhlak & amalan2 mulia. Agaknye sbb ni lah tu yg ramai jd korup bile dah tua ni. Kejayaan dinilaikan dgn sesuatu yg bersifat materialistik. Bile jd student kene dpt A, bila dah besar kene jadi kaya.

Pembelajaran & exam tu mmg penting, tp sistem pembelajaran & persekolahan kat malaysia ni terlampau exam oriented, which is never a good thing. Exam ni sumer hanyelah ’static benchmark’, bukan ‘real-world benchmark’, tp malang sekali kite dah ditanamkan dlm kepala, yg examlah segala-galanya. Sesungguhnya hidupku & matiku hanyalah untuk mendapat A dalam exam. Nauzubillah.

Migrating Birds Take Naps While in Flight

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

Hmm, interesting…

Migrating Birds Take Naps While in Flight
Category: SOFTPEDIA NEWS :: Science :: Nature

                                    

Scientists discovered three forms of compensating sleep loss
By: Stefan Anitei, Science Editor

 


A
new study showed that during the migration, birds take hundreds of naps
during the day, each lasting only few seconds, to compensate the night
sleep loss.

Swainson’s thrushes have a migration route of 3,000 miles from their
breeding areas in northern Canada and Alaska to winter territories in
Central and South America. They travel mostly during the night and
often for long hours at a time, leaving little time for sleep.
Scientists recorded caged thrushes for an entire year to see when and
how long they slept. During autumn and spring - the migration periods -
they reverse

 

their typical sleep patterns, staying awake at night and resting
during day. The difference is that, instead of sleeping for long
stretches at a time, the birds took several naps a day, of only 9
seconds on average. The scientists discovered also two other forms of
sleep beside shut-eye type.

The unilateral eye closure (UEC) means the birds rested one eye and one
half of their brains while their other eye and brain hemisphere
remained open and active, keeping them semi-alert to danger.

Other process, named drowsiness, is characterized by a partial shutting
of both eyes that still allows for some visual processing. Drowsiness
"is probably a state that, to some extent, grants the benefits of sleep
while allowing for some of the benefits of wakefulness," said study
team member Thomas Fuchs of Bowling Green State University in Ohio.

By alternating between naps, UEC and drowsiness, the thrushes and other
migratory birds can reap some of the benefits of sleep while only
marginally increasing their risks of being caught by prey birds. "In
terms of quality, drowsiness and unihemispheric sleep may be less
beneficial than [normal] sleep, but it may also be safer," Fuchs told
LiveScience.

The idea that some birds can really sleep while in flight has not yet
been proved. Sleep is nearly an universal must in the animal kingdom.
It may be necessary to organize the memories we amass during the day
and to give our bodies time to rest, but nothing is proven. "I think
what’s interesting about our findings is that even animals that should
be highly adapted to sleep loss cannot go on indefinitely," Fuchs said.

"That a need for sleep cannot be eliminated even in these species
underscores the importance of sleep for many, if not all, animals."

taken from: http://news.softpedia.com/news/Migrating-Birds-Take-Naps-While-in-Flight-37206.shtml