CCA Previews 2013

CCA Preview ’13: Raffles Entrepreneurs’ Network

Reading Time: 3 minutes

By Kim Min Seok (13A03B)

Running a business shouldn’t come as a challenge for any member of the Raffles Entrepreneurs’ Network (REN). The club’s members are regularly exposed to various vicarious and unmediated business situations that train them for the real world.

Still, for Shurvin Ho, “REN is so much more than just running businesses. It’s about learning how to mature as a person, a leader and a Rafflesian.” “By being part of REN, members can not only pick up practical skills about running a business, but they can also enter competitions to pilot their ideas,” enthused Zera Ong, Vice-Chair of the club. “It is really a fulfilling and rewarding experience, my competition team had a turnover of a few thousand dollars last year!”

Members of REN, which was founded in 2003, participate in various national and international level competitions, including the prestigious Students for the Global Advancement of Entrepreneurship and Start-up@Singapore.

Conference with Professor Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank
Conference with Professor Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank

“We are a really tightly-knit community. Ideas just come together when we discuss things. It’s like an intersection of truly unique perspectives,” said Kim Min Seok, Public Relations Director at REN. “Our obligations as students do not fetter our ambitions. We really want to experience what it really is like to be an entrepreneur,” he explained.
The club holds weekly 3-hour general meetings (GMs), during which members share various industry insights and perspectives. “I really gained so much from these sessions, I even compiled a list of memorable business ideas and entrepreneurs!” said member Isabel Chew.

Various industry experts and start-up founders are also invited to their GMs to discuss their experiences. Social enterprise pioneers such as Sourabh Sharma, founder of Milaap, have also been invited. In 2010, the club invited Muhammad Yunus, a Nobel Peace Prize recipient and founder of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh.

Talk with Saybons and Chewy Junior Founders
Talk with Saybons and Chewy Junior Founders

“Social enterprise is something we really hold dear to our hearts,” said Chairman Annabel Tay. “We don’t just try to make money, but we also consider the social impacts and consequences behind what we do. That’s why social enterprise is so crucial in both our club and the enterprise world today.”

New members are selected through interviews, and will be challenged to delve into their entrepreneurial selves. “We aren’t looking for the ‘perfect businessmen’ – that would be unfair for those who are genuinely interested but lack experience,” explained Ms Ong. “We want members who are truly passionate, dedicated and love entrepreneurship.”

Batch of 2013
Batch of 2013

Recruits will have to go through an induction camp. The camp, which involves a ‘Mini Business Pitch Competition’ to give new members a taste of what the club has to offer, takes place annually in March. “The camp was really enjoyable and allowed me to genuinely explore entrepreneurship,” mused member Chong Yong Xing. “The camp is certainly tiring, but it was so fun!” Mr Chong added with a grin. Given the club’s reputation, the interviews are known to be highly competitive. In 2012, only 25 fortunate recruits could join the club, out of the 150 students who applied.

CCA Preview ’13: Bridge Club

Reading Time: 3 minutes

By Marcus Chia (13SO3H) and Li Shaowu (13SO6G)

Not allowed to play card games in school? Well, the Raffles Institution Bridge Club gives you an opportunity to do just that! Established in 2004, the club continues to grow rapidly, in terms of membership and the quality of players. Just last year, the club set its place in the local Bridge scene, clinching 4 out of 5 championship trophies across the major interschool competitions. Members have also started to participate in international competitions, such as the ASEAN Bridge Club Championship held in Bali last December, with a 3rd place finish.

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To improve the skills of members, the club conducts its trainings every Wednesdays and Fridays. During trainings, there are usually pair matches and team matches (different Bridge competition formats) to prepare members for all competition types.

Bridge Club is looking for students with an interest for games of mental strength, intelligence, wit, creativity and flair. Members are dedicated to spending time learning about Bridge and picking it up as a hobby, with much passion for improving their skills.

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While some might think that joining Bridge may not add a lot to your curriculum vitae, as scholarship boards will view Bridge as merely a card game, this is far from true. Seniors who have graduated and clinched scholarships have remarked that their interviewers were looking for people with a hobby they were committed to pursuing.

