Life as an NTU undergrad... Life as an NTU undergrad
Transcription
Life as an NTU undergrad... Life as an NTU undergrad
THE NTU MAGAZINE MAR–APR 2014 NO. 15 IPRA GO AWARD L2D0EN WORLD 13 HEY, GOOD-LOOKER! & GLOBAL ALLIANCE COMM PRIX AWARD 2013 Getting to class is virtually a breeze Get more moolah MORE BUCKS FOR YOUR BANK (ACCOUNT) Pageant queen goes from flab to fab Prep talk HOW TO ACE THAT ADMISSIONS INTERVIEW CHECK IN TO CHECK OUT Life as an NTU undergrad... WIN! KIEHL’S PRODUCTS • ZUMBA CLASSES • ICE-SKATING PASSES • MOVIE TICKETS • GET FREE DESSERT Subscribe & win! We have 10 exclusive gift hampers ha from hw Kiehl’s (each worth $141) to give away! Each winner of this HEY! treat will receive either of these sets: • Ultra Facial Cleanser, Ultra Facial Toner, Ultra Facial Cream and Ultra Light Daily UV Defense • Ultra Facial Oil-Free Cleanser, Ultra Facial Oil-Free Toner, Ultra Facial Oil-Free Gel Cream and Ultra Light Daily UV Defense Simply subscribe to the online edition of HEY! at www.hey.ntu.edu.sg for your chance to win! KEEP IN TOUCH! We welcome your ideas, views and contributions. Email us at [email protected] ™ youtube.com/NTUsg b /NTU facebook.com/NTUsg twitter.com/NTUsg CHIEF EDITOR Dr Vivien Chiong EDITOR Eileen Tan ASSISTANT EDITOR Mabel Lee WRITERS Chrystal Chan Lester Kok Siddiqua Ovais Winifred Tan VIDEO PRODUCER Ei Ei Thei CONTRIBUTORS Christopher Ong (Class of 2009) Chua Wei Chong (Class of 2015) Sam Chin (Class of 2012) Zach Chia (Class of 2014) Victoria Chang (Class of 2013) DESIGN Loo Lay Hua HEY! GO GREEN Share your copy of the magazine, or return it to us and we will recycle it. HEY! is a publication of the Corporate Communications Office, Nanyang Technological University. All rights reserved. ©2014 by Nanyang Technological University, Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798. Reproduction in whole or part without permission is prohibited. T. (65) 6790 5116. F. (65) 6791 8494. Reg No 200604393R Printer: Times Printers Pte Ltd 2 FYI 4 FEATURE CELEBRATE NTU! The big campus party is back 5 FEATURE WORD ON THE WEB Tweets from NTU hopefuls 6 FEATURE 5 THINGS YOU CAN DO AS AN NTU STUDENT… Fruitful undergrad days ahead 23 FEATURE PREP TALK Winning advice from students and a prof 24 FEATURE “I USED TO BE FAT” Weighing in on weighty issues 26 FEATURE GET MORE MOOLAH Cash in on these money-making tips 29 HOT SHOTS HEY, GOOD LOOKING! Wearing their hearts on their sleeves 32 FEATURE GET TO CLASS ON-LINE Click to your classroom 33 THE P FILES A BEAUTIFUL START Prof Timothy White gets on course with e-learning 35 THINKING ALOUD 10 THINGS I HAVE LEARNT THIS SEMESTER From FML to $1 flights 36 UNPLUGGED DISRUPTIVE PIONEER Educating the world 40 MY SPACE MICHAEL MAH’S ROOM Cosy kingdom HEY! CATCH US ON... GET MORE FROM HEY! When you see the icon, you can enjoy exclusive stories, videos or photos via the desktop, mobile and tablet versions of HEY! Online at www.hey.ntu.edu.sg. Is your favourite prof in the hall of fame? NTU has a new Teaching Excellence Academy and the 12 who won the university’s top award for teaching last year have been inducted into it as the first Fellows who will be role models for other faculty members. The Teaching Excellence Academy will adapt their good teaching practices and drive initiatives for more effectivee learning, including developing innovative teaching tools such as an app for collaborative learning and an automated assessment system to make teaching more productive for engineering students. Five of the 12 Fellows: (from left) Prof Vijay Sethi, Assoc Prof Goh Wang Ling, Assoc Prof Roderick Wayland Bates, Assoc Prof Goh Wooi Boon and Asst Prof Jung Younbo Big bucks It pays to be an NTU business graduate: Nanyang MBA holders on average see their income more than double within three years of receiving their master’s degree. In the latest Financial Times annual global MBA rankings, the Nanyang MBA came in 12th for value-for-money, ahead of the world’s top five business schools. The Nanyang Business School was also ranked among the world’s top 40 business schools for the sixth consecutive year. Flight of fancy EXTRA Video: NTU’s smart quad-copters It was plane awesome to see NTU’s flying drones make their debut at this year’s Singapore Airshow. Built and programmed from scratch, the 12 drones – or Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) – swooped and dived in precise formation, wowing the crowd with a stunning aerial display jazzed up with strobe lights and music. Visitors also got to play interactive games with the drones, such as remote-controlling a drone to chase a car down a racing track. Watch the video to be amazed. 2 MAGICal cuts Enthralled by the epic visual effects in sci-fi movies like Star Trek and Pacific Rim? Now, you can look forward to more of such films produced locally, thanks to NTU’s new $7 million Future Studios Research Lab, housed within the Multi-plAtform Game Innovation Centre (MAGIC). With its state-of-the-art graphics processing equipment and artificial intelligence technologies, the lab will help entertainment and media companies produce high-quality films, animation and games at a fraction of their usual budgets and within tighter deadlines. It is now being used by a local studio to produce The Boy and His Robot, a sci-fi film scheduled for release this year. . HEY. it s PM lee! Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke at the NTU Ministerial Forum this year on Singapore’s progress. When touching on the promising younger generation, he mentioned some NTU students: Sally Yap, a PhD student helping to develop a vaccine for malaria, and the four communication undergrads (below with Prime Minister Lee) behind “The Real Reunion”, a social initiative that encourages busy families to bond over meals. “Pursue your passion, aim high, go for your dreams, act on your idealism, change Singapore, change the world, and make this a more vibrant and interesting society,” urged the Prime Minister. CONGRATULATIONS... BEATING THE ODDS A disability like poliomyelitis is no hindrance to sportsmanship, as demonstrated by Assoc Prof Mu Yuguang. The biological sciences professor clinched a Bronze medal for Singapore in a table tennis team event at the 7th ASEAN Para Games in Myanmar. POWERFUL PIONEER You have him to thank for not having to replace the battery of your phone each time it runs out of power. For his outstanding work in the 1980s making lithium-ion batteries safely rechargeable, Prof Rachid Yazami from the Energy Research Institute@NTU won the Draper Prize, a prestigious award given out annually to a very select few by the US-based National Academy of Engineering. NOT JUST A BLOCK OF WOOD NTU was the biggest winner at the Shell Ecomarathon Asia 2014 in Manila. The diesel-powered Nanyang Venture VI, nicknamed “Wooden Wonder”, clinched three awards – two for Vehicle Design and Safety and a Silver award in the Prototype (Diesel) category. The Nanyang Venture III, an electric-powered solar-assisted car, clinched the Technological Innovation prize for its innovative aerodynamism and unique electromagnetic clutch, which eliminates energy loss. Kudos to NTU’s engineering students! Wiping out malaria H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 There’s new hope for the billions exposed to malaria, one of the world’s deadliest diseases. NTU scientists have discovered a novel way to block the malaria parasite from invading human blood cells. This groundbreaking research, published in top journal Nature Communications, paves the way for a low-cost vaccine against the disease, which could help wipe out malaria in the long run. The researchers have also developed a new type of mouse with a human immune system and humann red blood cells. When infected by malaria parasite-carrying mosquitoes, it can be usedd to understand our body’s reactions to the disease and to test potential vaccines. PHOTO: SHELL 3 Prof Bertil Andersson with students at last year’s Quad Party The big campus party is back! Come Celebrate NTU! on 11 March 2014. Now N in its second d year, Celebrate NTU! is a special day for students, faculty, staff and alumni to come together to commemorate the university’s achievements. Kicking off the festivities on campus will be NTU’s first university-wide debate at 12.30pm in Lecture Theatre 19, where faculty and students will engage in a battle of wits and words on the relevance of exams. At 2.30pm, NTU President Prof Bertil Andersson will deliver the State of the University Address in the Nanyang Auditorium. An annual highlight, Prof Andersson’s keynote speech will touch on the university’s strategic directions and other exciting developments in the year ahead. Come hear his vision for the university, and also witness the inauguration of the Teaching Excellence Academy and the Nanyang Awards ceremony, where outstanding faculty, staff and students will be recognised. After that, join the Quad Party and tuck into a sumptuous buffet spread as you enjoy live music and dance performances by NTU’s student clubs and hall jam bands. For an adrenaline rush, drop by the exciting game stations like gyrospin and wave surfing. As night falls, let your hair down and boogie the night away on the dance floor. Headlining this year’s party are two of Timbre’s biggest bands, 53A and Goodfellas, as well as popular club personalities DJs Andrew T and Zushan and rapper ZY, who will be spinning chart-topping hits through the night. So mark 11 March on your calendar. You may even catch a surprise guest performance or win yourself an Apple iPad Air, Samsung Galaxy Note 3, travel vouchers and more at the lucky draws! 4 NTU’s dance night Feature Word on the web Overheard: NTU hopefuls Overheard pefuls on Twittersphere… ILLUSTRATIONS BY CHUA WEI CHONG @faizabd Yap NTU Business & Computer Engineering I’m coming to you! @babyghaibi “mom, can I apply for NTU Singapore later?” “sure, why not?” I LOVE YOU MAMA<3 @cookie_ joshi I went for an open day at NTU and was like omg it looks so cool @ThatsSoBella I got e most exciting news today. I’ve been invited for early admissions & scholarship applications from NTU!!! *Squeals!!!* @Safiuddinmcmphm should’ve went for NTU open house last Sat ~ Hais... #regrets @Imbabyjill Please NTU just accept me then I no need headache lol! @S3Xisanart NTU NTU NTU DIE DIE MUST ENTER. NO NUS NVM ONE @huzzy_fuzzy Oh yeahh~~got ntu letter alr! Muahhaa... H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 5 ture ea F U NT ouse nH Ope pecial S 6 5 things Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine you can do as an NTU student at!!! Set your sights on becoming a heart surgeon or a business analyst? A chemical engineer or a sports journalist? A drug researcher or a digital animator? No matter where your interest lies, there’s plenty to look forward to as an undergraduate at NTU. HEY! gives a sneak preview by Mabel Lee, Chrystal Chan, Christopher Ong, Siddiqua Ovais and Victoria Chang 1. Use your iiPadd as a llearning i bbuddy dd Get up to speed with your readings wherever you are with the medical school’s broad use of e-learning. Whether you’re at the school’s Yunnan Garden or Novena campus, tap your iPad to easily download a variety of learning materials like voiceover presentations, timetables, iBooks, pre-recorded lectures and even interviews with scientists and clinicians. 2. Study in a simulated environment Slightly nervous at the thought of injecting someone with a needle? Try drawing blood from a synthetic arm with fake blood, or interact with lifelike mannequins that can shiver, blink and mimic the symptoms of heart attacks and other maladies. The school’s big use of simulated patients (think trained actors portraying patients with specific ailments), prosthetics and high-tech simulator models means you get to train in safe but realistic environments. Learn how to stitch a wound on an anxious patient, deliver bad news, calm angry patients and treat them holistically during a minor surgery. 3. Meet real patients two months into the course As early as the second month of your medical studies, interact with real patients at polyclinics and Tan Tock Seng Hospital. You’ll get the hands-on experience of working in an actual clinical environment and studying disease progression and its effects on patients. The school has the Family Medicine Academy at Bukit Batok Polyclinic, which is equipped with a clinical skills laboratory and specially designed consultation rooms where you can practise examining patients. 4. Dissect a human eye… virtually Be amongst the first few in Southeast Asia to virtually dissect a body and study in-depth the various parts of the human anatomy using the Anatomage Table. It offers a realistic life-size digital rendering of the human body in 3D. At the medical school, you’ll also get to study the workings of the human body using plastinated human specimens – a first in Singapore. 