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Breakfast at Changi with kakis from NUS

24 Feb

First posted in NUS’ “The Change is Me“, 24 Feb 2012

These past few Sundays, I have been meeting kakis (= friends) at Holland Village MRT at 6.30am and cycling down to Changi Village for breakfast via Lornie Road and Tampines. We meet other kakis who begin their shorter ride at a more leisurely pace from the East Coast park C1 along the Coastal Park Connector at 7.00am. Shortly after 8.00am, we were all chomping on pratas and dosais and catching up!

To think that all of this began in 90′s with my NUS biology classmates! As we rode together over the years, some of our juniors in NUS whom I taught or shared a lab with joined in and eventually we also linked up with other friends. A relaxed bunch, we treasure the journey and feeling of freedom most of all, and call ourselves Zendogs.

And yes, we even have a blog!

Zendogs 2.0 - It's the journey not the destination
Classmate, juniors, friends and my mentee have
breakfast at Changi Village, 29 Jan 2012!
Photo by Kevin Lim

I had a lovely time in NUS and met many people. It was in biology that I was to be especially lucky for we had a very good time during field trips with a hardy bunch of people and some would go on to become very good friends. Over the years, I am still enjoying occasional cycling trips, forest hikes, RISK sessions, nature guiding and other activities with them. And Facebook has helped me reconnect with quite a few more!

Thus it is with great delight that I see our first year undergraduates in LSM1103 Biodiversity, a core module for Life Science students, get reasonable exposure in the field with their classmates.

These days though, the class size has almost reached 300. It certainly is a challenge ensuring we can maintain a small group environment to facilitate learning and safety in the field.

Happily, the Chief TAs have managed to recruit a very precious crop of Teaching Assistants – honours and graduate students in biodiversity with a motivation to share, facilitate and inspire!

LSM1103 Group B Animal Diversity Practical (21 Oct 2011)
Animal Diversity Lab – can you sort out the fish and amphibians in three minutes?

LSM1103 AY 11/12 Sem 2 Kent Ridge Practical
Identifying plants and animals on Kent Ridge after a rain.

LSM1103 Group B Changi Practical (28 Oct 2011)
Seining in the waters off Changi Beach for fish and invertebrates

The first lecture with the first years in Semester 1 for this module is a precious session – it is here that I explain, amongst other things, the complicated arrangement of classes for this particular module to a group of students new to the whole university setup.

Last year, I lost that scheduled lecture slot to a public holiday. Desperate, I tried but failed to find an available Lecture Theatre for the make up lecture. I finally decided I would run two 2-hour sessions at Lab 7 instead. As is typical, this turned out to be a blessing – we were able to allocate time for groups to get to know each other, a very precious thing to do!

As students chattered away in the class, the Chief TA for the module, Xu Weiting, and myself, took a photo of every group for the module’s Facebook page.
Students went on to tag themselves and some went on to create group pages to continue the dialogue over the semester.

I hope the chatter will lead to friendships and that some of them will still be cycling together, like we still do, after two decades.

Here’s to friendships, from NUS and beyond!

AY2011/12 Sem 1 group photos!
LSM1103 AY2011/2 Sem 1 groups

I’m blogging on NUS’ facebook account from Feb to May 2012.

Sunrise in campus and a battle remembered

24 Feb

First posted in NUS’ “The Change is Me“, 14 Feb 2012

As the sun rose last Sunday, 12th February 2012, more than a hundred people walked from the University Cultural Centre up to the Ridge, and across the Gap past Kent Ridge Park to Bukit Chandu. In doing so, they traced the route of the battle of Pasir Panjang and honoured the exemplary defense of the ridge by soldiers of the The Malay Regiment on 13th and 14th February 1942, who battled against the 18th division of the Japanese Army during World War II.

2012-02-12 07.08.19
Photo by Kenneth Pinto

This exercise began more than ten years ago but its origins go back to when I was an NUS undergraduate myself.

I was a freshman biology undergraduate in the late 80′s and brought to the ridge by my TA, a botany honours student. I was fascinated as she introduced us to the plants there, for she knew the scientific name of everything! We would go on to explore insect life there in second year ecology, ‘listen’ to bats echolocating in third year zoology, use the ridge as a short cut to Central Library (still only a ten minute stroll), watch birds in both day and night, and be lucky enough to see the occasional snake!

It was only after I graduated, in the early 90′s, that I learnt that a battle that been fought in the area!

My old ecology professor, D H Murphy tossed me a mild remark one afternoon as we chatted on a bench outside the laboratory. I searched for information everywhere but it was ultimately the shelves of Central Library which revealed a University of Malaya history honours thesis devoted to the Malay Regiment. The 1955 thesis by Dol Ramli chronicled the Battle of Pasir Panjang and was eventually published in a journal as: Ramli, D., 1965. The Malay Regiment, 1933-1942. Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 38(1): 199 – 243.

I read the words and was fascinated – and also dismayed that I had known nothing of this tale of valor and determination on a ridge I thought I knew so well.

Dol Ramli, 1965: p.234

General A. E. Percival, the Commander-in-Chief of the Malayan Command would say of the men in Mubin C. Sheppard’s 1947 book, “The Malay Regiment 1933-1947″:

“…these young and untried soldiers acquitted themselves in a way which bore comparison with the very best troops in Malaya. In particular, by their stubborn defence of the Pasir Panjang Ridge at the height of the Battle of Singapore, they set an example of steadfastness and endurance which will become a great tradition in the Regiment and an inspiration for the future generations.”

This story simply had to be told!

Examining the map in Ramli’s thesis, I realised the battle had begun near the UCC and ended at Bukit Chandu. The thesis told a lovely story of the regiment and we already had our stories about plants and animals, so I initiated the Ridge Walks in 2002. Coincidentally that year, National Archives of Singapore opened the Reflections at Bukit Chandu on the hill. A natural end point for our walks, we began collaborating with them in 2004.


Photo by Kenneth Pinto

Public walks aside, I would eventually lead students up the ridge as part of LSM1103 Biodiversity, a life sciences core module. Three years ago, I decided to extend that walk all the way to Bukit Chandu. This way, our undergraduates flavour their biological impressions of the ridge with a bit of history and geography and early in their NUS career.

The building acts as a beacon and this afternoon, I visited Reflections of Bukit Chandu. There I saw primary school kids seated on the floor of the interpretive centre, learning about the Battle of Pasir Panjang. I need no longer worry, this story is being told.

I’m blogging on NUS’ facebook account from Feb to May 2012.

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