Furthermore, Bridge itself is a highly engaging and interesting game. Unlike many other card games, it is not based on luck but on skill. Your results depend not on your cards, but how you play them. Each hand thus presents a new and interesting problem. Bridge can be said to be a game of strategy, much like chess. One’s tactical decisions at the table often decide the outcome of the game. However, where chess can be said to be likened to a war, where one needs greater experience and overall tactical insight to achieve victory, Bridge is much more like a small skirmish. In Bridge, one must be able to leverage the small advantages available and have a full understanding of the situation, supplemented by tactical knowledge. This is not to say that bridge is a game purely for “intellectuals” or a game where more experienced players always win. Almost every new member of the club is new to the game as well. Hence, new members can learn to enjoy and explore this truly amazing game in a friendly environment at Bridge Club.

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Interestingly, research has shown that Bridge can help in the development of mental capabilities and enhance the social aspects of students’ lives. It also builds teamwork and understanding among students. Tay Min, a member, has this to say on the game: “A winner listens to his partner’s point of view, while a loser just waits until it’s time to express his own.”

As a Bridge veteran once said: “Every hand is an adventure”, so join Bridge to start your adventure!

CCA Preview ’13: Touch Rugby

Reading Time: 3 minutes

by Chan Lee Chin (13S03C0, Louisa Ng (13S03L0) and Amanda Lee (13S07C)

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When will “making a touch” determine who wins? When can you play rugby without having to tackle?

With 6 people per team working equally hard on the field and only 20 minutes to make it count, Touch Rugby is a sport that requires an amalgamation of stamina, speed, strength and soul.

Getting well-toned legs, staying fit and healthy and having a chance to chalk up points for the Raffles Diploma (Sports & Health Domain) may be a few perks you associate with this CCA. However, putting the tangible aside, joining Touch Rugby is a unique experience that will benefit you and turn you into an all-rounded individual. Besides honing your mental strength, discipline and composure, you will realize how powerful team spirit and ‘telepathy’ can be. As emphasized by our coach, Mephine Ong, the team believes in having a driven attitude on the playing field. This takes a combination of excellent ball skills , as well as the ability to ‘burn’ your opponent (i.e. run through to score). Touch Rugby is very much a game of strategy and thinking on your feet.

Trials to enter the CCA test one’s physical capabilities – including acceleration, ball handling and execution of basic moves, as well as mental capacities like situation awareness Training sessions, which are held twice a week, mainly focus on picking up different moves, learning to apply them in the game and practicing these strategies. These come into play when the Junior College League kicks off annually from April to June, with many other smaller competitions along the way. However, the passion for the sport does not stop when you graduate, as alumni do go on to join clubs and come back to train the current team.

Coming in as strangers to the sport, everyone starts from the same page, only to achieve exponential progress as the number of training sessions increases. Apart from training, would you fancy roti prata or Island Creamery for supper? Besides monthly birthday celebrations and an annual Christmas event, lunches and suppers help the team turn from strangers to friends to a circle of trust. Having to shower to clean off the mud and wash your boots after training, especially after the rain or morning dew, creates memories and shared experiences within the team, holding everyone together in an even tighter bond.

Expect it to get sweaty. Expect it to get muddy. Expect yourself, along with your comrades, to be aggressive, and driven towards a goal like never before.

That’s Raffles Touch Rugby for you – we dare to try*.

(*try- term for scoring in touch rugby)

CCA Preview ’13: Football

Reading Time: 3 minutes

by Joel Chong (13S03A)

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“Football is a simple game; 22 men chase a ball for 90 minutes.” – Gary Lineker, England football legend.

That’s true, but not entirely. For one, A Division matches are played for a reduced 80 minutes. But there is more. Imagine playing at the Jalan Besar Stadium with hordes of friends and schoolmates cheering you on. Imagine embarking on a jinking run, beating one, two, three players before unleashing an unstoppable shot into the goal. With its fair share of thrills and spills it brings with it the ecstasy of winning which may suddenly turn into the heartbreak of losing and the regret which long remains etched in the memory.

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But above all, Lineker is right: football is a team sport in which 22 men chase after a ball – not alone, but together, as a team. Here at Raffles Football, there is no space for the individualists, the show boaters and crowd pleasers. It is team above self. Though our team is filled with unique members with differing views and backgrounds, we press on and look to iron out the differences. It’s truly “one for all and all for one”.

