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Kickstart wrote:Probably PNM supporters
Neither PEP supporters. Fack dem.Phone Surgeon wrote:So nobody eh care about pdp supporters
hover11 wrote:This isn't the first nor will it be the last time for such occurrence, if ppl hadda cheat to get ahead in life says alot about the individuals
Typical thing with OP, always some hearsay and then hurry excitedly to run new topic like ah gossip gyal.eliteauto wrote:AH HEAR!!!! lol ok
Education ministry: No compromise to SEA exam
https://www.guardian.co.tt/news/education-ministry-no-compromise-to-sea-exam-6.2.1669274.3374b36d06
The Ministry of Education says the leak of the SEA exam papers would not have compromised the national test. The following is a statement to CNC3 News from Education Minister, Dr Nyan Gadsy Dolly:
Social Media posts, which purport to have released the confidential SEA 2023 examination papers, would not have been accessible to students writing the SEA, as they were already engaged in the examination process, and based on the rules enforced by Assessment Supervisors and Centre Managers, would have had no access to their phones. Therefore, the integrity of the SEA 2023 has not been compromised.
It is likely that this post emanated from the limited category of personnel exposed to examination papers on the opening of the secure packages, which could only have taken place upon their unsealing on the day of the examination. If this is indeed so, it is highly regrettable.
The Cybercrime Department of the TTPS has been engaged to assist in the determination of the source of the initial post. The MOE extends its thanks to the staff of the Ministry who participated at every level to ensure the examination was conducted without major incident.
pugboy wrote:so for sure there was no leak
this like when the army chief say all regiment ammo accounted for
pugboy wrote:so it had a leak or not?
alfa wrote:pugboy wrote:so for sure there was no leak
this like when the army chief say all regiment ammo accounted for
Or Earla saying towfeek 500 rounds not lost
maj. tom wrote:Education ministry: No compromise to SEA exam
https://www.guardian.co.tt/news/education-ministry-no-compromise-to-sea-exam-6.2.1669274.3374b36d06
The Ministry of Education says the leak of the SEA exam papers would not have compromised the national test. The following is a statement to CNC3 News from Education Minister, Dr Nyan Gadsy Dolly:
Social Media posts, which purport to have released the confidential SEA 2023 examination papers, would not have been accessible to students writing the SEA, as they were already engaged in the examination process, and based on the rules enforced by Assessment Supervisors and Centre Managers, would have had no access to their phones. Therefore, the integrity of the SEA 2023 has not been compromised.
It is likely that this post emanated from the limited category of personnel exposed to examination papers on the opening of the secure packages, which could only have taken place upon their unsealing on the day of the examination. If this is indeed so, it is highly regrettable.
The Cybercrime Department of the TTPS has been engaged to assist in the determination of the source of the initial post. The MOE extends its thanks to the staff of the Ministry who participated at every level to ensure the examination was conducted without major incident.
LOL. Days for that long done.ruffneck_12 wrote:Source? Are you just trying to get a child in ur circle to resit the exam because they felt they did badly ? Cuz I see u post this after the exam. ehehehehehe
Well, I did wax my ears this morning inno.eliteauto wrote:AH HEAR!!!! lol ok
Well, it seems that I "heard" right.K74T wrote:Typical thing with OP, always some hearsay and then hurry excitedly to run new topic like ah gossip gyal.eliteauto wrote:AH HEAR!!!! lol ok
YES!pugboy wrote:so it had a leak or not?
Clearly you have not met some of these students. They will memorize anything in minutes, process and react within seconds.paid_influencer wrote:If the leak was from this morning, nothing really could be gained from it. There would not have been enough time for students to go through, solve and then further memorize all the answers. Indeed attempting such memorization in the short term may well displace the more relevant long term memory faculties.
Here's the best S.E.A. prep:
Learn the material while in Standard 1 through 4.
Learn test-taking strategies in Standard 5.
In the week before the exam, do not study anything. Concentrate on sleeping as much as possible. You want your mind to be as open and as empty as possible. Being in such state allows you pull from long term memory very easily, hold more of that information in short term memory, and manipulate that information with greater ease.
Unless you got that language arts paper a week out (which I am sure some people did), it would have done more harm than good to look at it.
The best 'cheat' strategy is to be the child of a local celebrity or from a very rich, renowned family. You can slip in to the 20% denominational board selection and all the above work become relevant only to the children of commoners.
Kickstart wrote:SEA means nothing
Masters does
Kickstart wrote:SEA means nothing
Masters does
paid_influencer wrote:there's basically three levels of memory:
long term memory
short term memory
working memory
supposedly you never forget anything you learnt (stored in long term memory). you just have difficulties in recall (bringing it into working memory and short term memory). long term memory is basically infinite, but you need to actively refresh those connections (occasionally bring them into working memory and short term memory) for the recall to be strong.
working memory is what you can store in your head at any given time. I think the limit is like 7 things can be stored and processed at a time.
short term memory is like the buffer for working memory. it is what you did over the last couple hours or days. it is what is 'fresh' in your mind.
for a computer analogy, working memory is like the CPU cache, short term memory is RAM and long term memory is like the hard drive.
for small tests, like end of term tests that cover a single subject and a single term, you can store all that crap in short term memory by "cramming." actually it can be very effective.
but for bigger tests, cramming is counter productive. there is too much stuff. it drains your neural energy. you process whatever you managed to cram in short term memory, rather than something in long term memory that might be more context relevant. it is especially bad for multidisciplinary exams where you have to synthesize novel solutions
VexXx Dogg wrote:https://trinidadexpress.com/news/local/english-paper-leaks-online/article_7830df7e-ce9a-11ed-ab43-d38113676691.html
Look it dey blue fete.
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