Notice of OVA Annual General Meeting 2010

26th February 2010

Dear OVA Member,

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

1 Please take notice that the Annual General Meeting of the Members of the Association will be held at:

Victoria School (how to get there)
2 Siglap Link, Singapore 448880
26th March 2010 (Friday)
6:00pm

Light refreshments will be served before the meeting.

2 Agenda:
a. To confirm the Minutes of the preceding Annual General Meeting.
b. To receive the Annual Report of the Management Council.
c. To consider and, if approved, pass the Audited Account and Balance Sheet of the Association for the year ended 31st December 2009.
d. To elect two Honorary Auditors.
e. To transact any other business arising from the matters set out in the Agenda.
f. To elect new Management Council for term 2010 to 2012.
g. To consider any matter of which at least seven days’ notice in writing has been given to the Honorary General Secretary in accordance with Rule 11(a) of the Rules of the Association.

Yours faithfully,

Vernon Teo
President
Old Victorians’ Association

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Kampung Breakfast – 28/Feb/2010

Fellow Victorians,

Please be reminded Kampung Breakfast will resume on 28/Feb at Victoria School. This Sunday also marks the last day of the Lunar New Year celebration. So let’s come together to have reunion breakfast before we start the new yr on a high note.

We would also like to invite OVA lifetime members who aspire to serve in the next term of OVA Management Council or participate in the organisation of Victoria School 135th anniversary celebration in 2011 to this breakfast to familiarise yourselves with the OVA community. For those who are keen but not lifetime member, do download and complete the membership form to register as lifetime member.

http://blog.ova.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/ovalifemembershipform.pdf

See you in 2 weeks time…

Date : 28th February 2010 (Sunday)
Time : starting from 9:00 am
Venue : Victoria School Canteen
Address : 2 Siglap Link
Singapore 448880

Photographs of the event

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Announcement: Kampung Breakfast (Feb)

Please be informed the Kampung Breakfast will resume in February instead of January.

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Kampung Breakfast ~ Taking A Year End Break

Hi fellow Victorians,

Since it is year end and many of us are busy with finishing up work, taking leave to be with your family and friends, we will not be holding the monthly Kampung Breakfast on every last Sunday of each month for November (29th) and December (27th). It will resume in January 2010 (31st).

The OVA Management Council would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone for the support towards the OVA and its activities, directly or indirectly contributing back to our alma mater. As the year draws to a close, we wish you a blessed, joyous and meaningful time with your family and friends, celebrate the success and achievements over the year, and getting recharged for the 2010. We wish you and your families best of health and happiness.

We look forward to your continual support towards OVA and participation in its activities in 2010. And of course seeing you on 31/Jan/2010 with your families at Victoria School canteen for breakfast.

Regards,
Joo Peng
Honorary General Secretary

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OVA Hockey Carnival 2009 (Postponed to 16-Jan-2010)

Dear Victorians & Friends,

We are pleased to invite you to participate in the inaugural OVA Hockey Carnival 2009 on Saturday 16th January 2010. It is a 5-a-side tournament (goalies are optional), to be played at the Delta Sports Complex.

Registration for the tournament starts at 7.45 am and matches finish around 3.00 pm. Attractive prizes are provided for the top 4 teams! All participants will also receive a goodie bag.

The Team Registration Form, as well as the Rules & Regulations, can be found at the websites stated below.

The registration fee is S$80 per team (up to 10 players) payable in advance by 6th January 2010. Participation is limited to the first 20 registered teams. Teams are required to submit their entry form by 6th January, Wednesday. Each team may register 10 players and 1 coach only. Only when we have received your payment, your team is registered.

Payment can be made via the following methods:

1. Cheque crossed and made payable to Old Vctorians’ Association, and indicate “OVA Hockey Carnival” and name of the team clearly. Please mail or deliver the cheque to Victoria School, 2 Siglap Link, S(448880) before 6th January 2010. Upon sending the cheque, do email Azarudin at nur_azarudin@hotmail.com to verify team registration.

2. Fund transfer to POSB savings account no: 194-15933-1. Do email Azarudin @ nur_azarudin@hotmail.com the team name, as well as a scanned copy of the transaction receipt for the entry fee. Payment should be made by 8th January 2010.

For future updates, do visit website at http://sites.google.com/site/ovahockeycarnival09/home, or visit the dedicated facebook site at: http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=147305829140&mid=13171e2G221af4d1G2e3a8baG7.

For further enquiries, you can also contact Aza or Sanjay at nur_azarudin@hotmail.com & markujaysan@gmail.com respectively.

