2012!
Jan 3rd
Alhamdulillah the new year has arrived! I know that the teachers are super busy preparing for the 2012 school activities. I also managed to make some minor changes to the website, probably unnoticeable to most users lol!
Once again, thank you for your continuous support and duaas! May Allah make things easy for us inshaallah.
Alhamdulillah, Jzkk For Your Support…
Dec 6th
We are happy to announce that, Alhamdulillah, we are opening a new preschool centre in Bandar Seri Putra !
Our new centre is at :
No. 12, Jalan Seri Putra 5/4
Bandar Seri Putra
43000 Kajang,
Selangor
(just next to our present Taska Tunas Al-Fatih)
The places are also limited, especially since we already had a long waiting list to cover. So, Alhamdulillah, those on waiting list before, are all accepted now.
Jzkk for all the nice words from parents out there. We usually get new parents telling us how much they want to join Al-Fatih since we were recommended by their friends and neighbours. May our good relationship continue , insya-Allah.
Eid-ul-Fitri Ziarah 2011
Sep 14th
Eid Mubarak, everyone !
As Klang Valley residents, we are used to the Aidilfitri being celebrated the whole of Syawal. Our real Raya actually starts after we return home from our balik kampung !
The same with the folks here in Bandar Seri Putra. So, Alhamdulillah, we had our Eid-ul-Fitri Ziarah programme for 2011 on 10th Sept ( Saturday).
It is now our 6th year of organising this wonderful and fun programme, and we never failed to get enthusiastic and cooperative parents to open their homes to receive the little Al-Fatih kids’ ziarah, Alhamdulillah.
This year, we had separate routes for Tadika 1 and Tadika 2 children, and visited 6 houses each. The kids came bedecked in beautiful hari Raya clothes ( complete with samping and songkok too.. so cute!) and recited marhaban together at these houses. Alhamdulillah, they were good, and may put some of we adults to shame with their reciting, loud and clear !
This year, we were challenged with rain coming down periodically during the entire programme. With the quick thinking of teachers-in-charge ( and the help of many umbrellas), we managed to complete the ziarah, Alhamdulillah.
We also had a mini ziarah programme for the lttle tots at Taska Tunas Al-Fatih for the first time. However, they only visited 3 houses, since that is how far their little can carry them. And yes, they also recited marhaban !
Pictures from that day can be seen at our facebook page..
Stop the Homework culture !
Jul 27th
Once, a few years ago, when we newly opened Al-Fatih preschool, one parent, expressing her non-confidence at our abilities to teach her daughter, literally came and “attacked” us after school. All because we have not given her dear daughter any homework whatsoever for the first 2 weeks of school.
Of course, after explaining about Orientation Week etc, I also informed her that we do not believe in homework per se, and we don’t intend to dish them out regularly, especially when the child is either not getting any guidance from parents to complete them, or getting too much help from parents. ( note the difference between guidance and help, which will be discussed another time..).
Needless to say, the explanation did not go down well with the mum. I guess the homework culture ( and tuition culture too, if I may add) is too ingrained in the Malaysian psyche.
Fast forward to today, well, we do dish out homeworks, however, the caveat emptor here is that the work that we ask children to do at home are :
1) repetitive work that they can complete by themselves like practice tracing and writing
2) incomplete class work that was already explained and guided in school
3) practice that needed repetition like math and recognising phonics.
No homework that needs too much guidance from adults, so children are able to do them by themselves.
I am happy I found an interesting article that illustrated our beliefs recently. How I wish the Malaysian education system will one day change to reflect its own message of fulfilling children’s real needs.
From The Star newspaper :
Sunday 24, 2011
When Kids Read
By ABBY WONG
ONE evening, while I was in the kitchen of our home in Sydney, my daughter was scribbling on a card she had made for her cousin in San Francisco. She was going to write “I Love You”, she said. Zehn will need my help to write those words, I told myself while peeling the onions and garlic. Or so I thought.
She wrote those three words flawlessly with a full stop neatly placed at the end, and signed her name in the right place, too. How could that be? She’s not even four yet!
My eight-year-old son came into the kitchen and praised Zehn for having done such a marvellous job in both designing the card and writing on it. “She has miraculously become literate, mum, and she seems so nonchalant about it,” he said casually.
