nowadays got video recording on phone so common. next time go and take videos and upload lor and pass to the media also.Originally posted by Manager433:Supervisor shouted at students in public
The New Paper
March 9, 2006
ON Saturday (4 Mar), students in my school were among many involved in the Apex Day Care Centre flag day to raise funds for care for the elderly.
The school made this outing complusory as we had to complete our Community Involvement Programme (CIP) hours by April.
Our school said we would be given three hours of CIP for the flag day work.
We collected our donation tins from the person-in-charge at Novena MRT station at about 8.30am. The only instruction he gave was that we not lose the tins and we had to be back by 1pm.
I returned with a few classmates at about 12.15pm. Due to the participation of many students that day in this project, we were unable to collect much in donations.
The person-in-charge did not allow us to return our tins as he said that they were too empty and threatened to take away our CIP hours. He refused to buy our story that there were too many students asking for donations that day, and shouted at us in public.
Even though there were coins inside my donation tin, he wrote 'Empty' in the remarks column in the form he filled.
When a girl classmate also returned her tin, this man forced her to estimate the value of the coins inside. When she could not, he kept shouting at her until she broke down in tears. He then wrote 'Barely' in the remarks column.
As students, we had tried our best and we should not be blamed if the tins were not full.
I found it most distressing to see a grown-up man making a defenceless girl cry in public.
I hope the Apex Day Care Centre will take up this matter and counsel the person in charge.
- Jun An
Under Singapore LAws., It is illegal to threaten or harrass anyone either verbally, physically or psychologicallyOriginally posted by Manager433:Supervisor shouted at students in public
The New Paper
March 9, 2006
ON Saturday (4 Mar), students in my school were among many involved in the Apex Day Care Centre flag day to raise funds for care for the elderly.
The school made this outing complusory as we had to complete our Community Involvement Programme (CIP) hours by April.
Our school said we would be given three hours of CIP for the flag day work.
We collected our donation tins from the person-in-charge at Novena MRT station at about 8.30am. The only instruction he gave was that we not lose the tins and we had to be back by 1pm.
I returned with a few classmates at about 12.15pm. Due to the participation of many students that day in this project, we were unable to collect much in donations.
The person-in-charge did not allow us to return our tins as he said that they were too empty and threatened to take away our CIP hours. He refused to buy our story that there were too many students asking for donations that day, and shouted at us in public.
Even though there were coins inside my donation tin, he wrote 'Empty' in the remarks column in the form he filled.
When a girl classmate also returned her tin, this man forced her to estimate the value of the coins inside. When she could not, he kept shouting at her until she broke down in tears. He then wrote 'Barely' in the remarks column.
As students, we had tried our best and we should not be blamed if the tins were not full.
I found it most distressing to see a grown-up man making a defenceless girl cry in public.
I hope the Apex Day Care Centre will take up this matter and counsel the person in charge.
- Jun An
hmm should i go back and start sueing all the sergeants in bmt??Originally posted by Remo Fernandez:Under Singapore LAws., It is illegal to threaten or harrass anyone either verbally, physically or psychologically
you got go collect money mehz?Originally posted by stellazio:i never liked cip in the first place..
Lesson no.1:How to eat snake...Originally posted by MooKu:what can students learn out of flag day, anyway?
i rarely see spca donations. you got go down to spca before? they so pitufulOriginally posted by MooKu:will I donate or not?
hmmm depends.
normally I'll ask the student a gazillion questions.
if i think he/she has a fair enough knowledge of the organization he/she is raising funds for, i'll donate maybe ten or twenty cents (if the organization is one i've never heard before) because i think the poor student deserves a bit more weight in the tin.
if the organization is a well-known one and i think it deserves the donation.. sometimes i'll donate $2... or $5... or $10.... or all the coins i have in my wallet.... depending on how wealthy i am at the moment.