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 WHY I REGRET GETTING STRAIGHT A1 IN SPM, by Akira Wong

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SUSDeadlocks
post Sep 25 2014, 01:08 PM, updated 12y ago

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WHY I REGRET GETTING STRAIGHT A1 IN SPM

May 15, 2011, by Akira Wong

http://akirastory.com/2011/05/15/why-i-reg...ight-a1-in-spm/

QUOTE
I nearly killed myself in high school for getting a straight A1 in high school. I nearly committed suicide just because of the stress and conflicts I had to go through to secure 16 A1 in SPM. Yeah, I got myself a 16A1 recognition. I was awarded a scholarship from JPA, and is currently studying in Intec and is going to further my study in US. However, it is because of this education experience and the people who I meet around in Intec that I gradually opened my eyes and have a clearer view on what I truly lost throughout the struggle to acquire straight 16A1 in SPM.

1. I lost friends and family

In the end you will find that friends and family are things that you can’t replaced with money and fame. The high school memories you spent with your family and friends are valuable cause these are memories that you created when you were still a teen, and you will never ever had a second chance to be a teen again. Much of my high school time were spent in studying and tuition. In the end, when I graduated from my high school, or even my current college, I was wondering: where are my memories?

2. Lack of sleep.

This is really true. When people keep looking at you shining glamorous as the “16A1″, you yourself know the best that it was paid with real hard works. Unless you are a genius, a good result has to be achieved through hard work; it’s the absolute. During the SPM I had a serious sleep deprivation and I forced myself to revise my works starting from 3 a.m.  I have an average 3 hours of tuition per day, and subtracting my school time which is 7 hours per day, I had only 14 hours to do all my other things. Homework is directly proportional to the number of subjects that you took, so does the time you need to spend for revision. With the extra curricular activities coming into the schedule, my average sleeping time per day is 3-5 hours.

3. When A1 becomes just the average.

You will have no idea how easy it is to achieve A1 in SPM. One of my friends who almost did not study his Sejarah yet can still get an A2 in his SPM. The number of students having straight A1 is overflowing throughout the Malaysia, and you might be thinking just like me: having more A1 will make you stand out among your peers more. I can tell you the truth that, YES, but TEMPORARILY. When you go to college you will find out that there are more students who are BETTER than you even if their SPM has a Fail in Moral or C in Bahasa or D in Physics. They are very specialized in subjects that they truly love. They are very passionate in their own interested subject. Only when you are in the college, you will realize that, despite all the large numbers of A1 that you have in your hand, you are just AVERAGE.

4. Mediocre talents.

High school is supposed to be a place where you can try out new things in your life, discover what you are loving or passionate in, and nurture these discovered traits. It is a protected area where you are allowed to explore, make mistakes and learn from those mistakes. It is the foundation for you to start discovering who you are and what you are good at. When I am at college, A LOT of my friends have their own talents. They play musical instruments; they take stunning pictures, they are good at socializing, things that you can’t learn if you are just confining yourself surrounded with books and books in your own room.

5. You forgot what you have learnt

I can’t denied that it is a good way for me to expose to things that I might not have chance to study, for instance economic and commerce study. It is a really great experience to learn things beyond your stream. But when I am in college I forgot almost most of the things that I have learnt in high school. If you calculate it you find that it isn’t really a good deal compared to what you had lost. The reason is that SPM is so examination-based that you, in spite of how passionate you are in your subject, will subconsciously study for the exam. With this attitude you tend to forget what you have learnt the moment the exam is over. I am still passionate in business study, but how many OSKIC you can join when you need to focus on 16 subjects and promise to your teachers that you can get them all A1?

6. All and all, nobody really cares.

Wake up! Nobody cares how many A1 you will have in your certs. JPA or Bank Nengara or Petronas might have a glimpse on it, but in the end, nobody will be amazed by your certs. Ask your future boss and he won’t really care a shit about it. It will be a past. In the end it is what who you are that shines to the others: your characters, your personality, your experience! A1 is not worth the price if you lost all these.

But wait! I need straight A1 to get scholarship!