We are looking forward to see you on the 16th January during the OVA Hockey Carnival 2010!

Best regards,
OVA Hockey Carnival Organising Committee 2010

Photographs of the event


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Kampung Breakfast ~ 25/Oct/2009 Sunday

Hey… BIG REMINDER of the Kampung breakfast this Sunday (month of October)…

For a change of flavour, Nasi Lemak will be catered for this Sunday breakfast instead of the usual prata… For the late risers, you are most welcomed to join in for brunch…

Let’s make the last Sunday of each month the gathering of the Victorian family…

Date : 25th October 2009 (Sunday)
Time : starting from 9:00 am
Venue : Victoria School Canteen
Address : 2 Siglap Link
Singapore 448880

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Reminder: Open Letter to VEC/VAC

Date : 2nd October 2009
Attention : Victoria Executive Committee / Victoria Advisory Committee

Dear Sir

RE: OUR EARLIER LETTER TO YOU REGARDING VJC’s ROPOSAL/SUBMISSION TO MOE TO SET UP ITS OWN INTEGRATED PROGRAMME (IP)

I had on 8th September 2009 written to you on the above.

On behalf of the OVA and the Victorian Alumni, I had also requested that you revert to us on the queries set out in my earlier letter.

If you will take the time and effort to go into certain cyber platforms like Facebook and various blogs hosted by fellow Victorians, you will undoubtedly note that they are concerned with receiving the answers to our queries. In any event, the queries which were raised in our earlier letter to you provide an opportunity for the VAC/VEC to clarify matters once and for all. With this intention, I am once again writing to you to let us have your response so that the Victorian family can be fully appraised of matters that transpired.

I trust that all members of the VAC/VEC will respond in writing and in anticipation of your courtesy of a written reply (within this week), I thank you personally and on behalf of the Victorian Alumni.

Please note that this letter will also be published and posted on the OVA website.

Sincerely Yours,
Vernon Teo,
President
Old Victorians’ Association

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Kampung Breakfast ~ 27/Sep/2009 Sunday

Hey… a BIG REMINDER of the Kampung breakfast this Sunday (month of September)…

We had 2 families of Victorians during the last breakfast – wives, parents and little kids… A heartwarming sight… Looking forward to have many many more little future Victorians running around and making friends this Sunday…

Date : 27th September 2009
Time : starting from 9:00 am
Venue : Victoria School Canteen
Address : 2 Siglap Link
Singapore 448880

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Straits Times Forum: VJC and Victoria School must not compete for students

VJC and Victoria School must not compete for students

I REFER to Mr David Goh’s letter on Tuesday, ‘Beware of breeding elitism’.

I had the privilege of graduating from Victoria School (VS) in 1993 after four wonderful years.

I believe many VS alumni like me are concerned that should Victoria Junior College (VJC) get the Ministry of Education’s go-ahead to start a six-year Integrated Programme (IP), this will result in competition for students between VS and VJC’s IP.

VS could lose out as an IP is deemed more prestigious than a regular four-year secondary school education.

While this scenario may seem far-fetched, history can shed some light. I believe attempts to start a Gifted Education Programme in VS did not work out because of poor enrolment due to competition from IPs launched by other schools in 2004.

Fast-forward to this year. If VJC does launch an IP with the Victoria brand name, what calibre of students will VS attract and how will this affect VS’ development? Only when we learn from past mistakes can we avoid mistakes in the future.

My Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) score was 252, but VS provided the same quality education for my classmates and me, regardless of our results.

During our lower secondary years, each class had an even mix of PSLE scorers and there were no attempts to ‘hothouse’ or have ‘elite’ classes for students with better grades. Each and every VS boy was given equal opportunity and treatment. This allowed us to explore our potential to the fullest.

VS has neither the legacy of the Raffles schools nor the financial resources of the Anglo-Chinese family. It is a common man’s school but its alumni are the common men who are part of Singapore’s social and professional fabric.

VS boys like me cringe when we hear talk of elitism or upper echelons of society. This country was built on meritocracy, and school is one of the first places where children learn and understand this concept.

Do we really need a nation built along the lines of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, where children and society in general are divided into clearly defined castes?

Hong Chou Hui

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In the News ~ School spirit keeps Victoria diehards going

Sunday Times, 13 September 2009

They opposed co-ed proposal in 2005, now they object to VJC’s plan to admit Sec 1s
By Mavis Toh

How far will you go to preserve the ‘family spirit’ of your alma mater?

One group, old boys of Victoria School (VS), went to the extent of writing to ministers, setting up online petitions and Facebook groups, and calling a press conference.

Four years ago, they objected to a proposal to turn the school co-ed.

