WELCOME TO THE MAPLE LEAF TIMES BLOG

A couple of articles are added each month with many more articles provided in the CAS's Maple Leaf Times (eMLT) magazine. To receive your eMLT magazine sent directly to your inbox (8 issues per year), become a member of the Canadian Association of Singapore. Visit the CAS website to register -- www.canadians.org.sg

Monday, September 1, 2014

CIS Bilingual Programme: Preparing Students for an Increasingly Globalised World


The Canadian International School (CIS) in Singapore prides itself on making sure their students are equipped with skills that enable them to thrive and achieve ambitious and worthy goals in an increasingly globalised world. With this in mind, the school launched a new bilingual Chinese-English programme in August 2014 for children aged 4 to 6. The reaction to the programme has been remarkable  - currently there are 13 bilingual classes across both campuses with plans to open further classes for students up to age 7 in January 2015, and up to age 9 in August 2015, to meet the growing demand.

The reasons for the programme’s popularity are diverse. Having two fully qualified teachers in each classroom at all times (one teacher is a native English speaker, the other a native Chinese speaker), appeals to many parents. Others like that the programme is fully aligned to the IB Primary Years Programme, promoting intercultural understanding, inquiry based learning and key features based on current “best practice” in teaching and learning. Another highly valued factor is that students receive a balanced exposure to both languages and class sizes are capped at 20 students in Junior Kindergarten (1:10 student-teacher ratio), 22 students in Senior Kindergarten (1:11 student-teacher ratio) and 24 in Grade 1 and 2 (1:12 student-teacher ratio). 

To find out more information about this pioneering bilingual educational opportunity for your child, please visiwww.cis.edu.sg/bilingual

Like Parent, Like Child: Good Oral Practice Starts at Home

Contributed by Specialist Dental Group®

According to a Straits Times article dated August 14th 2014, the number of children who have one or more rotten teeth at the age of seven rose from 47.6 percent in 2003 to 50.6 per cent last year.

It is important that as parents, you are well-informed about your children’s dental health.

Some misconceptions:

•   It is okay not to visit the dentist since their milk teeth   will fall out eventually.

    
Although children’s milk teeth will eventually fall    out, it is important that young children do not develop tooth decay as the milk teeth are place-holders for permanent teeth. Premature loss of milk teeth can have long-term implications, such as causing the nearby teeth to tip or shift into the space left unoccupied, resulting in the possibility for the new tooth to emerge tilted, crooked or misaligned.

•   My child is too young to see a dentist.

    
Your child’s first visit to the dentist should take place as soon as the first tooth erupts or at the very latest by the age of one. The first dental check-up identifies any dental issues with respect to the dental growth and development of the child.

•   It’s not too late to let my child learn about good oral habits only when they enter school.

    
Parents should start practicing good oral habits with their child as soon as the first tooth appears. Childhood is the best time to establish good dental habits that will last a lifetime. Children with good oral health since a very young age are more likely to have better health overall.

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Specialist Dental Group® is a corporate sponsor of the Canadian Association of Singapore (CAS). CAS members enjoy a special rate for dental services. For details, send an enquiry via www.specialistdentalgroup.com or call 6733 7883


To Alter or Not to Alter – That is the Question


By Jo Clary Maughan

We all wish that buying off the rack was as simple as walking up, selecting a garment, trying it on and wow - it’s perfect. But how many times does this actually happen? 

Shopping for clothes can be a tedious process, but you can have more freedom to purchase clothing off the rack if you are open to alterations.  Altering a garment can ensure it fits you perfectly rather than putting up with something that will have to do.  Below are a few tips on what you can and cannot alter:

Buy or alter an existing garment if:

1.   Altering an elastic waistband.
2.   Shortening straps or sleeve length.
3.   Taking up the hemlines. You can only take up 7.5 cms on skirts otherwise you lose the line of the garment which will result in having to take the sides in too.
4.   Shortening T-shirt, blouse and suit jacket hems.
5.   Taking in the back or side seams of waists on trousers and skirts.
6.   Putting in or making darts smaller in blouses and jackets.