I was further dumbfounded as I had no idea when and from where my son had learnt the meanings of “miraculous”, “literate” and “nonchalant”.
Little Zehn is freaking out mum by using similies correctly!
“They were part of my spelling words and I had seen them before in Roald Dahl’s books,” he deadpanned, walking off to play with his Lego blocks since there was no homework to complete – Australian primary schools do not give work in the first week back after a two-week winter break.
That is the magic of Australian primary education. Children learn without parents knowing much about it. While children are content with the relaxed learning environment in which they acquire knowledge through play and God knows what else, parents, Asian parents in particular, worry because there is no way of knowing what their children are learning every day at school.
There are no textbooks to bring home, and homework is often minimal – one page of math and another of English. There are no impromptu tests nor is there a ranking system that tells parents how their children’s academic performance compares with others in the class. Some Asian parents I know have resorted to sending their children for tutoring; others simply accept the system and learn to be equally relaxed. I am one of the latter group.
Though I do look for pieces of papers in my son’s school bag in hopes of finding clues to what he has done at school, I can never get anything more than just the school’s weekly newsletter that provides updates about the school. I have attempted to ask him but his replies can be unsettling. “We watched a movie,” he sometimes says. But he does not say anything about the play they have to put up after the movie. He learns to speak in various intonations through role-play and grasps the importance of punctuation by reading scripts. “Commas give your sentences tones,” he mutters, as he sits doing his homework, which is to write a suspenseful narrative.
I can only listen in wonder at these times when he unconsciously releases these intriguing clues to his development as a reader and writer.
“Please, thank you. Please, thank you,” my daughter, who attends pre-school, repeats this little song as she warms herself in the bathtub. “I said ‘thank you’ when Isabelle said my shoes were pretty, mum.”
I struggle to come up with a sensible response: “That’s right. We should not feel shy when praised and we thank people for the compliment.”
“Thank you, please. Thank you, please,” she continues singing.
Tie neatly done up and shirt tucked in, my son is ready for school on a rainy morning. “This rain is unremitting. It has been raining for five days in a row now, hasn’t it, mum?” he says casually. I can only smile. His choice of words is simply too much for me to comprehend on this rainy day – and, no doubt, will be on many other days in the future.
“Don’t lament about the weather, Jonn. I love rainy days, they are so romantic,” my daughter adds, as if to give her mother the final push round the bend.
When I say to my husband in Mandarin how crazy our kids have become in their choice of words, my son throws me a wry look. “I am not crazy,” Jonn says firmly.
I gave up. My mother’s lament about my children’s loss of a second language had just been proven groundless. My son learns Mandarin in school because his mother lacks the will to teach him.
“This is going to be the best day ever,” exclaims my daughter, as she looks eagerly forward to another day at preschool.
What wonders can be wrought with a relaxed learning environment at school and a bookworm “infestation” at home!
‘My face is as soft as putty, mum,’ says Abby Wong’s daughter, terrifying mum with her use of simile.
Joining the Social Network, At Last !
Apr 26th
Assalamu’alaikum wbk
After some ‘inertia’ (don’t understand this word ? Look it up!
) on our part to dive into the social media frenzy, at last, Teacher Nor and I decided we must.
So, we got ourselves a mobile wireless device, and somehow figured out how to get a facebook page etcetera, etcetera… and the rest is history.
Glad to report that it was one of the best decisions we took. We like ! 
So, for those who are internet-savvy out there, do look us up in Facebook (search for "Al-Fatih Integrated Preschool"). It is somewhat faster and easier to post updates there, so if you want to find out about the latest activities, Insya-Allah, meet you there !
Ramadhan Kareem!
Aug 15th
It is that time of the year again. Ramadhan Kareem everyone! Check the "Puasa Dulu Baru Raya" from Raihan (in Bahasa Malaysia)
Old & Orphaned Socks
May 29th
For the recent Arts & Crafts class, we asked the children to bring old and orphaned socks so we could turn them into hand puppets. So you could just see the joy in their faces when they were able to transform daddy’s socks into something fun :-)


A is for Allah – Yusuf Islam
Feb 14th
I remember listening to this song for this first time way back in the 80s. Evergreen!
I look, I see – Yusuf Islam
Jan 3rd
This one is definitely a classic! Live performance of I look I see by Yusuf Islam.