5. Pick the brains of medical heroes From left: Shona Woo School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences; Henryk Abucewicz Tan School of Humanities & Social Sciences; Brandon Teo College of Engineering; and Yew Ying Teng School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 Top-notch faculty members include Prof Dermot Kelleher, the School’s Dean and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Imperial College London; global immunology expert Prof Philip Ingham, who has helped to develop a new anti-cancer drug; and Prof Bernhard Boehm, renowned in the field of clinical and experimental diabetes immunology. 7 ture ea Nanyang Business School F U NT ouse nH Ope pecial S DID YOU KNOW? f LKCMedicine’s five-year programme is jointly offered by NTU and Imperial College London, whose medical school is ranked among the top 10 in the world. f The school’s curriculum is built on innovative learning methods, with a strong focus on grooming patientcentric doctors. Students will need both good grades and a genuine empathy for patients to excel. 1. Be taught by the world’s best business professor f By 2015, a seven-storey Experimental Medicine Building will be completed at NTU. A 19-storey Clinical Sciences Building in Novena will be equipped with social spaces like learning studios, alcove clusters, seminar rooms and student lounges. The Novena campus is located directly opposite Tan Tock Seng Hospital, making it easy for students to access clinical settings. 2. Get a head start in your career Prof Vijay Sethi fended off tough competition – 221 professors from leading institutions like Harvard Business School and London Business School – to be named the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Business Professor of the Year in 2013. Here’s your chance to share a classroom with him. Complete an honours Business or Accountancy degree programme in just three years and get a head start in your career while your peers are still sweating out their finals. Graduates from the school’s Accountancy & Business double degree programme are also very employable. In 2012, the first batch of graduates from this combined programme secured 100% employment. 3. Earn a degree well-regarded by the Big Four Recognised by the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority and Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Singapore as a professional accounting qualification, the Bachelor of Accountancy degree will help you get your foot in the door with the Big Four accounting firms. The Nanyang Business School is also acclaimed for its accounting research: it ranked fifth in the world in last year’s Brigham Young University Accounting Research Rankings, with Prof Tan Hun Tong retaining his crown as the world’s top accounting researcher for the third year running. 4. Become an IT cum biz whiz Technical skills and business sense make for a winning combination – just think the late Steve Jobs. With the new double degree programme in Business (Information Technology) and Engineering (Computer Engineering), you’ll be well-equipped to follow in a genius’s footsteps. 5. Crack (business) cases like Sherlock Holmes Winning at prestigious global competitions is elementary to the school’s undergrads. The ones they’ve come up trumps at in recent years include L’Oréal Brandstorm and the McGill Management International Case Competition. You can get cracking here, too! 8 Renaissance Engineering Programme 1. Get an enriching overseas experience at world-class universities Take your pick and spend a full year studying at either Imperial College London or University of California, Berkeley. Students nts who choose Imperial will be near key industry players like Rolls-Royce -R Royce and IBM in London, and benefit from the famed university’s y’s’s connectedness to Europe, while those at Berkeley will find the enterprising vibes of Silicon Valley highly infectious. 2. Rub shoulders with start-up stars in Silicon Valley Third-year students under the Renaissance Engineering Programme who choose the UC Berkeley path will read two highly popular entrepreneurship courses unique to the American university. Develop a business case for your start-up and be inspired by guest speakers like CNN NN Hero Captain Budi Soehardi and Drew Houston, the founder nd der of Dropbox. Students will also have internships in Silicon Valley, ey home to the world’s technology giants like Google, Facebook, Apple, Yahoo and Pixar. Fancy being the next Mark Zuckerberg? 3. Build a remote-controlled vehicle from scratch The Build and Test Project is much talked about by the programme’s students. In your first semester, test your creative juices by putting together from scratch a remotecontrolled car, submarine or boat, and enter it in a race with your peers. Such hands-on, or “experience-based”, learning, is a mainstay of Singapore’s top engineering programme. 4. Pick from a list of comprehensive scholarships That is, a diverse range of scholarships awarded by NTU, the government and local and foreign MNCs. The university’s bond-free Nanyang Scholarship, for example, pays your tuition fees and provides perks like an allowance of $6,000 per academic year, a one-off $5,000 travel grant for overseas study or attachment, and a computer grant. 5. Be guaranteed accommodation on campus DID YOU KNOW? f Pop superstar Stefanie Sun, who has sold over 10 million copies of her albums, is arguably the school’s most famous alumna. f Nanyang Business School graduates get a very respectable starting salary – for instance, the top 10% of Bachelor of Business graduates received an average monthly pay of $11,710, according to a 2013 survey. f Big employers who regularly hire the school’s graduates include Unilever, Shell, P&G, DBS Bank, Citibank, Samsung, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and General Electric. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 All students will get to stay in an NTU hall of residence, which Life's great at is equipped with comfortable meeting rooms for discussions. The upside of having all your peers as hall mates? When you need UC Berkeley a study buddy or are stumped on homework, you can easily consult a classmate living next door. Hall life will DID YOU KNOW? naturallyy be vibrant! f This elite programme offers ttop students a dual degree – a Bachelor of Engineering Science aand a Master of Science in Technology Management – in just four and M a half years. f Renaissance Engineering PProgramme students will get to sstudy a range of multidisciplinary ssubjects from engineering and bbusiness to the liberal arts. The pprogramme aspires to nurture a new wave of engineers with the potential w tto develop into outstanding CChief Executive Officers or Chief TTechnology Officers. 9 ture ea F U NT ouse nH School of Chemical & Biomedical Engineering Ope pecial S 1. FFoster your passion in all areas s of science If yo you love physics, chemistry, biology and mathematics, look no further than the School of Chemical & Biomedical Engineering, which offers students the chance to draw from each area of science and maths to solve real-world problems. Keen to fight super bugs or make super drugs? 2. Be an expert on food With the new second major in Food Science & Technology, you’ll find out how food is made, how to make those morsels tastier and even invent new food products. You’ll also be taught by renowned professors from Wageningen University in the Netherlands, which boasts one of the top Food Technology programmes in Europe. 3. Use your microscopic vision for good Here, you will gain a “superpower” – the ability to identify and observe microorganisms and nanomaterials, as well as learn from professors who’ve biochemically engineered bacteria to kill superbugs that cause infections in the body. 4. Get valuable industrial experience During the second semester of your third year, you will undergo attachments with local or overseas firms in manufacturing or R&D sectors. With the opportunity to intern at companies such as Shell, ExxonMobil, Pfizer, 3M and DuPont, your industrial attachment will go a long way in prepping you for your future career with one of these companies. 5. Be one of the pioneers in a rising sector The field of biomedical engineering is said to be a sunrise industry, with investments flowing in at a steady rate. Already, Singapore has poured in $2 billion and the figures are set to rise. As a student at this school, you will be at the forefront of a rapidly growing industry, and who knows, you might find yourself at the top faster than you can blink. DID YOU KNOW? f The school is ranked 25th in the 2014 Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings by Subject for Chemical Engineering. f Last December, the school played host to the International Bone-Tissue-Engineering Congress, a prestigious congress that was held outside Europe for the first time. Your food will never taste the same again... 10 School of Civil & Environmental Engineering 1. Get that top-of-thew feeling world A a school with a stellar At rreputation, you are sure to ggo further, faster. Civil & Structural Engineering is one S of o the 10 NTU disciplines to be ranked in the world’s top 30, r sitting at 21st place in the 2014 s QS World University Rankings by b Subject. 2. Chart a fine course DID YOU KNOW? f The school counts amongst its alumni Chang Long Jong, Deputy CEO of MediaCorp and the man behind stars like Zoe Tay and Joanne Peh; Er Dr Lee Bee Wah, Member of Parliament and President of the Singapore Table Tennis Association; and Singapore’s top woman cop, Zuraidah Abdullah, the first woman to be promoted to the rank of Senior Assistant Commissioner in the Singapore Police Force. Who says civil engineering graduates don’t have diverse interests and talents? Here, the world is your playground. With the push towards greener, cleaner environments, you can help shape the design and construction of green buildings that consume less energy, finding cheaper ways of producing clean drinking water and even pioneering ways of combating environmental threats. Look to the high seas as a graduate of the Maritime Studies programme and get the chance to join international shipping lines. 3. Land a job within six months of graduation Benefit from NTU’s close links with the “green” industry. With strong support from its partners, NTU has not only clinched more than $1 billion in funding for research in the area of sustainability, but has also made it possible for you to study and do projects with some of the leading names in industry. It is no wonder then that almost every fresh graduate of the school secured a job within six months of graduating. 4. Spend a semester in Norway Want to travel to see the world even as you study? The school’s Maritime Studies programme, jointly conducted by NTU and the BI Norwegian Business School, will take you all the way to Norway for a semester. Learn from the best in the maritime industry, pick up cross-cultural skills and maybe even see the Northern Lights. And take the opportunity to backpack when you’re there! 5. Create an underwater city When it seems you are running out of space, look beneath the surface. Underground developments have captured Singapore’s imagination, and at this school you’ll have the chance to really dig deep. The school’s research initiatives and projects in underground and rock engineering and protective technologies are paving the way towards the building of super structures to house equipment and even people, below land and sea. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 11 School of Computer Engineering ture ea F U NT ouse nH Ope pecial S DID IDD YYOU KN KNOW? Student Pan Zhengxiang, a savvy app creator, has even got Andy Lau’s attention f In 2013, over 90% of computer engineering graduates and 92% of computer science graduates were employed within six months of graduation. f Under the Intelligent Nation Masterplan, Singapore intends to invest heavily and create an additional 55,000 jobs in the Infocomm industry by 2015. What this means: the need for talented IT professionals is increasing, and the school’s very relevant programmes will give you a head start. 1. Master the ins and outs of IT Tan Chade-Meng with Obama This is the place to equip yourself with specialist skills in software, hardware, system integration and interfaces, and keep in touch with technology trends to understand their application in the industry. Build and programme a robot, design the next massive multiplayer online game like World of Warcraft, or learn how to stay ahead of hackers by understanding IT security and its role in computer networks. 2. Become a future millionaire or a technology pioneer The school’s illustrious graduates include Marcus Cheng, whose IT company ACCLIVIS reaped $15 million in its first year of operation; and Wang De Rong, the only Singaporean to be recruited from the Asia-Pacific region to work at Microsoft’s main campus in the United States. Don’t forget Google pioneer and Jolly Good Fellow Tan Chade-Meng – award-winning engineer and 12 New York Times bestselling author. He is the first Singaporean to be hired by the technology giant. 