To All Dentistry Students,
Please take note:
** High Priority **
Dear Group 3B members (Chang Weng Shaun, May Wong Siu Chen, Cecilia Yong
Sat-Yee, Wong Jin Lin and Chew Shu Qeng)
There is a mis-communication on the private clinic visit to Tan Dental
Specialist Centre. There will not be any visit to Tan Dental and the
affected group is Group 3B.
Kindly be informed that there will not be a visit to Tan Dental,
instead you will visit iSmile Dental Centre on the 5 August 2008.
iSmile Dental Centre Address
No 76A, Jalan SS21/35,
Jalan Damansara Utama
47400 Petaling Jaya
Selangor Darul Ehsan
T: 7727 2135
Sorry for the inconvenience caused. Contact me should there is any
queries.
Thank you
Regards
Denize
Hello everyone,
This is a message from Prof Khoo regarding our Museum Session this Friday. Please take note.
Regards
Lydia
In the same tradition as our first Comparative Anatomy Museum Session
we had this morning where we all had fun gathering facts, we also
embarked on a audio journey into the Comparative anatomy of the
different classes of vertebrates, I've decided that we extend that fun
for one more session this Friday:-
Please tell everyone that each table (total 4) has to have research and
discuss with table members the following (choose one for each table; not
repeatable) :-
a) Theme : " importance of teeth in the field of paleoanthropology"
Members of this table are belong to the National Geographic
Paleoantrhopological Society. These members will share with all of us
your experience, an insight into what you do and also why teeth are so
important in this field. Take about 8-10 minutes
b) Theme : " inter-relationships of fossil hominid types to one another
and to modern humans". Members of the table are ancient fossils. You are
all going to tell us in 8-10 minutes how you all are inter-related to
each other and to the modern humans.
c) Theme : "significance of characteristic craniofacial and dental
features that separate some of the fossil hominid types". Members of the
table will speak up against each other to tell us in 8-10 minutes the
cranifacial and dental features that separte some of you fossil hominid
types.
d) significance of characteristic craniofacial and dental features that
separate apes and modern humans.
Members of the table will speak up against each other to tell us in
8-10 minutes the cranifacial and dental features that separte some of
you fossil hominid types.
This museum session is informally carried out based on some formal
structured themes we think you should appreciate. After this round of
discovery-sharing, we wil issue you some structured study guidelines (as
we did today) for you to work on, then we will wind up with a
continuation of the audio journey into the human world.
Dont wind yourself up too much, you're not being assessed, try and have
fun!
Please tell your friends that everyone should participate.
Thank you.
Regards,
Prof Khoo