Tipping Point – Grammar Book Completed!

victortanws
 

The IGCSE Grammar book has been completed and has finally been sent for formatting, and you have NO IDEA how relieved I am.

It’s been a full labor that has involved crafting a 250-page collection of grammatical terms and reviewing various other things; I’ve not just affirmed the standard grammatical rules that defined my repertoire, but also become able to know exactly what appositives, pluperfect subjunctives, modifiers, clauses, phrases, adverbials, attributive/predicative adjectives, common/collective/distributive plurals are, and also to be able to understand almost every single possible variant of sentence and how to break it down to its elements through the long process of obtaining feedback, advice, and guidance not just from different teachers, but also with some of you along the way.

Simply put, it’s been tough because I’ve been trying to be comprehensive, and also because I’ve been trying to balance many different things which I’m not great at balancing just yet, but am getting better at through the storm.

Through the vicissitudes of this journey, I’ve gone through the process of learning many things that I hadn’t learned before, and come into contact with ideas aplenty that I had scarce experienced in the measure that perhaps I should have; somewhere along the way, it led me into a space of deep clarity that brought me into a sort of rhythm that characterized my daily life and began to suffuse it with learning, reading, and reasoning aplenty about the language by which I’ve come to ply my entire trade and in turn yielded knowledge greater than I ever imagined possible.

Strangely enough, it’s the third book I’ve written this year after many years of not being able to write a single one, which in turn led me to wonder about how this was possible for a while, only to realize that it hasn’t changed what I’ve had to do. Anyway, I’m sorry that it took a bit longer than some of you may have expected, but I had to ensure that this was executed well, and am confident that this will be something incredible that will help you all to level up.

Looking forward to updating you guys soon-ish!

V.

Descriptive and Narrative Composition Banks Updated! (July 8th 2023)

victortanws
 

Hi everyone and happy weekend!

The descriptive and narrative composition banks have been updated, and here are four brand new FREE descriptive and narrative essays!

Meanwhile, the Narrative and Descriptive from the previous update have been reverted to Premium.

If you’d like to read all sample essays, please feel free to sign up for Premium. Thank you!

We hope you enjoyed these essays! If you want to join our IGCSE First Language English class or just want to know how we can help you, please feel free to fill in this form, or drop us a WhatsApp here.

Alternately, you may scan the QR code below:

I’m Writing An IGCSE English Grammar Book!

victortanws
 

Every Sunday evening, my family and I have dinner together – it’s a classic Tan Family thing where we gather relatives from all over different parts of KL and we just have a good meal together and spend some quality time together enjoying fellowship with one another and having conversations about many different things.

One of these conversations was about language learning.

As some of you know, I’m in the process of compiling a grammar book at the moment for IGCSE students – it’s a process that began about two weeks ago when I realized that one of the hugest gaps in instruction for IGCSE students (both First Language and English as a Second Language) is grammar, which has led to a long process of writing that continues to this day and even more extensive reading as I research what needs to be included and as I refine the work.

As a matter of fact, I read four entire grammar books in the past ten days, inclusive of Swan’s Practical English Usage (~600 pages), Penston’s A Concise Grammar for English Teachers (~130 pages), Parrott’s Grammar for English Language Teachers (~400+ pages); the last one was a recommendation from my relatives, many of whom hailed from an earlier generation and learned English from this book:

It was interesting to leaf through the pages of this old gem; browsing through it, I couldn’t help but think that it was a wonderful resource… Though one that was quite clearly incomplete.

Still, though, it offered me some valuable guidance and thoughts on how to structure my own book and, more importantly, highlighted for me the generational gap in English language proficiency faced by many students in Malaysia and the world at large, whether schooled in international schools or otherwise.

There is little formal training for students to get better at grammar within a schooling context, and almost every resource that I’ve seen focuses altogether too much on topic-based learning (which is understandable to a degree) to the extent that a sustained focus on understanding the rules of the game seems to have been entirely forgone.

The consequence? An entire generation of students who seem to be navigating the waters of good rhetoric with a hole in their metaphorical ships, allowing meaning and comprehension to slip through because the rules that govern language are not familiar in their heads and the powers that be assume familiarity with them or are unable to assess the extent to which student work is grammatical or isn’t for they themselves are unfamiliar with the rules of the game themselves and presume to teach a higher order skill that they themselves have only imperfectly procured.

It’s for this reason that I’m writing The Complete Grammar Guide for IGCSE English Students, a book that I hope you’ll find enjoyable and tailored to the unique context of the IGCSE, whether for First Language English or English as a Second Language.

I’ll be continuing to draft and write the book in the week ahead in preparation for formatting, but just as a bit of a sneak peek for you, have a look at some of the covers I’ve compiled and that I will be using in the days ahead 🙂 (Which ones do you like? Let me know in the comments!)

I wonder what difference this book will make in people’s lives, but I do know for sure that it’s important to me to create this because I think that it will help to impact many people in this world 🙂

If you’d like to contribute towards my understanding of what is needed, do feel free to drop a comment in the blog post or to communicate with me, and I’ll look forward to working with you soon. Enjoy the week, everyone, and rest assured that I’ll be working hard to bring you more content in a bit – I’ll look forward to catching you again soon!

V.