3. Make a mark here and abroad Be inspired by enterprising seniors like Pan Zhengxiang, who invented more than six technological innovations when he was a final-year student. Amongst them is the Eco iPledge, a free mobile application that uses augmented reality to rally residents to make digital pledges to keep Singapore clean. The app is Asia’s first community-based augmented reality app to promote environmental friendliness, and was launched by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong last year. Follow in Zhengxiang’s footsteps – his industrious streak and solid training at the school also saw him become the first Singaporean and Asian to be selected as Senior Vice President, Publicity and Outreach Specialised Agency of Google’s Executive Board at Harvard University’s National Model United Nations. 4. Work at some of the “happiest companies” in the world Get your foot in the door by interning at big-league companies like Google and Facebook, or leading banks and financial companies like Citibank, Standard Chartered and Merrill Lynch. Microsoft, Lucasfilm and Procter & Gamble are also some of the big names who’re known to hire the school’s graduates. 5. Earn big bucks upon graduation The school’s graduates are amongst the highest-earning fresh NTU hires. The average gross monthly salary for holders of the double degree in business and computer science is $3,615, while the top earner overall last year is a computer science graduate drawing $11,700 monthly as a software engineer. School of Electrical & Electronic nic Engineering 1. Carve out a name for yourself Here’s a solid fact: both the Electrical & Electronic Engineering and Information Engineering & Media programmes are endorsed by the Engineering Accreditation Board of the Institution of Engineers Singapore. The two degrees are also recognised under the Washington Accord, an international accreditation agreement for professional engineering academic degrees. What this means: you’ll be recognised as a qualified engineer when you graduate from this school and be highly-regarded by potential employers worldwide. 2. Get out of this world There is space to excel at Singapore’s first school with an undergraduate satellite programme. Lastt November, the school made headlines again when en it successfully launched Singapore’s first student-built satellite into space. The solar-powered satellite, VELOX-PII, has been orbiting some 600km above Earth, testing hardware and software designed by the students. The school’s Satellite Research Centre also shot to fame in 2011 when it designed and launched the first made-in-Singapore satellite, X-SAT, into space. What’s next: another student-built satellite, VELOX-I, will be sent into space this year. 3. Engineer solutions for real-life problems At this top engineering school, you’ll learn how to tackle complex engineering problems faced by the world today, and work alongside eminent professors and researchers who are geared up to revolutionise everything from integrated circuits, cyber security, robotic implants and neural prosthetics to power and clean energy. For instance, you may learn how to create a technology that lets you switch television channels by simply thinking (that is, using your brainwaves)! VELOX-I DID YOU KNOW? f The school is ranked 10th in the world in the 2014 QS World University Rankings by Subject for Electrical and Electronic Engineering, jumping 26 places since 2011. f Globally recognised for its quality research output, the school consistently attracts about $65 million of research funding every year. Its research outcomes appear in about 650 academic journals and 400 conference papers annually. 4. Gawk at the school’s revolutionary inventions An ultra high-speed wireless chipset; a touch-sensing technology that transforms any hard surface into a touch screen; a new revolutionary graphene-based sensor that is more sensitive to light than the ones found in today’s cameras… these are just some of the impactful inventions that have come from this school. 5. Sharpen your business edge The school’s new engineering programmes offering a second major in Business will not only help you master the applications of engineering, but also develop your business sense. Having both technical and business perspectives will definitely give you a competitive edge in the job market, and open doors to exciting career routes in future. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 VELOX-PII 13 ture ea School of Materials Science & Engineering F U NT ouse nH This NTU invention, Ree-Trakt, is helping patients around the world Ope pecial S DID YOU KNOW? f The School of Materials Science & Engineering is home to the world’s first completely-dissolving heart stent; Ree-Trakt, a medical tool that helps surgeons better control soft tissue during operations; and LipoLat, a novel way of fighting glaucoma through painless jabs. Here, you’ll get to dabble in all manner of materials, from aerospace and biomedical engineering to clean energy, consumer products, electronics, manufacturing, petrochemical, semiconductor and defence technologies. University, and World Cultural Council special recognition award winner Prof Zhang Hua, whose work on the synthesis of hexagonal close-packed gold nanostructure is considered one of the most important fundamental advances in materials science and chemistry. 2. Be a business-savvy engineer 4. Think out of the lab A new Engineering with a Second Major in Business programme lets you select from 11 Engineering majors and 4 Business tracks in Accounting, Finance, Marketing and Operations Management. With solid grounding in engineering and business by the time you graduate, you’re sure to make an impressive start at work. 3. Learn from the best It’s the path less-travelled that leads you to a new discovery. Be inspired by the likes of Prof Subbu Venkatraman, the School’s Chair, and NTU Provost Prof Freddy Boey, both trailblazers in the biomedical services sector with their inventions used around the world. Here, you’ll also have the chance to work with top minds like Prof Bo Gunnar Liedberg, a pioneer in biological and chemical sensing previously from Sweden’s Linköping 14 f The school has launched about 10 spin-off companies, despite being a young faculty. f This is your chance to study at the largest materials institute in the world, ranked 8th worldwide for Materials Science in the 2014 QS World University Rankings by Subject, making it the top engineering school in NTU. Want to see if your idea can make a difference? Test it in the real world. With annual innovation challenges and industry-linked final-year projects, there are opportunities for you to go from researcher to entrepreneur. Among the school’s research breakthroughs are super biomaterials, the world’s slimmest capacitor for brighter camera flashes on mobile phones, and materials that could lead to energy-efficient solar cells. 5. Join top names in the industry An industry-relevant curriculum and close ties with market leaders like 3M Asia-Pacific, ExxonMobil, Rolls-Royce Singapore and Robert Bosch (SEA), mean you can be in the right circles for your career. Whether you turn an internship into a job opportunity or opt for a management trainee programme, it’s all about the company you keep. The prolific duo behind innovative life-saving inventions like stents that unclog blocked blood vessels and a device that can fix a broken heart. PHOTO: THE STRAITS TIMES © SINGAPORE PRESS HOLDINGS LIMITED. REPRODUCED WITH PERMISSION. 1. Lay hands on all the cool stuff School of Mechanical anical & Aerospac Aerospace Engineering 1. Build your own robot The sky’s the limit at the School of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, home to impactful innovations like the world’ss first flexible endoscope with small robotic fingers, solar-powered cars and unmanned aerial vehicles that can execute complex aerial manoeuvres such as writing calligraphy and flying in formation within inches of one another. Ranked 6th globally in robotics research, the school is also behind Singapore’s first human-size robot, NASH (NTU Advanced Smart Humanoid). 2. Win a championship driving your “own” car Zip along race tracks with an eco-friendly car you helped build from scratch. Since 2009, the school’s eco-cars have performed well in several international competitions, most recently bagging another four awards at the Shell Ecomarathon Asia 2014 in Manila. The Nanyang Venture VI team raced their diesel-powered car made of wood, while the Nanyang Venture III team revved an electric solar car. Va va vroom! 3. Fly overseas to work for global aerospace companies Top students of the Aerospace Engineering programme can do exclusive overseas internships at brand-name companies for increased exposure to the global aerospace industry. Think companies like The German Aerospace Center, Fraunhofer EMI, Rolls-Royce and ST Aerospace. Experiencing how engineering problems are tackled in different parts of the world will certainly boost your resume. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 4. PiPickk from f seven differentt specialisations Whether it’s Aeronautical Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, Energy and the Environment or Naval Architecture & Marine Engineering, you’ll find your forte on this versatile engineering programme. The school’s wide variety of specialisations also means you’re likely to find a major that suits your interests and needs. 5. Be a top-earning engineer According to the latest Graduate Employment Survey, published by the Ministry of Education, NTU’s fresh Aerospace Engineering graduates earn a mean gross monthly salary of $3,536, the highest amongst all engineering programmes in Singapore. Not bots about it – it pays to be an NTU aerospace engineering graduate DID YOU KNOW? f NTU is the 12th best in the world for Mechanical, Aeronautical & Manufacturing Engineering, according to the latest QS World University Rankings by Subject. f This May, the school will launch its Additive Manufacturing Centre, equipped with the latest 3D printing machines that can print metal parts and even living cells. f The school’s Aerospace Engineering degree programme is the first and onlyy one in Singapore. gp Plane impressive! 15 ture ea F U NT ouse nH School of Art, Design & Media Ope pecial S 1. Learn from the makers of your favourite movies and TV shows With artists and creative thinkers from all over the world, the faculty is a United Nations of artistic excellence. This includes the likes of Malaysian-born comic artist Sonny Liew, who has collaborated with the Marvel Comics Group; Benjamin Seide, who worked on visual effects for the hit HBO fantasy drama series, Game of Thrones; Academy Award-winning filmmaker Ben Shedd; and d Hans Bacher, a legendary illustrator famous for his work on Disney movies like Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King and Mulan. The school’s Chair, Prof Vibeke Sorensen, was also formerly a consultant for Disney. 2. Loll on a sweeping grass roof Featured in numerous international design publications, the school’s iconic building has been the talk of the global grapevine since its conception. It even made it to the Buzzfeed community’s list of “10 uniquely stunning college campuses from around the world”, alongside the likes of the University of Oxford and University of Glasgow. The heart-shaped building also won the Building & Construction Authority’s Green Mark Platinum Award, the highest honour for a “green building” in Singapore. Watch the NTU corporate video to see stunning aerial views of this building. 3. Stretch your creativity in an artistic environment You’ll find something new and colourful to check out all the time, from student-decorated lockers and art gallery exhibits to a library stocked with art books and comics from the likes of Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman series. Even the students are visual standouts in their striking sartorial choices, with both years’ winners of the Nail That Unique Style competition amongst them. The school also has its very own gallery, a unique exhibition space fitted with high-tech systems like museum track lighting and climate-controls to safely present sensitive and valuable works of art. 4. Embark on your own “statement pieces” Depending on your chosen specialty, the skills you learn will enable you to do anything from setting up your own art installation to directing your own short film or writing a screenplay. Every year, graduating students participate in the “ADM Show”, where their artworks are publicly exhibited, marking their transformation from varsity students to professional artists and designers. Even as an undergraduate, aspiring film producer Cindy Khoo made her way to the Cannes Film Festival & Market in 2011 to network with potential distributors of her short films. The school introduces new modules every year, most recently courses in 3D film production. 5. Dabble with state-of-the-art tools Here, you can use modern equipment inside studios for hands-on work, digital creation laboratories, media studios and open workshop spaces. Many of these facilities are used by today’s industry practitioners to do motion-capture, record high-quality sounds and design products. 