Do not buy or alter an existing garment if:

1.   You need to let out more than the seam will allow. This goes for side seams and trouser length.
2.   Very sheer fabrics, knits, leather or fur will leave    holes in the fabric where the original stitching was.
3.   Lowering the crotch (rise) by more than one centimetre or quarter of an inch.
4.   Making smaller armholes in jackets, tops and blouses with sleeves.
5.   It is almost impossible to relocate a pocket, or remove it altogether, as you will always see the outline where the original pocket was.

While the 5 alterations (above) can be performed, the cost will be much higher due to the complexity of the work and may cost you the same price as the garment itself - so your purchase may not be worth the money.



Tabitha Founder Janne Ritskes

By  Sarah Chakravarty


As Tabitha Foundation marks an incredible 20 years helping poverty-stricken Cambodians, we talked to Tabitha’s nspirational founder, Canadian Janne Ritskes about how far she has come from the early days of dodging bullets in war-torn Phnom Penh and about her most ambitious project to date - Cambodia’s first ever women’s hospital, Nokor Tep.

Since Tabitha Cambodia was founded in 1994 (it now has supporting Foundations in over 8 countries including Singapore), it has earned a reputation for professionalism and sustainability. Six programs – savings, wells, housebuilding, cottage industry, schools, and now the planned Nokor Tep Women’s Hospital, provide long-term solutions to poverty.

The statistics are of Biblical proportions.  3 million Cambodians raised from poverty to self-sufficiency.  8,000 houses built by 15,000 volunteers. In 2013 alone, 25,000 families moved to middle-class income.

Much of Tabitha’s success so far is credited to Janne’s vision, warmth and downright tenacity. Born and raised in Canada, Janne has lived in Phnom Penh for two decades and has an adopted daughter Miriam, whom she calls ‘the greatest gift of all’ and who, as HIV positive, she says has taught ‘all of us that just because someone has an illness, that is not the whole person’.

Talking to Janne shows that Cambodia is a very different place to the shell-shocked country of 1994.  She told us what life was like when Tabitha began.

‘Our first office, my goodness, when it rained it flooded.  Toilets overflowed.  I slept in one of the office rooms and every night there was gunfire and grenade blasts.’ 

The Family Savings program is the cornerstone of Tabitha.  Every week each family saves a pre-agreed amount, maybe as little as 25c, and after 10 weeks uses the money saved to buy a pre-determined item, such as a cooking pot, or a blanket.  The saving cycle continues, and after 5-7 years the family will ‘graduate’ from the program with a steady source of income, a sturdy permanent house and all of their children in school.

The housebuilding program is one of the most successful run by the Foundation, often with unexpected benefits for the volunteers.

“I remember our very first housebuilding team, a group of young students with behavioural problems.  My challenge was to give them a different role.  James, a troubled teen, expelled from three schools, was team leader.  After house building, James wrote to all three schools and apologized for his behaviour.  He asked for forgiveness and a second chance.  All three schools gave him that chance.  James did this without his friends or parents knowing”.

Janne has had her share of personal sadness.  She was not able to be at her mother’s side to say goodbye when she passed away, because she was in Cambodia with the people to whom she has devoted so much of her life. True to her nature though, she has turned her personal struggles into opportunities for good.

“The day I was diagnosed with breast cancer, within an hour, all was set for treatment.  If I was an ordinary Cambodian woman, this would be a painful death sentence.  Building Nokor Tep Women’s Hospital has become our current project.  It is good and right, but like all facets of our work it involves struggles, struggles that make us strong.”

Janne was successfully treated.  And now in Tabitha’s 20th year the pace of her work has far from slowed down but quickened with this milestone initiative.  It is her vision with co-founders Her Excellency Dr. Ing Kantha Phavi, Cambodian Minister for Women’s Affairs and His Excellency Mr Trac Thai Sieng, Vice Governor of Phnom Penh.

“No woman in Cambodia will be denied treatment because of inability to pay the basic fees.  The project and costs are immense, but building is well underway.  We still have a long way to go and $835,000 is needed for the next phase.  The hospital will also provide mobile outreach clinics to reach out to communities throughout the country.”

Find out more about how you can help the Tabitha Foundation Singapore at www.tabithasingapore.com and the Nokor Tep Foundation at www.nokortep.com