Coached by one of the best youth coaches in Singapore, RI Football has traditionally taken its place amongst the ‘Big Four’ of JC football. After an unfortunate blip last season, the passion to play and desire to bring the trophy home is as strong as ever.

“Width and depth support, mobility, penetration, creativity,”  replies coach Philippe Aw, when asked what the team aspires towards. Drills, passing, shooting and runs are all part of the rigorous training sessions designed to build technique and physical fitness. The team frequently meets up for extra “self-training” sessions to do runs, work out in the gym or simply kick a ball around together. We have also braved the rigorous six-day training week during season, when we had to juggle football and school work as well as the taxing physical trainings – climbing 24×3 stories with barely a break in between sets. Apart from training sessions, playing tchoukball, watching movies and going out to binge eat are all activities through which the team comes together to relax and bond.

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Members can look forward to playing matches on a frequent basis, with friendly games with other schools and clubs planned out for game time and experience. These games lead up to the A Division Football Competition in which JCs compete for the coveted national title. In addition to games and training, Raffles Football also plans CIP events to teach less fortunate kids basic soccer skills.

Joining Raffles Football will not only help improve one’s physical fitness and coordination, but will bring many intangible benefits. The memories of hanging out with your buddies after training sessions or going to watch a game together rank amongst the precious times one will reminisce after one’s JC years. Football allows one to escape the overwhelming workload and deadlines and simply take a break and enjoy. Raffles Football is summed up nicely by striker Jiang Peicun, 13A01A, who came up with this year’s team cheer – “One team. One dream. Raffles, Champions!!”

CCA Preview ’13: Piano Ensemble

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Perhaps because of the word “Ensemble,” the images most members would associate with our CCA are probably:1) an entire ensemble packed onto stage, simultaneously tickling the ivories of ten grand pianos, or 2) about twenty people squeezed shoulder-to-shoulder at the keyboard of a grand total of one piano, each passionately banging away at about two keys each.

Sounds familiar? If it does, don’t worry, you’re not alone! About the whole of PE Batch ‘13 was with you in our first impressions.


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As much as the Piano Ensemble would like to offer such a visual spectacle, we don’t have quite enough space or resources to put up such a show. Still, though we might not be able to stage a 30-something hand masterpiece, rest assured, we certainly do more than the usual solo playing! In their two years here, members have the chance to perform duets, duos and even triets with other like-minded piano enthusiasts, batchmates and friends. Engaging, fun, yet professional – or at least, what we feel to be so – this CCA hopes to fill what usually is a technically demanding process of practising an instrument, with plenty of enthusiasm and interest. After all, quality does come over quantity.

And quality is definitely something that we strive for, be it in our annual concert, competitions or smaller-scale recitals. This is evident by the consistently stellar results attained by the CCA’s members in the annual inter-JC piano competition  – Vivace, the pianistic equivalent of the SYF – for which we are happy and thankful that we have been clinching the gold award every year since we first participated in 2005. The ensemble’s endeavour for excellence is also reflected in its innovative and out-of-the-box concert themes, which include “For Euridyce” (2005), “Child’s Play” (2009), and most recently, “Légende” (2012).

As German poet Berthold Auerbach once said, “Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” If you’re wondering what else we engage in apart from performances and competitions, RI PE is also heavily engaged in community service, in hopes of sharing and spreading our passion for music to others, and, in doing so, help them discover the profound healing powers of this medium for emotion. Each year, our CCA undertakes several different types of projects with different beneficiaries every year. These comprise giving monthly hour-long lunch-time recitals at the Singapore General Hospital as well as offering weekly piano lessons to the children of Chen Su Lan Methodist Children’s Home.

And what can you expect from our weekly CCA sessions? We’d really like to think that anything goes – planned sessions with Master classes, musical sharing, rehearsals and even the much-feared pre-concert Quality Control checks will definitely be on the programme. However, just as much, if not even more time will be devoted to batch planning, discussions and even just bonding time, because the direction of any CCA is ultimately determined by all its members. You can expect spontaneous improvisations, spontaneous practices, and a lot of laughter and inside jokes forming.

So if you are a piano enthusiast seeking to showcase and develop your pianistic talents, or a compassionate pianist who wishes to propagate love through music, or a hobby player who’s simply bored of playing the piano alone, then look no further, the doors of Piano Ensemble are wide open for you!