16 Art, fashion and tech on the school runway DID YOU KNOW? f This is Singapore’s first professional art school offering degree courses in art, design and media. f The school’s graduates include Sarah Choo, who won Singapore’s biggest photography award, the ICON de Martell Cordon Bleu, and Long Yinghan, who has created visual effects for Hollywood blockbusters like The Avengers. f Other alumni have joined major advertising agencies like BBDO, while a good number have started their own companies producing films and advertisements for government ministries, statutory boards and major beauty brands. f Who is attending or has attended school here: son of celebrity couple Edmund Chen and Xiang Yun; son of local character actor Zhu Houren; and daughter of former Education Minister Dr Ng Eng Hen. School of Humanities & Social Sciences do a second major in Business at the Nanyang Business School. Psychology majors can also take up a second major in Biological Sciences. The school also offers a new interdisciplinary minor, Global Asia. 4. Be inspired by head-turning professors 1. Get on with that book you’ve always wanted to write DID YOU KNOW? f Despite being a young school formed only in 2004, the school is already ranked amongst the world’s top 100 in various international subject rankings. The school made big strides in the 2014 QS World University Rankings by Subject, with English Language & Literature moving up 38 spots to be ranked 46th. Political & International Studies is ranked 35th, and Linguistics, 42nd. f The multidisciplinary nature of the school’s programmes mean that its graduates are well-equipped to work for big names in various industries, such as Citibank, Forbes Research, Procter & Gamble, Singapore Press Holdings, the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Aspiring novelists, screenwriters and playwrights can look forward to learning about the craft of writing through the school’s Creative Writing Programme. Build your writing portfolio and work on that collection of short stories, poems or plays for a whole semester when you take the Advanced Creative Writing course. Learn more about style, structure, characterisation and the publishing process from visiting local and international writers like Singaporean poet Boey Kim Cheng and awardwinning Malaysian novelist Tash Aw. 2. Become a strong thinker Engage in a greater contemplation of the world when you take the school’s newly introduced degree in Philosophy. You’ll develop a sophisticated sense of logic, and maximise your capacity for rigorous reasoning with modules like Logic and Paradoxes and Moral Philosophy. In line with a rapidly developing world, the programme will help you understand different global perspectives as it intersects with other disciplines like mathematics, physics, biology, economics and psychology. Meet Asst Prof Suzy Styles, an expert in psycholinguistics who left the world of nuclear physics for humanities when she realised spinning electrons in radioactive isotopes were not her thing. Or be inspired by Asst Prof Leong Kaiwen, the four-time junior college dropout who obtained three masters’ degrees and a PhD in economics from Princeton University by the age of 31, and Asst Prof Patrick Williams, who was honoured with the inaugural Nanyang Education Award (College), a top award for teaching excellence presented by the university last year. 5. Get a head start with that major you’ve always been passionate about Under the school’s four-year direct honours programme, students do not have to go through the hassle or panic of a selection process of their major. Apply directly for your desired major – English, Public Policy and Global Affairs, Sociology, Linguistics and Multilingual Studies, Psychology, Philosophy or Chinese – when you enter university. One of our fav profs... 3. Boost your resume with a second major Outstanding first-year students will have the opportunity to take a second major in any of the eight major disciplines within the School of Humanities & Social Sciences, or pursue one at NTU’s communication or art, design & media schools. Economics majors can opt to H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 17 ture ea F U NT ouse nH Wee Kim Wee School of Communication & Information Ope pecial S DID YOU KNOW? “I am reporting ‘live’ from Newsplex Asia, an integrated N newsroom of the future…” f In Communication & Media Studies, NTU is ranked 6th in the world in the latest QS World University Rankings by Subject, jumping an impressive 17 spots within two years to become number one in Singapore and the Asia-Pacific. f Graduates of the school can take on jobs ranging from movie directors and film producers to international correspondents, editors and advertising agency creative directors. f Famous alum include awardwinning journalists like The Straits Times’ Deputy Foreign Editor Chua Chin Hon and TODAY’s Associate Editor Loh Chee Kong. Actress Joanne Peh and beauty queen Faraliza Tan also studied here. 4. Intern at leading media agencies and companies 1. Report breaking news in a simulated state-of-the-art newsroom Aspiring journalists will get to do their assignments in Newsplex Asia, dubbed the newsroom of the future. The 60seat glass-walled room is the first of its kind in Asia. Created with WAN-IFRA (World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers), this news hub also trains journalists from Singapore and the region, so you’ll get to work alongside savvy media professionals. 2. Satisfy your curiosity in all areas of the media The only full-fledged Communication school in Singapore, it offers the broadest range of media-related curricula. From broadcasting to journalism and advertising to public relations, communication research and information studies, students can learn about it all under one roof. Can’t decide which area to major in? Go for an inter-disciplinary concentration, which allows you to pick and choose subjects to suit your needs. 18 3. Indulge that love for travel You can travel the world as a student with overseas training modules specially designed for communication students. There’s the Go-FAR (Going Overseas For Advanced Reporting) programme, the SOJOURN (Short Overseas Journalism) practicum, the ISCM (International Strategic Communication Management) course for PR/Advertising majors, and the Wee trip, an overseas community involvement expedition organised by students from the Communication & Information Club, all sponsored by the Wee Kim Wee Legacy Fund, which also goes a long way to assist students who qualify for overseas exchange programmes and internships. Think countries off the beaten path like North Korea, Bhutan, Pakistan, Turkey and Spain. MTV Asia, Disney, Universal Studios, Golin Harris International, Ogilvy Public Relations, Thomson Reuters, The Straits Times… you’ll get the pick of the crop as an NTU communication student. The school requires every third-year student to undergo a six-month internship at companies like these – you won’t just be the coffee boy or girl but the bright-eyed intern that could be offered a full-time job at the end of your stint. 5. Make the news The school’s students constantly make newspaper headlines with their final-year projects, such as the four who came up with humorous but extreme ways to deal with people too engrossed in using their mobile phones even when in the presence of friends or family. Other groups have attempted to raise awareness about recycling electronics and the need to reduce food wastage. School of Biological Sciences School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences 1. Discover a cure for cancer Follow the lead of Acting Chair Prof Peter Preiser, who recently made headlines globally for his breakthrough research in human malaria. Prof Preiser and his team developed a new breed of mouse – the first to have a human immune system that can be infected by human strains of malaria, and potentially the key to discovering a new treatment for the disease. Perhaps you’ll make similar headway into cancer research here... You’re in for a magical time! 2. Work alongside a world-famous structural biologist Internationally feted for her work on chromosome biology, Prof Daniela Rhodes, a Fellow of the Royal Society in the United Kingdom, enjoys helping budding young researchers like you become passionate about science. Seize the opportunity to be mentored by a leading scholar who obtained her PhD under the guidance of 1982 Chemistry Nobel laureate Aaron Klug. 3. Cut across disciplines Find your niche in the leading biomedical hub that is Singapore with a programme that gives you both an honours degree in Biological Sciences and a second major in Chemical Biology. With the guidance of experts from the School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences’ division of Chemistry and Biology Chemistry, you’ll soon be solving complex biological problems with the aid of chemical tools you designed. 4. Prep yourself for a rewarding career Passion pays at the School of Biological Sciences. According to a JobStreet survey last year, biotechnology research scientists have the second-highest average starting salary amongst all fresh grads in Singapore. You can be one of them, too. 5. Have fun with Freud Always wanted to read someone’s mind? The Biological Sciences with Psychology Major programme lets you learn all about human emotions, behaviours and thoughts. Study topics like forensic psychology of crime, and benefit from additional career paths in public affairs, advertising and the media industry. 1. Be inspired by young superstars of science With more than half of NTU’s 31 National Research Foundation Fellows – the best young talents from top international varsities – based at the school, you’ll have no shortage of mentors to introduce you to a wide range of subjects like quantum physics and green and medicinal chemistry. 2. Make things disappear like magic… ... just like Asst Prof Zhang Baile. He may not be Harry Potter, but Asst Prof Zhang, named one of the “20 Super Cool People” at the TED2013 conference in California, invented his very own invisibility cloak from cheap natural mineral. Recognised as one of the top 10 university innovations by the Times Higher Education, it bends light to make objects, like a coin, invisible to the human eye. 3. Study in facilities modelled after Oxford’s Fun fact: the Chemistry & Biological Chemistry building is modelled after the University of Oxford’s largest research facility, the Chemistry Research Laboratory. And the school’s connection to prestigious international institutions doesn’t end there: several alumni have gone on to graduate studies at places like Harvard University, Stanford University and London School of Economics. 4. Tinker to your heart’s content Apply scientific solutions to a real-life problem of your choosing in the new Making and Tinkering course, available this May. With the latest equipment such as 3D printers, work with students from other disciplines to turn your solution into reality and then prove it is a winning creation before a panel of judges. 5. Master the earth DID YOU KNOW? f Bayer AG, the Lonza Group and Roche are some of the leading companies that look to the school for fresh hires. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 As part of the new undergraduate programme, Environmental Earth Systems Science, venture abroad on field trips to exotic locales like Bali and be trained to tackle the major issues of our time, including the impact of humans on the environment, climate change and management of natural resources. 19 ture ea National Institute of Education F U NT ouse nH Ope pecial S This building is modelled after Oxford’s chemistry lab DID YOU KNOW? f The curriculum and standards for the various disciplines offered at the school are modelled after worldclass varsities like Yale University, University of California, Los Angeles, Cornell University and University of Cambridge. f At a truly interdisciplinary school like this one, you’ll find the likes of mathematicians making an impact in computer science and physicists dabbling in financial engineering. f The school counts a Nobel laureate amongst its faculty: Nanyang Visiting Professor Rudolph A Marcus, 91 this year, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1992. 1. Nurture your passion for teaching Here, you’ll learn everything about becoming an effective and engaging teacher: from tried and tested teaching methods to important language and voice presentation skills. Under the National Institute of Education, which has over 60 years of history working with the Ministry of Education and Singapore’s schools, you’ll be well-trained to inspire young minds. 2. Be both a professional and a student The Arts (Education) and Science (Education) undergraduate degree programmes are designed to not only grow your potential as a teaching professional, but also build your strong foundation in education. This means that after you graduate, you’ll be ready to further your studies with a higher degree in your chosen discipline, or to excel in careers in both education and academic-related fields. 