Recently, they were upset again after affiliated school Victoria Junior College (VJC) wanted to enrol Secondary 1 students.

At the crux of the present brouhaha is this: VJC wants to attract top primary school pupils by accepting them – both boys and girls – at Sec 1 and taking them through a six-year programme to the A levels.

VJC submitted its proposal to the Ministry of Education (MOE) last month. It currently enrols students from Sec 3 for a four-year integrated programme (IP).

The old boys oppose the initiative for several reasons. If VJC gets its way, they fear it will vie with VS for the same post-primary cohort and hence ’split up the family’.

Also, the Old Victorians’ Association (OVA) told The Sunday Times it is all for a VS-VJC merger as long as the school’s heritage is preserved and VS remains a single-sex school.

OVA president Vernon Teo, 41, said the group is especially ‘disappointed, saddened and puzzled’ as to why it was not properly informed and consulted before VJC’s submission.

VS started as an English class in Kampong Glam Malay School in 1876. Over the years, it moved to Victoria Street, Tyrwhitt Road and the present Siglap Link.

It attracted students from all walks of life and produced three presidents: Mr Yusof Ishak, Mr C.V. Devan Nair and Mr S R Nathan.

Today, the 133-year-old school is the only all-boys government school left and is a top boys’ school.

VJC, an idea first mooted by Victorians, was set up in 1984 after the late MP Dr Ong Chit Chung, an alumnus, submitted a proposal to the MOE. It has always ranked as one of the top JCs.

In 2005, after a proposal was floated for VS to become co-ed, then OVA president Teo Ser Luck organised a forum for the involved committees, alumni, teachers and principals.

Mr Teo, 41, now Senior Parliamentary Secretary (Community Development, Youth and Sports, and Transport), attributes his leadership qualities to his time at the school, and said Victorians are a ‘bonded and vocal bunch’ who readily contribute time and money generously to the school.

‘The school spirit has always been very strong. We would cheer our schoolmates in everything, from those involved in the band to drama to sports,’ recalled Mr Teo, who graduated in 1984.

Mr Vernon Teo, the managing director of an events management and production company, who took over as OVA chief in 2007, said he continues the fight to keep the school’s heritage.

Besides holding two more dialogues, he wrote to Education Minister Ng Eng Hen last month to explain why the association is against the expansion of the JC’s IP.

He has also called a press conference and, last week, penned an open letter to the Victoria Executive and Advisory Committee (VEC/VAC). The Sunday Times understands that this 18-member body, which includes old boys, can offer its views on the policy decisions of VS and VJC.

Mr Vernon Teo said previous meetings had led to an agreement that OVA be consulted on major decisions by VS and/or VJC, especially regarding the implementation of any IP.

He added that the OVA had not been consulted on VJC’s recent proposal, even if the move was apparently backed and supported by the VEC/VAC. He wants to know if there was a voting process and, if so, what the outcome was.

‘My question is, before the proposal was made, had they consulted enough parents, students, stakeholders and old boys,’ he said.

He graduated 25 years ago and spoke fondly of the times he sneaked into the school’s Jalan Besar campus after dark with fellow boys for ‘ghost walks’.

‘It was there we built our character and grew from mischievous boys into young men,’ he said.

Another Victorian, Mr Teo Yang Song, 55, agreed that VJC’s proposal would split the family. But if the proposal passes, he wants VJC to stop using VS’ badge and song.

The senior executive building officer has been voluntarily coaching the VS soccer team for the past 12 years. He met his wife there, when they were in the school’s co-educational pre-university classes, and his eldest son, 28, is an old boy too.

Meanwhile, a Facebook group set up to protest against expanding the IP now has about 2,200 members. Also, all 60 comments posted on a website OVA launched to gather views on VJC’s proposal were against the idea.

But one old boy, engineer William Tan, 57, does not care. He said: ‘The education landscape has changed, the principals should do what’s best for the students. Retaining heritage is not everything.’

When contacted, VJC principal Chan Poh Meng said that since 2005, VJC and VS have actively engaged OVA members, former students as well as the VEC/VAC to discuss extending VJC’s IP to Sec 1 students, including a possible merger with VS. Several meetings were held, he added, before the proposal was submitted to the MOE.

Meanwhile, the OVA has three suggestions: a merger with centralised management; a collaboration with an all-girls school to provide students for the IP; or setting up an all-girls school within the Victorian family.

Said Mr Vernon Teo: ‘We just want to look after the interests of the family.’

mavistoh@sph.com.sg

What are your views on the moves by the old boys? Send them to suntimes@sph.com.sg

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