Sunday, September 03, 2006

exam fever

It was a maths (called arithmatic those days & i can't honestly say i know the difference!) test & i scored 47 out of 50. it was the 1st of hundreds of test/exams/assessments i was to toil for before the final one nearly 29 years later. that's an awfully long time span to be bury oneself in revision books & past-year papers, but yup, there's no other way to decide who deserves the A's & who gets the diploma.

preparing for an exam is a sobering experience, because you think you have so much to cover in so short a time. humiliating as well, because you've come to realise how little you actually know about the subject. suddenly, a feeling of inadequacy overwhelms you & the possiblility of failure becomes real. this does not just apply to school/college exams. i remember i had butterflies in my stomach the morning i was to take the driving test. in those heydays of my youth, i can easily devour 3 roti canais before you can say "teh tarik", but that fluttering in the tummy & the audible pounding of the heart, plus the mind-clouding road signs/hand signals/3-point turning manouvres sure play havoc with the appetite. in the end, half a canai & 2 sips of the tarik is all i can handle. talk about supreme anxiety. & this is just a run-of-the-mill driving test.

so as the year runs it's final stretch, i can relate to the thousands who will begin the exam season with the UPSR tomorrow, to be followed in rapid succession by PMR, SPM & STPM. in this era of endless "kelas tambahan", intense private tuition & unreal, astronomical expectations, it is baffling how much responsibility is being burdened on those young shoulders. i wish them all the best for their undertakings, & hope that, at some stage of their student lives, they remember occasionally to stop & smell the roses.

"If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, & it will be given to him." James 1:5

note : not exactly the top prize, this modest cup was one of several trophies i had won for extra-curricular activities - i represented my form 2 class in debate & we were runners-up to the 3rd formers. it's special because it was the 1st competition in school that i had won anything. it was also made of real metal. today's students are more rounded in the sense that these activities, now termed "co-curricular" to emphasise it's importance, are made compulsory in many schools.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yes of course. Preparing for exams is definitely sober. I feel that too whenever my finals are near. But nevertheless, all the best to Emma!

(:

P.S. --- I sent you an email. Need to ask you some stuff. Looking forward to hear from you soon.

Anonymous said...

Opps! The mail did not get through. Failed. Let me try again.

doc said...

kyels,

i don't envy the students one bit! thanks for you kind wishes. i've already replied to your email. let me know if you still need more info.

fishtail said...

Very colourful post :) What a delightful surprise to find Kyels' comments here too.

doc said...

fishtail,

with a ominous black background, i had to add some colour if i wanted people to read my blog. as for kyels, her influence in bloggosphere is far-reaching.

backStreetGluttons said...

hi, talkg about exams.

exams 2day r nothing like in d old days ! 75% GRADUATES CANNOT FIND JOBS, better throw away "degrees" lah

doc said...

hi tonixe,

i agree. something's not quite right in the current education system. when i did MCE (called SPM now), only a handful of students scored the maximum 9As but these days, students not only take 17 subjects but aced them all as well. i'm flabbergasted!