3. Pick from different career tracks Three possible routes: teaching, leadership or senior specialist, where you can progress to become a master teacher or school principal. 4. Do your practicum… overseas As a student teacher, you’ll get to spend time in schools learning the ropes of the school process from experienced teachers. With the institute’s strong collaborations with overseas universities, you will get chances to fly abroad to study at its partner universities in the United States and Europe, and benefit from their best educational practices. 5. Be a sports star A better life in 3D 20 The sharpest Th h p a and fastest come here... f The four-year direct honours Sport Science & Management programme is the only sports-related degree offered by a Singapore university. With the government pouring millions of dollars into the sports industry, and the opening of the Sports Hub this year, the programme’s strengths in physiology, biomechanics, sport management and coaching will make your education very relevant. DID YOU KNOW? f NTU is ranked 1st in Asia in the 2014 QS World University Rankings by Subject for Education. f The National Institute of Education takes effort to encourage altruism as part of its curriculum. Student teachers, for example, will take part in Group Endeavours in Service Learning projects, where they offer community services in Singapore via different social initiatives. f Sport science & management undergrads in the limelight include Tan Si Lie, who bagged Singapore’s first medal at the prestigious Indoor Archery World Cup in 2013, and Dipna Lim-Prasad, Singapore’s first female track Olympian in 36 years. NEW IN NTU! Four exciting programmes will be offered during the academic year from August. Will you be part of the pioneer batch? Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Environmental Earth Systems Science Dig deep into the mysteries of the planet with this programme, the first of its kind in Singapore. Learn how to think like an earth system scientist, and uncover the connections in the earth system and their important roles in maintaining a sustainable human society. Take classes in weather and climate, oceanography, hydrology and ecology, and study the scientific effects of environmental problems like climate change and natural hazards on humans. Be taught by some of the world’s best “rock stars”, geologist Prof Kerry Sieh and tectonics expert Prof Charles Rubin, and go on “Rock star” field courses overseas, such as an introductory field Prof Kerry Sieh trip to Bali at the end of your first year of study. Under this unique programme offered by NTU’s Division of Earth Sciences at the School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences, you’ll also get to read specialisations like Geosciences, which could land you an exciting job in natural and resource exploration, water resource management and geotechnical consulting; or Society and Earth System, which will prepare you for a career in fields like environmental and urban planning. Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Philosophy Want to be a famous philosophy graduate like former US President Bill Clinton? Under NTU’s new Philosophy programme by the School of Humanities & Social Sciences, you’ll hone your critical and philosophical thinking skills that are transferable and applicable to a host of career paths and industries. Read unique courses like Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Technology, and Philosophy and History of Great Ideas, all of which are aimed at raising your level of innovative thinking on different areas like technology, business and public policies. All students complete a final-year project to stretch their creative thinking. They will also have the option to take up a second major or a minor to bolster their knowledge and make them more wellrounded graduates. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) with a Second Major in Business Get the best of both worlds with this rigorous double major programme in Engineering and Business, which lets you choose from a range of 11 exciting engineering majors and four specialist tracks in Business. In the first two years, engineering students will read Business foundation modules together with the ones in their specific Engineering major, and even attend business classes with their peers at the Nanyang Business School. At the end of your second year, zoom into your specific interests and career goals by opting for one of four Business tracks: accounting, finance, marketing or operations management. Graduates of this dual programme will be highly valued for their mix of business leadership and credible engineering pedigree. This means getting a distinct competitive edge and market value over your peers, and receiving more career opportunities in diverse industries. Second Major in Food Science & Technology What goes into the food we eat? How do we keep food fresh for a longer time, and make it taste better? Learn all about food processes and manufacturing from an industrial point of view, and discover the significance of food science and technology and its possibilities in combating malnutrition, reducing food waste and improving sustainability. Students will also have opportunities to intern at big food companies, and be taught by renowned professors from Wageningen University, one of the world’s leading teaching and research centres in food science and technology. This new programme is jointly awarded by NTU and Wageningen University from the Netherlands, and is open to top students reading undergraduate degrees in Biological Sciences, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, and Chemistry & Biological Chemistry. 21 22 Feature F Prep talk Winifred Tan gets insider tips on how to tackle that admissions interview Tip 1: Be yourself Seniors say… “My interview was more of a friendly chat with two professors on my life experiences, projects I’ve been involved in and what I hope to achieve. My advice to NTU applicants? Be true to yourself and communicate what you really feel and want.” Gabriel Chee University Scholars Programme “For certain questions that test creative problem-solving, interviewers are more interested in the way you think rather than whether you can give an accurate answer.” Sharmaine Wong Renaissance Engineering Programme “Medicine applicants are divided into groups and have to go through eight rounds of multiple mini-interviews. Each session was timed and focused on a different theme, which compelled us to be succinct in our answers. Don’t be afraid to get ‘grilled’; the interviewers genuinely want to get to know you as an individual.” Lavisha Punjabi Medicine H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 Find out more about the course or programme you’re applying for, either by reading up online or talking to your seniors, suggests NTU scholar Sharmaine Wong. And think about what you hope to achieve at university. “The aim of the admissions interview is to determine whether you’re qualified and ready to pursue the programme. It is therefore important that you be yourself, and not someone who you think will fit in,” advises Prof Tan Ooi Kiang, Director of NTU’s admissions office. Tip 2: Be appropriately dressed On the day of the interview, show up punctually looking smartly dressed, unless you want to give the impression that the interview is just a means to an end for you to land a spot in university. “I once met an applicant who turned up in his soccer jersey so that he could rush for a soccer game after his interview,” says Prof Tan, citing a negative example. Tip 3: Speak confidently about your achievements During the interview, answer questions succinctly and speak confidently. This is where it pays to know your “selling points”. But steer clear of reciting answers, cautions accountancy and business undergraduate Gabriel Chee. “Preparing for common interview questions is not about memorising a set of ‘standard’ answers. It’s a way of spurring yourself to think about your motivations and reflect on what you want out of your university education.” “I was quizzed on why I wanted to study aerospace engineering and whether I held leadership positions in school,” recalls CN Yang Scholar Chen Ningjia. “Some of my friends were asked to solve science questions.” Interview questions typically cover three aspects: your personality, technical knowledge, and creativity and problemsolving skills. Tip 4: Ask questions As Sharmaine puts it, a good interview is “both interrogative and informative”. Interviewers will often take the time to guide you through the programme’s expectations and address your queries, so use these opportunities well. Explains Prof Tan: “Here’s your chance to discuss your goals with your future mentors in a friendly setting.” 23 Feature " I used to be Fat" Tips for fighting obesity, from a beauty queen – who once almost tipped the scales at 100kg – and a health communications researcher by Chrystal Chan Kylie Yuen shops for groceries differently from most of us. Whenever she picks up an item, she flips it over to study the ingredients list, and if she sees something that isn’t naturally-derived, she puts it back on the shelf. “I make sure I check the nutrition labels of everything I buy. As long as there is an ingredient I don’t recognise or can’t pronounce, I don’t touch it,” says the svelte business student, who was crowned Nanyang Business School Queen last year. Kylie hasn’t always been this meticulous, however. Just four years ago, she was twice her current size and ate whatever she wanted. This meant she spent most of her teenage years hiding in baggy polo tees and bermudas. The wake-up call came one day in 2010 when she stepped on the weighing scale and noticed that her weight was dangerously close to hitting the 100kg mark. “I got a shock when I saw I was 99.7kg. I decided I could not allow myself to reach 100kg, so I set my heart on losing weight,” recalls the first-year undergrad. Rather than relying on slimming products, Kylie researched online to find the most efficient way of losing weight and began recording her progress on a piece of paper that she pasted in front of her weighing scale to keep her on track. Kylie credits most of her 45kg weight loss to her diet, which includes lots of vegetables and no processed food. She abstains from candy, junk food and fast food, opting for healthy alternatives like fruits when she craves something sweet. “If you freeze a very ripe papaya, it will taste like ice cream,” she says. 24 Good moves Regular exercise also helped tremendously when she was trying to lose weight. Every day, after school, she would take a half-hour jog around her home. “I think every little bit counts when it comes to exercise. I climb the stairs instead of taking the lift, or walk to school from my hall instead of taking the bus,” she says. Her dramatic weight loss has changed her life for the better. Not only did she clinch second place in The New Paper New Face 2012 contest, which has launched the careers of many models and celebrities, she is more confident now, and unlike before, not self-conscious about her looks. “I feel people are kinder to me now, but that’s probably because I am more sociable and nd receptive to others, so I feel that hat people are friendlier,” she adds. s. Kylie admits that she should d have started adopting healthy habits at a younger age. “I was a fat kid because my grandparents loved to spoil me and would give me all the good od food,” she says. “I think, for kids these dayss and even many of us, it is easyy to put on weight, because we lead d such busy lives. Many of us eat at out often and don’t really havee time to exercise.” Her sentiments are echoed by Assoc Prof May Lwin, who has as conducted numerous research h projects on childhood obesityy and health communications. “Childhood obesity is a growing issue in Singapore and worldwide, because the sedentary lifestyle is getting more prevalent amongst the young. And with so many digital distractions, kids have less reason to go out and play,” says Assoc Prof Lwin. The Wee Kim Wee School of Communication & Information professor has made great strides in her research, recently developing H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 a mobile game application called My Pet Fitness that can motivate kids to go out and exercise. To bring up their virtual pet, players have to raise in-game money for pet food and other necessities by doing physical activities such as walking or jogging, which creates and sustains the motivation to work out. “You can’t force kids to exercise, so any way to get them moving should be encouraged. What’s more, these days, there are a lot of processed ingredients and junk food in meals, which unfortunately, contribute more calories and less of the good stuff, like vitamins and minerals,,” she says. y RRead eadd bbefore eforre yo ef youu ea eatt Assoc Prof Lwin has also done extensive research on health education and communication, such as studying how food packaging can influence eating decisions. “When grocery shopping, it’s best to read the labels of the products you are thinking of