It could be true. Some families are in dire needs to have a scholarship to provide their children a tertiary education. But trust me, JPA is not the only way to have the scholarship. Opportunities are everywhere. If you have the character, the personality, the experience and the courage to try things out and explore the possibilities that you can have beyond JPA and SPM, you will realize that, you can still success without a scholarship. I know friends who can get admitted to top university in US without a JPA scholarship (cause he doesn’t have straight A1 in his SPM).

So now, what should I do?

Nothing is too late. As for me, I realized this very truth when I am exposed to more people around me. I began to pick up interests and nurture them. I became more extrovert and socialize more when I am in college. I am not afraid to try things new, even if it means things that are embarrassing. I read more as compared to my high school time. I am not saying that study is not important; I am just saying that knowing that what you really want in your life and who you are eventually is so much more important than just the numbers of A1 in your certs. (now they are having A+ instead of A1, but it’s still the same principle). Look further, my friends. My result is truly average now, but hey! The points and prides in my resume have tripled.

cckkpr
post Sep 25 2014, 02:35 PM

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On the one hand, you said you study sooooo hard to get the A1s and on the other hand, you said it is so easy to get an A1s when you went to college.

Yeah, it was never hard to get an A1s in SPM nowadays. That's why there are so many straight A1s students nowadays. And is so easy to now get a bursary that it is making a mockery of the whole education system.
limeuu
post Sep 25 2014, 03:22 PM

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There is nothing conflicting in what was said....
BrachialPlexus
post Sep 25 2014, 04:17 PM

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Knowing how short-sighted some people are, students are going to read this and jump to the conclusion of 'no need to get good results, no need to study, life will be ok regardless.'

No.

It is NOT ok to neglect your education. As a student who has never gotten below the highest possible grade for every public/standardized exam ever, I cannot over-emphasize the importance of gaining as much knowledge as possible. Having an excellent education changes your perspective on life and opens more doors than you realize. As much as we hate to admit it, having a strong academic track record gets you places.

A lot of people take for granted the value of education by quoting famous drop-outs like Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs, as well as I-have-seen-the-light-esque stories like the one above. And all that is completely understandable. Who doesn't like a good underdog story? But people often forget about the fact that Gates and Zuckerberg and Jobs dropped out of incredibly prestigious colleges (Harvard and Reed respectively). More critically, they forget that these illustrious personalities have very solid plans and goals about what they want in life after their premature departure from college.

Having good grades alone is neither sufficient nor necessary for opportunities to come by, but it certainly helps. I think the message from the above article should not be construed as 'f*ck SPM' but rather 'exams are important, but having a life is even more so.' Learn for the sake of learning, not for exams. Do things and have intellectual interests outside of exam requirements. Read. Write. Explore. Live.

The author made the forgivable mistake of dedicating his/her whole life to a superficial paper chase, and that should never be the end goal. But that does not mean we should all start drawing toilet bowls and smiley faces on our answer sheets during the upcoming test season. By all means, do well in tests because at the end of the day, it still is vitally important.... but do not let the paper chase dominate your life. And if you're starting to give up on having a life, or enjoying the learning process, or neglecting your loved ones, or stunting your personal development... that's when you've gone too far.
maximR
post Sep 25 2014, 04:23 PM

Remember who you are
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This has been posted countless of times.
cnvery
post Sep 25 2014, 05:41 PM

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What he said is true
SUSalaskanbunny
post Sep 26 2014, 01:23 AM

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it is important to have a balanced life and yet at the same time excel at what's important and what you do...

i got straight As for spm more than 10 years ago and am proud out it, i had my social life too..
SUSDeadlocks
post Sep 26 2014, 09:25 AM

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QUOTE(alaskanbunny @ Sep 26 2014, 01:23 AM)
it is important to have a balanced life and yet at the same time excel at what's important and what you do...

i got straight As for spm more than 10 years ago and am proud out it, i had my social life too..
*
Okay. Except that having 10As did not stop you from over using ellipses.
Just Visiting By
post Sep 26 2014, 12:03 PM

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Getting straight As is helpful and definitely encouraged but never at the expense of social health and mental well-being.

