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Sharon.
Princess in Hebrew.



27 Nov 1986.
Loves Tanning.
SMU BBM Student.
Not the average girl-next-door
A almost typical Sagittarius
For you to judge, not for me to say.


Speak

The Past
01/2005 02/2005 03/2005 04/2005 05/2005 06/2005 07/2005 08/2005 09/2005 10/2005 11/2005 12/2005 01/2006 02/2006 03/2006 04/2006 05/2006 06/2006 07/2006 08/2006 09/2006 10/2006 11/2006 12/2006 01/2007 02/2007 03/2007 04/2007 05/2007 06/2007 07/2007 08/2007 09/2007 10/2007 11/2007 12/2007 01/2008 02/2008 03/2008 04/2008 05/2008 06/2008 07/2008 08/2008 09/2008 10/2008 11/2008 12/2008 01/2009 03/2009 04/2009 05/2009 06/2009 11/2009 01/2010

Sharon Yeo
Sharon Yeo
Create Your Badge

Wishlist
- Nice wristlet
- Gorgeous Digital Watch
- Ipod Touch
- Adidas Originals Jacket
- More dresses!
- Nike/Adidas Gym bag
- Get another tuition kid!
- Tiffany & Co ring
- Get the hell out of school


Exits
My baby & me
  • Aloysius
  • Angel (Hubber)
  • Ann (Deb)
  • Athena
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  • Bena
  • Chee wee
  • Cindy
  • Clara
  • Crystal
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  • Evon Yan
  • Glen
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  • Huiling
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  • JEnnifer (ii)
  • Jerraine(ii)
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  • Jul
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  • Kailing
  • Kat
  • Kok Loong
  • Liyan
  • Na
  • NuR
  • Qiuyan
  • Ray
  • Ryan
  • Shaozong
  • Sau Mun
  • ShiHui
  • Siew Wee
  • Tommy
  • Val
  • Wenhui
  • YingZi
  • Serene
  • YuPing

    Nice Reads
  • Cherine (Photography)
  • Kanny
  • Foodie
  • Feizhu
  • Wokking Mum
  • Ellena Guan
  • Foodies Queen
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  • Wu Zhun
  • Show Luo
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  • Xiaxue
  • Jeanette Aw
  • Nat Ho
  • Felicia Chin
  • Elvin Ng
  • Joanne Peh
  • Rebecca Lim
  • Andrea Fonseka
  • Tuesday, May 22, 2007
    4:02 PM

    Got an extract from an online portal of universities.
    Pretty much spells out what i think bout my current school.


    My Singapore management university.


    Why Do You Do What You Do, SMU?
    By Shermeen Tan, SMU; Photography by Marvin Lowe, SMU

    City campus. Short skirts and chunky accessories. Antique vases in the library. Seminar rooms with swivel chairs. Laptops open and cups of coffee in the middle of a cluster of students frantically typing away…..Welcome to SMU - where town's a stone throw away and a student cries if you crash his/her laptop in Week 13 (well, either that or you get strangled).

    This is SMU where Week 15 means exams, Week 13 means a non-stop slew of presentations and report deadlines and when killer eyebags are the new fashion fad, while Week 8's mid-term "break" is just a joke of the actual definition.


    MU is a business school. EVERYTHING is business-orientated. We have CEO talks, finance talks, marketing talks, corporate communication talks; courses such as Finishing Touch that teach you how to write your resume, dress appropriately and prepare for an interview; the Office of Career Services that sources for internships for us and provide CV assistance; opportunities such as the Business Study Mission modules whereby students spend a term studying the business and economic background of a major city (like New York or Shanghai) and at the end of the term, the whole class takes a 2-week trip to that country to visit renown corporations.

    If you think about it, business is all about networking. So just imagine the benefits, considering that your entire current cohort will probably be the next crop of business, finance, economics and accounting individuals you'll meet when you step out into the working world."

    Sounds a tad materialistic? Perhaps. That's a vibe some mention about SMU, and it's something I think most SMU students would admit themselves. We have a culture that's undoubtedly vivid and dynamic, but at the same time, with this glossy sheen to it.

    The "gloss" is this picture-perfect quality SMU has about it - from the architecture of our new campus to the way students interact with each other to how all our events are presented. Everything seems a little larger than life. It's a prevailing surface pleasantness that is neither bad nor good; a superficiality that one might have to agree that it is necessary, like an occasion that calls for polite niceties. One could say it's similar to the corporate world, where everybody strives to upkeep the façade of civility and everything smacks of political correctness. So, I guess we're doing very well for a business school then, apparently we've even managed to simulate the corporate-environment.

    It's an ironic testimonial: our "marketing" is too good. Most students have learnt to "package" themselves so well that the overall feel of the population is one that is beginning to border on "plastic". Can you blame us? After all, doesn't it make perfect sense to want to only showcase your better side? In the business world, that's what you always do with your product anyway. Marketing isn't about telling lies, it's about drawing attention to the best and sweeping the rest under the carpet. Half-truths, if you like.

    So there are a lot of times when what you see in SMU might not be what you get. There are the events with big glossy posters everywhere and swanky advertorial emails that hype you up only to fall short of your expectations; there are the articulate, well-dressed acquaintances who you suspect are more (or less) than what they seem; the project mates that drive you up the wall, but you are forced to remain cordial with for yours, theirs, everybody's sake; and of course, the SMU "interactive pedagogy" and "participative methodology" that's much talked about, but frequently take a backseat to "8.30am-tiredness" and the usual student reticence when faced with the "I-won't-talk-if-nobody-else-in-class-is" atmosphere.

    But hey, you know what?



    I still love SMU and am really glad to be where I'm at. I know it sounds sappy, I know it sounds as if I'm giving in and being politically correct to appease my university's administration, but I'm not. I didn't get paid to say that (but if somebody wants to, SURE, by all means, be my guest!).

    SMU's a university where you can have a blast, if you want to. There's a lot to be gained if you're willing to step out from your comfort zone and socialise, to try things you've never done before. True, the projects will stress you up and make you pull all-nighters in the GSRs; the food prices here are atrocious even with discounts (logically, we all understand it's the rent and prime urban city land which equates to EXPENSIVE EXPENSIVE EXPENSIVE, but don't sue us for complaining); and sports facilities, um, what sports facilities? (Okay, to be fair, besides our very impressive gym and a newly-opened multi-purpose sports hall.) Even so, just be confident and proactive, and sooner or later, you'll find your comfort niche and settle in.




    The harder the days in skool, the sweeter the holidays.








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