buying carefully, to find out what’s actually in them, as food packaging can be deceiving,” she advises. “For example, a packet that has a picture of strawberries may mislead you to think that the food item inside it has strawberries when it merely contains pink food colouring,” she explains. Assoc Prof Lwin’s research on deceptive food packaging has been shared with the Health Promotion Board and AgriFood & Veterinary Authority of Singapore. “By “B By identifying types of the ty misleading or misle unhelpful devices unhel by food used b companies out there, comp authorities can the au determine effective determ labelling guidelines labelli hopefully reduce and ho these kinds of the incidence of th food packaging,” she says. The next time you shop, don’t be swayed by the pictures on food packaging or the discounts offered, and instead be proactive about selecting healthier options, suggests Assoc Prof Lwin. 25 Feature get more moolah Final-year student Zach Chia explores the different ways to get dough as a student, whether it’s financing your education, earning an allowance, growing your income or even boosting your CV While government loans and grants can help pay for your school fees, they may not be able to cover your daily expenses or the cost of overseas study trips. Here are some ways a student like you can get more bucks for your bank (account). Bursaries You can apply for a bursary if the per capita income of your household is $1,700 or less. Per capita income is computed by dividing the gross household income by the number of people in the household. Bursaries are tenable for a year and provide you with money to tide you over the school year. The sum given ranges from $800 to about $2,900, depending on the awarding entity, with the money usually dispersed in two trenches, in November and March. No repayment is required. The application window opens after you have matriculated. It’s open every academic year, so everyone who qualifies financially can apply. Scholarships From the Nanyang Scholarship to the College Scholarship and LKCMedicine Scholarship, the list runs long. And you may not know that some scholarship options are open to you after you have entered NTU. These one-year scholarships are awarded based on your performance at university, both academic and non-academic, and have values ranging from $3,000 to $15,000 per academic year. Recent biological sciences graduate Darren Lim, a recipient of the CJ Koh Scholarship and Tan Sri Dr Runme Shaw Scholarship, says: “Being bond-free, these scholarships give me the freedom I want, and have helped to fund my hall fees, overseas exchange at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden and internships in Singapore and Shanghai.” Eligible freshmen can submit their application in July. Candidates shortlisted by the evaluation committee go through an interview. 26 Loans Some 7 in 10 students go abroad at least once during their studies at NTU. The intangibles that global exposure brings are very beneficial in the long term. Students wondering how to finance these opportunities can turn to various schemes and loans to help defray the cost of going on exchange or other immersion trips in addition to their tuition fees. Did you know? NTU’s overseas programmes include exchange, summer school, work-study schemes, internships and attachments and research programmes, including Final Year Projects (students from the School of Biological Sciences, for example, are able to conduct their final-year research overseas and get a loan to do so). Growing your pocket money What if you want to make some pocket money while you are studying? Work on campus Tiffany Goh, a third-year sociology student, worked part-time at NTU’s Centre for IT Services last semester, bagging not just spare moolah but some work experience. “Besides being in a job to earn a bit of pocket money, I also had a taste of what it might be like to enter the workforce. It forced me to be disciplined – to be punctual for work, meet deadlines and take instructions from colleagues with different working styles. It was an enjoyable experience and I would recommend such part-time work to any student who can afford the time.” Undergraduates under NTU’s work-study scheme can work up to 14 hours a week during the semester and 44 hours a week during semestral breaks. At the website, look for StudentLink to search for jobs that pay by the hour. There are many different jobs, some ad hoc, others regular, and the money also comes rather quickly once you have completed the administrative work. Volunteer for experiments or surveys Some schools, like the School of Humanities & Social Sciences, often need subjects for research experiments. Give under 30 minutes of your time to bag some quick cash or shopping vouchers. It’s a nice way to help with research – think economic risk response, linguistic ability and creativity, change in muscle makeup based on diet and lifestyle, etc. Making $avvy moves for your CV Or maybe you want to try a pushcart store. The NTU Students’ Union runs a U-Flea Market every two months; you pay a rental fee of $30 and have two full days to make a killing in the student market. Research and earn If you score well in your studies, you may be invited to take part in the Undergraduate Research Experience on CAmpus (URECA) programme and earn the coveted title of NTU President Research Scholar – plus some income. URECA is designed to get top students to take part in research and consider a research career. “URECA coincided with what I wanted – hands-on research experience, on top of the usual curriculum,” says Darren, who was on the programme for two years and has done research in both Singapore and Sweden. Maybe you want more. Not just money for tuition fees and pocket money, but something that also looks good on your CV, such as a business you started and ran while at university. champions in the CIMB ASEAN Youth Stock Challenge in 2012, and got a “safe environment to practise trading strategies”. Together with his course mate, third-year computer engineering student Randall Ong won the CIMB Securities Youth Challenge two years ago, which came with a $10,000 prize, allowing him to beef up his trading portfolio and “reaffirm” his trading strategies. He adds: “It helps because employers can see that you won in a competitive setting and that it’s quite an achievement.” Says third-year business student Kay Woo, who was a runner-up in the annual CP Marketing Challenge: “The greatest joy from joining competitions is learning from other teams putting their best foot forward to make sure they come out at the top.” Be a boss Sometimes, you need to spend money to make more money, but it can pay off. The Nanyang Technopreneurship Centre runs a Minor in Entrepreneurship programme that provides both theory and practical experience – a great way to get your own little thing off the ground with some guidance. If you already have a workable idea or product that you want to turn into a business, approach NTU’s Nanyang Innovation and Enterprise Office about setting up your firm at the centre. H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 Join competitions Check your NTU email account – you’ll regularly see announcements for competitions, from trading or business case competitions to science and essay contests. Many of these offer great prizes, too. It’s a really smart thing to do – you get good money if you win, gain practical experience and boost your CV. Many enterprising students take this route. Recent Nanyang Business School graduate Aaron Bay, a management associate at Keppel Corporation, and his team were national 27 28 Hot Shots HEY , GOOD-LOOKING! What plans did NTU students make for Valentine’s Day? PRISCILLA LAM ACCOUNTANCY “It’s important that I spend the day making meaningful conversation with the people who matter.” “If I don’t find a date for Valentine’s Day, I’d hang out with my friends and show them some extra love. If I were to go out with a girl, I’d ask to meet at Clarke Quay. We would take a leisurely walk by the Singapore River, go to a tapas restaurant, and enjoy a glass of wine in the sunshine.” BEL GOH AEROSPACE ENGINEERING “I’d take my girlfriend somewhere close to nature, like a park with a lot of greenery, or a beach with a pleasant view.” ROBERT NILSSON COMMUNICATION NATALIE TEOW HUMANITIES “I have a late-night date with my mum and dad, after dining with my boyfriend at Raffles. I’m very close to my parents and want to express my affection for them, too.” EUNICE SEOW HUMANITIES “I’ll be chilling out in a quiet café in East Coast, eating Japanese food. I don’t typically make a fuss about Valentine’s Day, as I believe you can show appreciation for your loved ones all the time, and not just on special occasions.” S PHOTOS: CHRYSTAL CHAN CARLOS JAVIER MARTONO BUSINES H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 “I’m an exchange student from the Netherlands, so unfortunately, my girlfriend is back at home. Next best thing: a relaxing getaway to Bali with my buddies!” 29 30 Advertorial SCREEN SAVERS Dermatologist Solutions™ Ultra Light Daily UV Defense SPF 50 PA+++, $52 Dermatologist Solutions™ Actively Corre cting & Beautifying BB Cream SPF 50 PA+++, $52 (3 shade s) You might be ageing faster than your peers around you Slapping on sunscreen is one of the best ways to protect your skin from pre-mature ageing. It reduces skin cancer risk and prevents unsightly dark spots from appearing due to harmful UV radiation, but not any kind of sunscreen out there will do. Some leave a white cast on skin, clog pores or are so thick it feels like you’re wearing a mask. Thankfully, Kiehl’s is here to help. Kiehl’s Dermatologist Solutions™ Ultra Light Daily UV Defense SPF 50 PA+++ sunscreen is oil-free, colour-free, PABA-free and fragrance-free, which means you’ll get complete protection from the sun and barely even feel it. If you need colour coverage, opt for Kiehl’s Actively Correcting & Beautifying BB Cream. It offers the same SPF 50 PA+++ protection with the added benefit of concealing skin imperfections and improving your skin tone with long-term use. The lightweight formula contains a plethora of skin-perfecting ingredients – Vitamin C, a powerful antioxidant that corrects skin damage; Glycerin, to retain skin moisture; and natural mineral pigments, for coverage. Kiehl’s Dermatologist Solutions™ Actively Correcting & Beautifying BB Cream SPF 50 PA+++ comes in three shades and has been dermatologically-tested for sensitive skin. HEAR WHAT NTU STUDENTS HAVE TO SAY… “As I do not like scented products because they tend to irritate my skin, Kiehl’s Ultra Light Daily UV Defense is fine for my daily use. Also, it is very light and easily absorbed by my skin, so a little goes a long way. I just needed a 10 cent amount. I would recommend this to my friends.” ARIEL LEE, YEAR 4, ART, DESIGN & MEDIA “Kiehl’s Ultra Light Daily UV Defense sunscreen is packaged in a squeeze tube so the product comes out easily without leaving a mess. Plus, unlike other sunscreens that leave my face oily and shiny, this does not feel greasy even towards the end of the day.” KARL TAY, YEAR 4, MECHANICAL ENGINEERING “I used the BB cream for a full day in school and it stayed put on my skin without turning greasy even after 10 hours. What’s more, it effortlessly blends into my skin and effectively covers up dark spots and blemishes on my face.” DENISE SOONG, YEAR 1, SOCIOLOGY R– A PR P R 2 0 14 14 HEY! M A R s from kiehl’s 3 suncare tip experts u still UV rays, so yo ocks out 20% of bl ly on e ad sh Umbrella ily sunscreen. need a good da r your under the sun fo go unprotected to get ed dy ne ea u alr yo le k If you thin ain. Most peop min D, think ag ! ta re Vi su of po se ex n do su daily utes of D from just min enough Vitamin lleté and your neck, déco y sunscreen to pl re. ap su to po et ex rg V fo Don’t ainst daily U ll-protected ag hands to be we “The best thing about the BB cream is that it comes with SPF 50 PA+++, so I can save the hassle of applying sunscreen before that. The light to medium coverage does a good job ob of evening out my skin tone, not becoming oily or sticky even after a long day on campus.” LIN ZHIDAN, YEAR 1, BUSINESS “One of the first things I noticed about the sunscreen is its texture. It is lightweight for its high SPF value of 50. I’m constantly on the move due to my hectic schedule, but even when I perspire, I don’t get the feeling at all that I’m wearing sunscreen.” MICHAEL MAH, YEAR 1, PSYCHOLOGY 31 31 Feature Get t0 class on line Chrystal Chan discovers the allure of e-learning and the draw of NTU’s first fully online classes on open learning platform Coursera Picture this. You’re reviewing your class material when you realise you are unsure about what your professor is talking about so you decide to post a question online. In no time at all, you get responses to your question from your classmates… in Africa and the Netherlands. Welcome to the new age of online learning. This is a reality for more than 18,400 students worldwide, all of whom have started on NTU’s first-ever Coursera course, Beauty, Form and Function: An Exploration of Symmetry, conducted entirely online since 17 February. Students who “log on to class” via the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) platform will see a video of the professor conducting a lesson in one of NTU’s specially-built interactive classrooms, in this case, Prof Tim White from NTU’s School of Materials Science & Engineering. “Contrary to popular belief, virtual classes are quite personalised. I can see my students via webcam, whereas in a typical lecture you can’t see the guys at the back,” says Prof White. 