Fun At First BM Tuision Lesson

My first tuision lesson with my ex-BM teacher yesterday afternoon.

The lesson was temporarily taking place in my current Physics subject teacher’s rented house. By the time my friend Yin Hann and i got there, which is just a 5 minutes walk from our school, the Physics teacher is home and in the shower. The keys they found somehow couldn’t unlock the gate. So we were kept waiting outside.

And then a friend Yee Ling, who arrived early and was let inside before the teacher went to take her bath, joked that we’ll have to climb in.

Tired of waiting outside, we actually took that literally. First we threw our bags and books over the gate, and Yee Ling helped take our bags in. Then Yin Hann, who has earlier changed into school t-shirt and pants, climbed her way over the gate, and landed safely on the other side of the gate.

All the while i was watching, wondering how the hell am i gonna climb over in school pinafore.

Fortunately they found the key that opens the back door. So i ran to the back door and my BM tuision teacher Pn. Chow let me in.

Phew! All that sweat to get into the house for a tuision lesson.

The 2-hour lesson went well. Pn. Chow, whom i think is quite strict in school, is more friendly during tuision lesson. I didn’t even get scolded for not completing an essay i was supposed to hand in.

Oh, Pn. Chow’s clothes were kinda sexy too. You know, a little low cut in front. [whistle]

She gave us a rumusan to work on. And while we’re doing, she chatted with us. A friend asked about matriculation, and she tells us what she knows, plus gave us tips of a technique to get into goverment universities. Something about the ratio of students. Like if you go study in a state/district where there are few students, the chances of you getting into a gov uni will be higher.

Apart from the rumusan, she wants us to list down the 9 challenges of our Wawasan 2020, the names of the past prime minister of Malaysia, the names of each of the ministry department and the name of the cabinet holders, and also list down the 6 MSC projects (smart card technology, electronic government, smart schools, technopreneurship, e-Business and telehealth).

Almost all of us had a hard time recalling all those names. I don’t take much interest in politics and normally just skip those pages in the newspaper. And it was like, none of us could even name one of the MSC projects. [sigh] Pn. Chow said these knowledge would come in handy if we were to write an essay.

Our lesson for that day ended at 4.30 p.m.. Looking forward to the next lesson, which i think will be on Monday, a replacement for the January’s first week’s lesson which didn’t take place.