Monday, December 30, 2013

How to excel in Poly?



A little about my Polytechnic Experience
I entered Temasek Polytechnic (TP) in 2007 and I graduated with a Silver Medal for the Diploma in Microelectronics (Merit) with a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 3.91/4.00. I was also in the Dean's List (TP's version of Director's List), and my Final Year Project (FYP) was exhibited in TP's annual Engineering Project Show (EPS); my FYP team and I won the commendation award. After TP, I was awarded a scholarship to pursue a Bachelor of Business Management at Singapore Management University; expected graduation Apr 2014.


Coming January will be Semester 2 for my Polytechnic friends. These 10 poly-success secrets will definitely make your Polytechnic journey a memorable and fruitful one. 

#1. PLAN, PLAN, PLAN, and EXECUTE. 
Know when you will have a quiz, or a test. Print/photocopy the schedule (usually in your course-book), and stick it on your wall or somewhere prominent. Highlight the important dates and remember to check them. Ignoring them after having them on your walls, is equally useless. I used a google calendar to keep track of important dates and plan my study/practice too. Print all the past-exam papers early and start looking at the questions, EVEN if the topic is new.

#2. BE CONSISTENT WITH YOUR WORK. EVERY QUIZ, COUNTS.
Unlike during secondary school where one only had to BE SERIOUS when taking the General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level (GCE O'Level) examination. Things are CUMULATIVE in Poly; be prepared for every graded assessment. If its a Lab-assessment, go to the free-access labs and practice. If its a quiz, STUDY! If its Mid-terms or the Finals, study and practice! Past-year papers are very helpful.

#3. TIME MANAGEMENT
I was giving private tuitions while I was studying in TP. BE PRACTICAL, do not fully 'book' your week. You need to have buffer time too. I used (and i still use) a 4-quadrant task table. Like this below.
This way, you are more likely to do the 'Important' and 'Urgent' matters and not be trapped into being busy with low priority tasks.



#4. NEVER SKIP LECTURES, WORST ENTIRE SCHOOL DAY.
In my entire Polytechnic education, I missed 3 school days due to being critically ill. Yes, I did go to lessons late (bad move), but I never skipped lectures unless I was critically ill. Lectures are the best time to learn something. You learn better when others ask questions. These questions could be lame, but its better to have questions cleared now then later during the eve of a paper. Furthermore, being humans we can also identify topics which the lecturer seems to be more interested to cover. These topics are usually the ones that you can expect more tough questions on or are fundamental topics. Either way, just take note of these topics and you make sure you MASTER them.

#5. MIND YOUR BODY
Take care of your health and be mentally prepared for the Polytechnic marathon. Have enough sleep before a morning lesson. No use being in class when your brain is not absorbing anything. DO NOT FEAST before a lesson especially a lecture. The heavier a meal, the more likely you will be dozing of as Dr. Marks YaDown lectures away; have a light meal instead. Bring a water bottle, drinking plain water helps to keep you awake and it reduces the need to buy sugary drinks which will also induce sleep (after the initial sugar rush).

#6. FRIEND OR FOE?
Polytechnic is a fun place to study but it can also sometimes be too fun a place to study. Make sure, your circle of friends are matured enough and have an end-view in mind; like a GPA of 3.8 or 'make it to local uni', having goals will motivate you and your clique. If you can't find any like minded souls, then fly solo. Better to fly solo then to die in a pack. I was fortunate to have a few like-minded 'kakis'. We printed papers, exchanged notes (don't waste time into making your notes pretty), and did lab-practices together. These 'like-minded' souls are usually found in clubs associated with the diploma. :P 

#7. CCA MYTH
GPA is still your ticket to a local Uni or a great job. However, do pursue leadership roles in CCAs but always remember your primary duty as a student! CCAs are a great place to make new friends and to try things you always wanted to try i.e. rock climbing, etc.

#8. BE NICE TO EVERYONE, ESPECIALLY LECTURES
I am typically a nice guy and it shocked me that some of my poly-mates were rude to certain lecturers and lab-technicians. They paid the price when they needed help from these 'third-parties' for FYP or additional coaching (the lecturers were busier when these rascals approached them). 

#9. CALCULATE YOUR GPA
I used to do it by paper, until SMU made me more of an Excel enthusiast. So here's my gift to you. Download this Polytechnic CGPA Calculator for free! Having calculated your GPA and CGPA, you will know how much to score to hit your desired CGPA. It will keep you motivated and focused.
LINK: https://www.dropbox.com/s/8ebwvp19sllzm4c/TP%20GPA%20CAL.xlsx
https://www.dropbox.com/s/zkknas5n5nxcb58/TP%20GPA%20CAL.xlsx?dl=0

#10. KEEP THE END IN MIND
The Polytechnic challenge is a marathon. Keeping the end in mind will help you remain motivated. For me, it was to graduate with a 3.91 CGPA. I have friends who had 'MAKE IT TO NTU' pasted on their walls.
Have a great Polytechnic journey ahead! Cheers!

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Illumi Run 2013

Me with my SMU friends at illumi run 2013



The inaugural illumi run yesterday saw about 10,000 runners (news.asiaone). I missed the early-bird window and had to pay $68 to be one amongst the 10000 party-goers/runners yesterday. It was crowded but definitely fun! However, I was disappointed with the goodie bag; especially the poor quality of the running t-shirt. Being a business student I was intrigued that they would try to pull a run with poor quality t-shirt as compared to the other runs with better quality gears, and yet illumi run could still charge a premium. Only then did I realise that infinitus (organiser) may have applied blue-ocean 4-step strategy when they organised the run. 

Here's my take on the illumi run's Blue Ocean strategy. 

Cheers,
Dev