32 includes keystroke identification to check that you’re really taking the class. Matriculated NTU students can take the course on the Signature Track for free. Current and prospective NTU students who take the courses can earn credits that count towards their NTU degree. Since each course is worth three Academic Units (AUs) and takes about eight weeks to complete, it is a boon for those planning to finish their degree programme in a shorter time. Prospective NTU students, for example, would be able to clear at least one module before they even begin their freshman year. “I really like the idea that you can go to class at home or anywhere, because it saves travelling time. I’d like to try it out since I can offset my AUs as well,” says Natalie Teow, QUICK FACTS a second-year where all the students for Chinese major. 1. Using ZeeMaps, you can see Three more a course are logging in from. student’s paper will be courses taught by one – rs rade co-g are ents Stud 2. marks will be averaged. top professors are marked by three others and the w in the pipeline fello ch whi , time any 3. Students can ask questions answer. – Chinese can ld wor the nd arou from coursemates philosophy, be may you , trip eld fi a des 4. If your class assignment inclu e. e-commerce and ther ally actu you were asked to take a “selfie” to show technology, and Ng, co-founder of natural hazards. 5. Stanford University’s Andrew d mpe NTU’s reva Coursera, was so impressed with “We’re hoping er bett e wer studios that he claimed they to plough back than Stanford’s. the knowledge we gain from conducting online classes into All classes offered on our mainstream courses to make Coursera are free. Those who them even better. Under a fiveopt for the Signature Track will year plan, we will roll out even receive a “verified certificate” more online courses, so it’s jointly issued by Coursera quite exciting,” says Prof Kam and NTU for US$29. The Chan Hin, Associate Provost Signature Track uses a “verified for Undergraduate Education. certification” process that “Personally, I really love the idea that we’re going to be teaching people in Africa and the Bahamas. I think that’s really fun,” he adds. More than 38,400 students worldwide have registered for NTU’s first two MOOCs. The second course, Introduction to Forensic Science, starting in May, has over 20,000 sign-ups and is still accepting applicants. “I’ve actually been wanting to take the forensic science module as I think it’s quite interesting, but I’ve heard that it is quite content heavy, so that has been putting me off from taking it together with my regular modules. But now that it is available online, I might consider signing up for it,” says graduating mechanical engineering student Karl Tay. b Christopher by Chr hrisstto oph pher er O Ong ng Spurred by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and bird flu outbreaks of the early 2000s, Prof Timothy White pioneered NTU’s first comprehensive online course, Symmetry and Crystals, in 2007. It proved a hit with students. Today, the course is the inspiration for NTU’s first foray into Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) on Coursera – Beauty, Form and Function: An Exploration of Symmetry, where students learn how to identify symmetrical forms and appreciate their importance in nature, art, architecture and everyday life. The School of Materials Science & Engineering professor shares: “After the bird flu and SARS scares, we started Symmetry and Crystals to see how we could use online learning in the event that undergrads could not attend classes.” “The course was initially delivered both online and in person via tutorials. Later on, while we still offered students the option of coming for classes, we found that most of them preferred attending online tutorials.” As an educator, Prof White weighed the merits of breaking with the old model of one professor standing in front of a group of students. He saw that online tutorials helped students “get through the fluff quickly” – they would take the initiative to answer the simpler questions posed by their peers via the group H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 chat function, allowing him to focus on the difficult ones. “We could cover over 50 questions in an online session versus 10 to 15 questions in a regular tutorial.” Although the course ended when Prof White returned to his native Australia in 2009, the online learning pioneer was handed the opportunity to build on the foundations he had put in place when he returned to NTU three years later. “We could cover over 50 questions in an online session versus 10 to 15 questions in a regular tutorial.” On 17 February, Beauty, Form and Function: An Exploration of Symmetry opened its virtual classroom doors. NTU’s first MOOC has attracted more than 18,400 enrolments from over 100 countries and Prof White is excited by the prospect of reaching out to learners from the furthest corners of the globe, including Bolivia, Sudan and the Netherlands Antilles. He adds: “With the use of a webcam, I can offer a learning experience that is one-to-one and personal, instead of one-to-many in a packed lecture theatre with 200 students.” There are even recorded interviews with experts – from a geomancer named Master Lim to the director of the Singapore Botanic Gardens – offering insights into the exquisite patterns found in crystals and flowers. More importantly, Prof White hopes that students will make full use of social media and form online study groups with others interested in the same area of specialisation. “We’ve created spaces on Facebook, Twitter and Coursera, where students can discuss the course material. For Coursera courses, a thought-provoking question typically receives between 50 and 200 responses, so this is a good opportunity for peer learning.” He adds: “Students are often better than their professors at explaining concepts to their peers, and the best part is that explaining something to someone else is a fantastic way to learn.” Second-year aerospace engineering student Cheng Shi Wee has enjoyed the MOOC experience, describing it as “fun and interactive”. He enthuses: “I like how I can talk to students from across the globe, which makes me feel that the world has become smaller. And I can view the lectures and do the quizzes in my own time. In fact, I don’t need to leave my desk to complete this course.” 33 Advertorial No strings attached It happens. With every New Year’s resolution comes a decision to get fit and in shape, which means signing up for gym memberships and fitness class packages for the entire year. But once the six-month mark rolls around, much of your earlier enthusiasm falls by the wayside, as you find your busy schedule getting in the way of regular gym or class attendance. Thankfully, not every fitness centre out there demands you pay a hefty sum upfront for a full package of fitness classes you might find yourself unable to complete later. One of these centres is Zesty Kickz, offering fun workout classes such as Zumba, capoeira and kickboxing for ladies. Just a stone’s throw away from Somerset MRT station at Orchard Central, Zesty Kickz practices a pay-as-you-attend policy, where customers looking for a workout can pick a class they would like to join and pay only for that session. Customers are not required to apply for membership or take up a package so they can drop in whenever they have a free hour to spare. As tempting as that sounds, it’s best to reserve a spot via email before heading down in case the class you want is full for that particular time slot. The most popular class is Zumba, which takes up to 25 students per session, per instructor. Classes are affordable, at $15 for an hour of Zumba and $30 each for the capoeira and the ladies kickboxing classes, less than the price of a meal from a fancy restaurant. Now this is a fitness centre even commitment-phobes will warm to. Zesty Kickz is at #05-31, Orchard Central. For more information, visit www.zestykickz.com. Advertorial Be cool! At Singapore’s only Olympic-size ice rink on Level 3 of JCube, there’s all the space you need to show off your moves as a figure skater, pit your skills against ice-hockey pros or just skate your troubles away. Sign up for The Rink’s Learn-to-skate class and pick up the basics of ice-skating in just five lessons*. Every Friday and Saturday night, head for Disco on Ice and groove to the hottest hits from 9.45pm to 11.45pm. The spacious dance floor, at 60m by 30m, is one where you won’t rub elbows with the crowd. What’s more, with your Student Pass**, one friend gets to join you at Friday night’s Disco on Ice for free for three months. The Student Pass is also your passport to freebies worth $245, such as free entry for two friends during your birthday month, and three months of unlimited entry for yourself on weekdays, including school holidays. Running out of party ideas? Glide into The Rink. For just $30 per person (for a minimum of 10 party-goers), you get two hours of admission including usage of a party room with free rental of skate boots and a dedicated party host on ice who will liven up your celebration for 30 minutes. Here’s an Event & Party Package that tops all other ice-breakers! The regular adult admission rate for a two-hour session at The Rink is $14, with rental of ice skates costing $3.50. * Each lesson involves 30 minutes with a qualified coach and two hours of practice. The course fee is $107 per skater per level for group bookings by schools/universities. **The Student Pass for tertiary students (aged 18-22) is priced at $105. 34 Thinking Aloud 10 things I have learnt this semester by Andrew Duffy Andrew Duffy is an Assistant Professor at the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication & Information. He has previously written for The New Paper and The Straits Times. Professors – as any student will agree – don’t know everything. Luckily, some of the best teachers are my students, but I can also, if desperate, learn from colleagues as well. In fact, just by being on campus, wisdom seeps into my brain by osmosis. The point is that going to university should inculcate a desire for lifelong learning, and it has certainly worked for me. Here are 10 things I have learnt this semester. 1. The meaning of “FML”. I “arrowed” a student for a task and she said: “Great, FML.” I guessed she meant: “For Me? Laughs!” I was wrong. I visited Urban Dictionary and found out it’s something to do with lighthouses. So now I know. 2. Students obsess about GPAA The until they go on exchange. The purpose of GPA, or Grade Point Average, is to secure a place on exchange, so when that’s done, all’s good. This also explains the exchange students who arrive in Singapore and for whom GPA seems to stand for “Goback-Packing Allthetime”. 3. Campus bus routes change at the weekends. So I had a surprisee visit to the Pioneer MRT station. That’s fi ne, but the fine, driver made me get off the (air-conditioned) ir-conditioned) bus, walk down the (not air-conditioned) onditioned) road and stand in the (hot) sun, un, before ggetting back on the bus again. 4. Istanbul is the capital of moustache transplants. I learnt this from a student preparing PHOTO: PEARLY TAN for a travel-writing trip to Turkey. Apparently, Turkish CEOs do not command respect unless they have a luxuriant moustache. If they can’t grow one, they go to Istanbul and return with a massive mo. Who knew? 5. Some scientists know more about rock music than science. I joined a team of biochemechanicalcomputerengineericists at an H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 NTU pub quiz where faculty pit their brains against one another. Who sang “And the last thing I see is my heart, still beating…”? They knew.* How many elements in the Periodic Table? Not so sure...** 6. Brad Pitt can do my job. As NTU embraces online courses, who knows, one day lecturers may not be needed. We just write the lectures and NTU could video Brad delivering them. I am OK with this. I am even prepared to swap my salary and house with Brad. So, Brad, give me a call. Angelina still has my number. 7. You can fly to Bangkok for $1 return. This came up in a big lecture theatre when I asked a student what she had bought recently, and why, and she said: “A return flight to Bangkok, because it was $1.” 8. Getting a $1 flight to BBangkok does not make you popular. I gathered this from the looks of envy, hatred and resentment from the other 163 people in the room. Me included. 