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[4] [5] The first accident claimed the life an Indonesian worker, [6] while the second accident injured 9 other workers. [7] [8] On 31 October 2017, the school began applying fireproof materials to the building. [9] Prior to the opening of the school on 16 November 2020 students carried out higher educations in the Sayyidina Ali Secondary ...
Meragang Sixth Form Centre (Malay: Pusat Tingkatan Enam Meragang, abbrev: PTEM) is a sixth form college located in Kampong Meragang, Brunei Darussalam.Known locally by its acronym, PTEM offers Cambridge International Examinations AS-level examinations at the end of students' first year, or the following May/June, and A-level examinations in the October/November of the second.
Tutong Sixth Form Centre (Malay: Pusat Tingkatan Enam Tutong; Malay, abbreviated; PTET) is a sixth form centre in Tutong District, Brunei. It first opened its doors in 2012, and since then, accepts mainly secondary school leavers from the district.
Sengkurong Sixth Form Centre is located in Mulaut, a settlement in Brunei-Muara District outside Bandar Seri Begawan.The school takes its name from the name of the mukim or subdistrict where it lies.
At the end of the schooling, students sit for Brunei-Cambridge GCE A Level. [4] Students may also opt to take Advanced Subsidiary Level or AS Level halfway at the end of Lower Sixth or halfway through Upper Sixth. Sixth form is not compulsory, but a preferable choice for students wishing to continue in academic studies leading to university level.
Admissions to Malaysian public universities require CGPA of at least 2.00 and above, with principal passes in three subjects including General Studies. [4] On the other hand, local private universities accept students with only two principal passes without considering the requirement of CGPA.
6LoWPAN (acronym of "IPv6 over Low-Power Wireless Personal Area Networks") [1] was a working group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). [2] It was created with the intention of applying the Internet Protocol (IP) even to the smallest devices, [3] enabling low-power devices with limited processing capabilities to participate in the Internet of Things.
However, when Musa Hitam was named as the first chairman of the (initially, 13-member) commission, these fears were eased, as he was believed to be critical of Mahathir in many ways. [4] The commission's recommendations under Musa, however, were often not implemented by the government. When his two-year term ended, he did not seek reappointment.