Last year, Tiong
had an opportunity to deliver a presentation to a group of Singaporean
school teachers. The majority of Singapore
schools, unlike Malaysian ones, are wired. The Singapore Government is
perhaps more diligent than its Asian counterparts in
ensuring that all schools are properly equipped with computers and the
right infrastructure to ensure they are groomed for the
knowledge-based economy.
Singapore students
are also more fortunate in that each school has a dedicated staff in charge
of IT development. This person sees to
the needs of the students in harnessing IT and ensures that the necessary
infrastructure is in place to support this exercise. The
Government's aim is to create thinking schools in order to breed a learning
nation. A new syllabus has been developed that comprises
three new skills--entrepreneurship, thought and creativity.
So when Tiong
stood up at the podium, the last in the series of speakers that evening,
the audience were prepared to leave. How
could a single principal from some backyard school impart what the Singapore
teachers already knew or had in their schools?
Unfazed, Tiong
pulled out his Powerbook and loaded a CD-ROM created by a group of his
students. Its contents showcased the early
beginnings of SMJK Dindings and the achievements in the last seven years.
In his not-so-fluent English, Tiong won the audience over
with his sincerity and dogged belief that it only takes one person to
make the difference.
My friends at
Sun were also equally impressed after touring the school premises, and
like their 3Com counterparts who had signed
the school under the company's Netprep program, the Sun respresentatives
expressed an equal desire to contribute to the school.
What they didn't
realize was that 3Com hadn't found Tiong. Tiong had found them.
As this visionary
says of his continuing quest to bring his students into the future: "I
teach the students to plant paddy, not merely to
eat from their rice bowl."