9. Students are not ro On Valentine’s romantic. Day, Day some of my students were d dressed with angel wings and devil’s horns… but none d admitted to a date. So I never admi found foun out whether the angels or the th devils had the best time. 10. I need a haircut. I learnt this from two students who randomly serenaded me with a guitar and an improvised ditty about my shaggy head. Some things you can’t just tell someone – you have to put it in a song. So, here are 10 valuable lessons. My life is richer for knowing them. I share them in the hope that yours will be, too. * Meat Loaf ’s Bat Out of Hell. ** There are 98 naturally occurring elements, and 16 more have been synthesised. Plus two unofficial elements that may have been synthesised. So the answer is 98, 114 or 116. Unobtanium is not one of them, by the way. 35 Unplugged DISRUPTIVE PIONEER Anyone with an Internet connection can now take two of NTU’s most popular courses on Coursera. Lester Kok visits its co-founder, Andrew Ng, an associate professor at Stanford University, at his Mountain View office in California to find out about the next frontier of education Who are the ones taking Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)? At Coursera, we are getting the most traction in professional education. More than 75% of Coursera users already have a bachelor’s degree. The old model of education – where you go to university for four years and spend the next 40 years coasting along on that education – makes little sense in today’s world. All of us need regular infusions of knowledge in order to stay current. Online courses – the kind that you can take from top universities and from the convenience of your own home – are bringing many adults back into the higher education system. One unique feature in Coursera is the Signature Track, where a student can get a signed certificate from Coursera and its partner university. How do you make sure students don’t cheat? We use a few methods to verify their identity. First, 36 we ask the student to hold their government-issued identity card to the webcam, so we can capture their picture and their real legal name. Next is to check their typing rhythm, which is fairly unique, just like fingerprints. No matter how hard I try, I will have a very hard time typing like you do. It is almost hardwired into our brains through many years of habitual typing, as my own research has found. The verification process we use is so stringent that it poses an even bigger deterrence to cheating when compared with the situation at most universities’ on-campus classes. Since top universities are offering courses online, why should one attend university? For most 18-year-olds, between choosing to stay at home to take a free online course and attending a university to take courses conducted on its campus, the latter option “Increasingly, more employers are taking Signature Track certificates seriously. We are starting to see employers asking for MOOC credentials in their job descriptions.” would be much more attractive. I’d advise all young people to attend university – there is no substitute for the residential experience, which can enrich you in so many ways. For NTU students, they can attend campus classes and take MOOCs. I think MOOCs can help universities to improve their on-campus education by increasing access to their courses so more students can take them. PHOTO: LESTER KOK What Wh att a are re some som omee ne new ttrends rend ds ffor or MOOCs?? IIncreasingly, MOOC i l more employers are taking Signature Track certificates seriously. We are starting to see employers asking for MOOC credentials in their job descriptions. A few universities have started to issue guidelines to students, teaching them how to use MOOC credentials when applying for university. NTU is one of the pioneers here. While several universities have started to offer credits for MOOCs hosted on Coursera, NTU has gone further by allowing those taking its MOOCs to offset academic credits during university admissions, which means a prospective student can chalk up course credits even before entering NTU. Where do you see MOOCs in the education sector? I think the biggest impact of MOOCs in the near future would be in continuing education, where there is a huge need H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 for online learning. In the United and, U i d States S d to a lesser l extent, Singapore, there is a gap between what employers are looking for in terms of skill sets and the skills workers present. MOOCs fill that void fairly nicely. How do you see the future of learning? The future will increasingly be one where you learn your entire life. If you want to learn a new subject or how to speak better publicly, for example, you can take a high-quality course at your own convenience. That is what MOOCs offer. You have visited many universities in the course of your work. What about NTU’s foray into online education most impresses you? One of the things I really admire about NTU is the work done on blended learning. NTU is one of the most advanced in blended learning, or the flipped classroom, which is having oncampus students consume online d li content and use the classroom time for deeper discussion. Last year, you were listed by TIME magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world for “bringing elite education to everyone”. Tell us more about your childhood. I was born in the United Kingdom and raised in Hong Kong. When I was eight years old, I moved to Singapore where I attended Anglo-Chinese School (Primary), Raffles Institution, then Raffles Junior College. I left junior college after nine months there to study computer science at Carnegie Mellon University. I was on the Singapore International Mathematical Olympiad team and now teach artificial intelligence, so I guess you could say I have always been interested in science, mathematics and the potential of technology to change the world. 37 COLLABORATE. INNOVATE. INTEGRATE. CLAIM YOUR PLACE AMONG EXCELLENT COMPANY. Brandon Teo College of Engineering AM ING PLIFY PA RSH RTNE IPS To excel in a global workplace, you need connections and skills beyond the ordinary. With an education at NTU, you’ll be more than ready. We team up with over 400 academic and industry partners on our cosmopolitan campus to bring you a truly interdisciplinary and global education. From the classrooms of Imperial College London to the laboratories of BMW and Rolls-Royce, you’ll discover what it takes to be the next mover and shaker in the global village. Take your potential to the next level. Join NTU today. www.ntu.edu.sg/admissions giveaways 20% OFF + FREE Win Divergent movie tickets your total bill Osmanthus Jelly Dessert (worth $3.60) We have 30 pairs to give away! PHOTO COURTESY OF WWW.MAKEYOURCALORIESCOUNT.COM when you flash your NTU student card! Valid only on weekdays from 11.30am–2.30pm at Dian Xiao Er, Jurong Point 2, #03-26/27. Present this original coupon along with your NTU matriculation card to enjoy the discount and complimentary dessert. For dine-in only. Not applicable with other promotions, discounts or set menus. One redemption per table. Valid till 31 March 2014. Coupon is not exchangeable for cash. Win an 8-piece sample set from Kiehl’s 75 sets (each worth $40) up for grabs! Each set includes 5ml sachets of Ultra Light Daily UV Defense SPF 50 PA+++, Acne Blemish Control Daily Skin Clearing Treatment, Ultra Facial OilFree Cleanser and Rare Earth Pore Minimizing Lotion. Simply state whether this is true or false: Students can earn an income under NTU’s Undergraduate Research Experience on CAmpus (URECA) programme. Email your answer, with “Divergent” as the subject line, along with your full name, school/year of study or graduation, contact number and email address, to [email protected] by 16 March 2014. Winners will be drawn from among contestants with the correct answer. Multiple entries from the same person will not be accepted. All prizes are to be collected from the Corporate Communications Office, NTU. Win a Zumba fitness package worth $150! Free for 10 lucky readers – 11 sessions of instructor-led Zumba workouts at Zesty Kickz To win, write in to [email protected], with “Kiehl’s giveaway” as the subject line, along with your full name, NTU school/year of study, contact number and email address, by 20 March 2014. Multiple entries from the same person will not be accepted. All prizes are to be collected from the Corporate Communications Office, NTU. 40 pairs of ice-skating passes to be won! Grab your friend and skate for 2 hours at The Rink at JCube for free Inclusive of skate boots rental. Simply answer this question: Name a free online course that NTU is offering on Coursera this year. Email your answer, with “Zesty Kickz giveaway” as the subject line, along with your full name, school/year of study or graduation, contact number and email address, to [email protected] by 31 March 2014. Winners will be drawn from among contestants with the correct answer. Each Zumba fitness package is valid for a year. Multiple entries from the same person will E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 not beHaccepted. Each pair worth $35 Valid for redemption in April, May or July 2014 (Monday to Thursday). Not valid on the eve of Public Holidays and on Public Holidays. To win a pair, send an email with “Ice skating” as the subject title, along with your full name, NTU school/year of study, contact number and email address, to [email protected] by 23 March 2014. Winners will be drawn from among the names of NTU students who participate. Multiple entries from the same person will not be accepted. All passes are to be collected from the Corporate 39 Communications Office, NTU. At Officer Cadet School, where I met Bolong These bracelets are souvenirs from the university orientation camps I went to – the psychology, hall and Union camps We like listening to covers of the latest hits, and Bolong has a thing for indie music My friend, a designer, model and breakdancer, did this sketch of me This wooden table doubles up as a box – it’s super handy because we can stash our stuff in it I was surprised to find this picture of m me being crowned UOC’13 King on the cover of HEY! A vinyl disc of Bolong’s favourite band, Local Natives. His friend who went to the US for exchange specially shipped it back for him This carpet makes us feel like we’re walking on grass EXTRA Video: Room at the top My Space If there ever were an awards ceremony for Best Roommate, Michael Mah (left) would be a shoo-in for the grand prize. “I always miss my alarm in the morning, and because it keeps ringing, it will wake Michael up, but he never gets annoyed. He just comes over and wakes me up, so I always make it to class on time,” says his roommate Bolong Chew. “He also keeps our room in mint condition!” The duo met while doing National Service and bonded quickly, thanks to the many mutual friends they had. When they found out they were coming to NTU, they decided to room together. 40 With their different schedules – Michael is studying psychology while Bolong is a business major – and heavy involvement in school-related activities, they don’t always get the chance to chill out in their dorm together, but when they do, it’s usually a blast. “A day before the exam results were released, we invited some friends over to hang out and have some fun. It was kind of like a last hurrah before our results came out,” recalls Michael. “Luckily, our results turned out fine, or we’d need another party to drown our sorrows,” adds Bolong with a laugh. – Chrystal Chan H E Y ! M A R– A PR 2 0 14 PHOTOS: SAM CHIN . Michael mah s room REPUTABLE. ADAPTABLE. FLEXIBLE. AN NTU EDUCATION IS PRIZED GLOBALLY. Shaun Tan Kylie Yuen School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Ng Shi Yao School of Humanities and Social Sciences Nanyang Business School AM EARN L G N I PLIFY ING Get a balanced, well-rounded education at NTU that prepares you for a dynamic working world, and impress with qualities valued by employers. Design a curriculum that supports your diverse interests. However you choose to shape your study, one thing is certain — as a graduate from the university, ranked 41st internationally, you’ll be given recognition wherever you go. Join NTU today. www.ntu.edu.sg/admissions WELL-READ. WELL-TRAVELLED. WELL-ROUNDED. AND WELL-RECEIVED BY EMPLOYERS. Henryk Abucewicz Tan School of Humanities and Social Sciences Shona Woo School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences IVERS D G IFYIN AMPL ITY At NTU, you’ll have one of the most holistic educational experiences the world has to offer. On top of a balanced curriculum that develops hard and soft skills, we place great emphasis on real-world exposure. In fact, our students enjoy exchange programmes at over 250 universities across the globe. 7 in 10 undergraduates get to go overseas for Z[\KPLZPU[LYUZOPWZÄLSK[YPWZJVTWL[P[PVUZHUKTVYL With an unparalleled edge, 97% of NTU graduates receive a job offer within four months of graduation. Give yourself the competitive advantage. Join NTU today. www.ntu.edu.sg/admissions
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