It's totally up to the individual, how he treats his exam. Giving great emphasis to achieving flawless result is okay but never sacrifice your basic human requirements - the need to mingle with other people, and to enjoy life.

jingyong
post Sep 26 2014, 05:12 PM

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QUOTE(Just Visiting By @ Sep 26 2014, 12:03 PM)
Getting straight As is helpful and definitely encouraged but never at the expense of social health and mental well-being.

It's totally up to the individual, how he treats his exam. Giving great emphasis to achieving flawless result is okay but never sacrifice your basic human requirements - the need to mingle with other people, and to enjoy life.
*
Yeap, just try ur best n whether u get or not it's up to God then
lostxkitten
post Sep 26 2014, 10:27 PM

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Every year this essay will come out lel
ainafoon
post Sep 27 2014, 12:02 AM

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QUOTE(Deadlocks @ Sep 25 2014, 01:08 PM)
WHY I REGRET GETTING STRAIGHT A1 IN SPM

May 15, 2011, by Akira Wong

http://akirastory.com/2011/05/15/why-i-reg...ight-a1-in-spm/
*
Why I regret for getting straight Gs is because now I am washing the plate in mamak earning RM1000, whereas my friend work as executive in Petronas earning RM4000. lol
brain_disrupter
post Sep 27 2014, 12:26 AM

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People like to give life advices.. should enjoy life, should not neglect education, should mix with people, should be balance, should this, should that.

In reality, everybody has their own version of how their life should be.

And in 140 years, everyone existing on this planet now, even a newborn now, would be dead.
So in the end, nothing really matters.
BelowAverage
post Sep 27 2014, 01:32 AM

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well, he can write this cause he is straight As student.

is like the rich say how he regret not enjoying his life while working hard. he get to say that cause he already succesful.

if you didnt study and fail ur subjects, those things above dont matter already.
limeuu
post Sep 27 2014, 06:57 AM

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I can see many completely missed the point of the essay....
kumiko_91
post Oct 1 2014, 02:24 AM

这个世界有咁大,你又点玩嗮~
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I am an example of scoring shit in SPM, I even score G in my maths but here I am, scored distinction in diploma, first class honours in degree and now sponsored for master's degree.

I was always doing programming since form 2. Currently a research student in the field of computing.

I would say it is important to find what you want to do and what's your passion. SPM is important, but not that important until you have to give up your social life. Study that way will only makes you to become an introvert who doesn't know how to communicate.

This post has been edited by kumiko_91: Oct 12 2014, 12:55 AM
Critical_Fallacy
post Oct 1 2014, 03:11 PM

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QUOTE(kumiko_91 @ Oct 1 2014, 02:24 AM)
I was always doing programming since form 2. Currently a research student in the field of artificial intelligence.
You will make a good friend with charkoteow3. sweat.gif
kumiko_91
post Oct 12 2014, 12:56 AM

这个世界有咁大,你又点玩嗮~
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QUOTE(Critical_Fallacy @ Oct 1 2014, 03:11 PM)
You will make a good friend with charkoteow3. sweat.gif
*
Paiseh i type with mobile, really hard to see properly the whole sentence.
rotloi
post Oct 12 2014, 12:58 AM

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too smart or too dumb you choose
SUSDeadlocks
post Oct 12 2014, 08:19 AM

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QUOTE(rotloi @ Oct 12 2014, 12:58 AM)
too smart or too dumb you choose
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Har?
kazuyea
post Oct 12 2014, 05:42 PM

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QUOTE(brain_disrupter @ Sep 27 2014, 12:26 AM)
People like to give life advices.. should enjoy life, should not neglect education, should mix with people, should be balance, should this, should that.

In reality, everybody has their own version of how their life should be.

And in 140 years, everyone existing on this planet now, even a newborn now, would be dead.
So in the end, nothing really matters.
*
nothing really matters, because everyone would be dead someday. but there's two ways to look at that. some people say that to not care about some stuff and some people say that to encourage people to do the opposite and do their best in everything.

for me, it changes from time to time haha. like right now. plus cant wait to finish high school la!! biggrin.gif biggrin.gif

but this poem tho

This post has been edited by kazuyea: Oct 12 2014, 05:42 PM


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