244 research outputs found

    BILINGUALISM POLICY IN SINGAPORE ELITE SCHOOLS

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    The Singapore government has been promoting the mastery of the English language as well as the mother tongue since 1987 in the hope that Singaporeans can be fluent in both the working language and one related to their native roots. From then on, all Chinese schools are required to teach in the English language, and English is officially known as the first language of all students. This paper aims to study the policy’s background, specifically in the area of Mandarin, and find out whether this policy has managed to achieve its goals, how it has affected Singapore students’ language development in elite schools, how to improve the policy to benefit students in the future as well as provide some implications for enhancing Chinese teaching pedagogy.Keywords: Mother tongue,  the  English  Language,  elite school, Chinese teaching pedagogy

    Bilingualism policy in Singapore elite schools

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    The Singapore government has been promoting the mastery of the English language as well as the mother tongue since 1987 in the hope that Singaporeans can be fluent in both the working language and one related to their native roots. From then on, all Chinese schools are required to teach in the English language, and English is officially known as the first language of all students. This paper aims to study the policy’s background, specifically in the area of Mandarin, and find out whether this policy has managed to achieve its goals, how it has affected Singapore students’ language development in elite schools, how to improve the policy to benefit students in the future as well as provide some implications for enhancing Chinese teaching pedagogy

    3-(Diphenyl­methyl­idene)indolin-2-one

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    The title mol­ecule, C21H15NO, has an indoline-2-one and two benzene substituent groups which are arranged in a propeller-like fashion around the central C atom. The dihedral angle between the two benzene rings is 73.32 (16)° and those between the benzene rings and the indoline-2-one group are 76.54 (14) and 67.69 (14)°. In the crystal, there is an inter­molecular N—H⋯O hydrogen-bonding inter­action, which links the mol­ecules into chains extending along c

    Real-time Data Flow Control for CBM-TOF Super Module Quality Evaluation

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    Super module assembled with MRPC detectors is the component unit of TOF (Time of Flight) system for the Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment. Quality of super modules needs to be evaluated before it is applied in CBM-TOF. Time signals exported from super module are digitalized at TDC (Time to Digital Converter) station. Data rate is up to 6 Gbps at each TDC station, which brings a tremendous pressure for data transmission in real time. In this paper, a real-time data flow control method is designed. In this control method, data flow is divided into 3 types: scientific data flow, status data flow and control data flow. In scientific data flow, data of each TDC station is divided into 4 sub-flows, and then is read out by a parallel and hierarchical network, which consists of multiple readout mother boards and daughter boards groups. In status data flow, status data is aggregated into a specific readout mother board. Then it is uploaded to DAQ via readout daughter board. In control data flow, control data is downloaded to all circuit modules in the opposite direction of status data flow. Preliminary test result indicated data of STS was correctly transmitted to DAQ with no error and three type data flows were control orderly in real time. This data flow control method can meet the quality evaluation requirement of supper module in CBM-TOF

    Distance-Restricted Folklore Weisfeiler-Leman GNNs with Provable Cycle Counting Power

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    The ability of graph neural networks (GNNs) to count certain graph substructures, especially cycles, is important for the success of GNNs on a wide range of tasks. It has been recently used as a popular metric for evaluating the expressive power of GNNs. Many of the proposed GNN models with provable cycle counting power are based on subgraph GNNs, i.e., extracting a bag of subgraphs from the input graph, generating representations for each subgraph, and using them to augment the representation of the input graph. However, those methods require heavy preprocessing, and suffer from high time and memory costs. In this paper, we overcome the aforementioned limitations of subgraph GNNs by proposing a novel class of GNNs -- dd-Distance-Restricted FWL(2) GNNs, or dd-DRFWL(2) GNNs. dd-DRFWL(2) GNNs use node pairs whose mutual distances are at most dd as the units for message passing to balance the expressive power and complexity. By performing message passing among distance-restricted node pairs in the original graph, dd-DRFWL(2) GNNs avoid the expensive subgraph extraction operations in subgraph GNNs, making both the time and space complexity lower. We theoretically show that the discriminative power of dd-DRFWL(2) GNNs strictly increases as dd increases. More importantly, dd-DRFWL(2) GNNs have provably strong cycle counting power even with d=2d=2: they can count all 3, 4, 5, 6-cycles. Since 6-cycles (e.g., benzene rings) are ubiquitous in organic molecules, being able to detect and count them is crucial for achieving robust and generalizable performance on molecular tasks. Experiments on both synthetic datasets and molecular datasets verify our theory. To the best of our knowledge, our model is the most efficient GNN model to date (both theoretically and empirically) that can count up to 6-cycles

    Unique Fine Morphology of Mouthparts in Haematoloecha nigrorufa (Stål) (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) Adapted to Millipede Feeding

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    Millipede assassin bugs are a diverse group of specialized millipede predators. However, the feeding behavior of Ectrichodiinae remains poorly known, especially how the mouthpart structures relate to various functions in feeding. In this study, fine morphology of the mouthparts and feeding performance of Haematoloecha nigrorufa (Stål, 1867) was observed and described in detail for the first time. The triangular labrum is divided by a conspicuous transverse membrane into a strongly sclerotized basilabrum and a less sclerotized distilabrum. Fifteen types of sensilla are distributed on the mouthparts. Each mandibular stylet has an expanded spatulate apex and about 150 approximately transverse ridges on the external middle side; these help in penetrating the ventral trunk area and the intersegmental membranes of millipede prey. The right maxilla is tapered. On the internal surface are a row dorsal short bristles near the apex and a row of ventral bristles preapically. A longitudinal row of long lamellate structures extend proximate for a considerable distance, lie entirely within the food canal, and bear several short spines and short bristles. There is no obvious di erence between males and females in the distribution, number, and types of sensilla on mouthparts. The adult feeding process involves several steps, including searching and capturing prey, paralyzing prey, a resting phase, and a feeding phase. The evolution of the mouthpart morphology and the putative functional significance of their sensilla are discussed, providing insight into the structure and function of the mouthparts adapted for millipede feeding
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