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Education in Singapore

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Education in Singapore A Response to Economic Challenges & Nation Building Education during the Colonial Period (1819-1945) Mission Schools English medium ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Education in Singapore


1
Education in Singapore
  • A Response to Economic Challenges
  • Nation Building

2
Education during the Colonial Period (1819-1945)
  • Mission Schools English medium
  • Singapore Free School (1834) later RI (1963)
  • King Edward VII College of Medicine (1905)
  • Raffles College (1926)
  • Vernacular Schools Chinese, Malay and Tamil
  • Govt support for Malay schools (not all)
  • Role of community clan associations, businessmen

University Of Malaya
3
Strengths
  • Enterprise pioneering spirit of the various
    community
  • ? existed entirely on their own resources
  • Preservation of cultural linguistic differences
    in Singapore

4
Challenges
  • Education was limited to those who could afford
    (end of colonial period, gt40 were illiterate)
  • Divided along racial lines
  • Due to world events (revolutionary fervor
    changes in China in the early 20th C)
  • ? Politicized ? threat to the govt

5
Post-War Years (1945-1965)
  • 1947 Ten-Year Plan
  • Free Education ages 6-12 yrs
  • To foster capacity for self-govt
  • MT as medium of instruction
  • EL from 3rd year
  • Standardised curriculum
  • Selection for English Primary School
  • Training College

Meanwhile, Unrests continued
6
Post-War Years (1945-1965)
  • 1955 Limited Self-Government
  • All-Party Committee
  • Proposed education policy that met the needs of
    various committees ? nationhood ? NE
  • Bilingual primary education
  • Trilingual secondary education
  • ECA
  • Teaching of civics
  • Parity of treatment for all 4 language streams
  • Technical education and industrial training
    emphasized
  • 1959- Policy took shape
  • Emphasis on Maths and Science
  • 1960- 2nd Lang compulsory in Primary School

7
Challenges of Independence
  • Social
  • Lacked built-in reflexes
  • (loyalty, patriotism, shared
  • history/ tradition)
  • Population divided by race,
  • language, religion
  • - 1964 racial riots
  • Political
  • Confrontasi
  • Clashes with Malaysian leaders
  • ? Highlighted our vulnerability
  • Economic
  • Lost Malaysian hinterland
  • Unemployment (double digit)
  • fall in entrepot trade
  • 1967 withdrawal of Br forces
  • Solution?
  • Dual role of education
  • Economic transformation
  • Disciplined cohesive society

8
Post Independence YearsLabour-Intensive
Industries (1966-1970s)
  • Aims
  • Nation Building
  • Economic Development
  • Education for more people
  • Different types of education
  • were provided for different
  • age groups
  • Malay as the National Language
  • Overall increase in student
  • intake at various levels
  • Focus on Mathematics, Science and
  • Technical subjects

9
Post Independence YearsLabour-Intensive
Industries (1966-1970s)
  • Meeting Economic Challenges
  • 1966- Second Language in Secondary schs
  • 1969- Lower Sec Tech Subject
  • Girls had a choice/ VITB/ Science Labs in all
    Sec/ SP and NA Tech College
  • Improved quality of education
  • Attention to teaching resources, planning
    (facilities), research, organisation, and
    evaluation
  • Promote use of Mandarin
  • 1978, SAP schools
  • 1971, GCE O-levels
  • Nation Building
  • Pledge taking, flag raising lowering
  • ECA grades
  • 1969, common curriculum for all Sec 1 2 in all
    4 language stream schools

10
Problems
  • High education wastage
  • Attrition rate 29 for primary
  • 36 for secondary
  • Variation in academic performance
  • New Economic Challenges
  • Labour Shortage
  • Competition from Other Countries
  • Lower cost
  • Lower productivity

11
Industrial Restructuring -1980s
  • Higher/ Tertiary education was encouraged
  • Increased intake
  • NU merged with U of Singapore NUS
  • NTI, 1981 (engineering and technology)
  • 1991, NTU
  • BEST (EL, MA) for large protion of the workforce
    who have less tha P6 education
  • Improved quality of education
  • Streaming introduced to bring out the best in
    every individual and to reduce dropout rate
  • GEP, 1984
  • Increased investment
  • Building more schools, single-session schools
  • 1988,89 Independent Schools
  • Relaxed entry to Secondary school

12
Moving into the 1990s
  • Economic Restructuring
  • What was the focus in the 1990s?

13
1990s
  • Further concentration on post secondary and
    tertiary education
  • ?to develop the manpower needed for the push to
    high tech and knowledge intensive products and
    services
  • 1992, SIM Open U
  • 1997, became privatized
  • 1992, ITE
  • 1993, Edusave
  • 1994, 4th Polytechnic, TP
  • 1994-6, Autonomous schools

14
1990s
  • Twin forces of globalization and technological
    change
  • Ability-driven
  • Curriculum
  • School environment
  • Teaching service
  • Education structure
  • Education hub
  • Administrative excellence

15
1990s
  • 1997, 2 bil on IT in classrooms
  • IT Masterplan
  • PW
  • NE
  • ECA? CCA
  • Post-grad and Arts education encouraged
  • PRIME
  • SEM
  • Cluster Schools
  • Compulsory Education, 2000

16
Education Policies Practices in Singapore
  • 60s-70s
  • Flag-raising
  • Pledge-taking
  • Billingualism
  • ECAs
  • Technical Education
  • 80s-early 90s
  • Streaming
  • Moral Values
  • Vocational Traning
  • Schools given
  • Greater Autonomy
  • Late 1990s
  • Caring Thinking
  • Creative thinking
  • IT
  • NE
  • CIP
  • Compulsory Pri
  • Education (2000)

17
Education Policies Practices in Singapore
21st Century TLLM (2003) Integrated Programme/
Through Train (2003) Future Schools
(2008) Specialised Schools - NUS Maths Science
School - School of Science Technology -
School of the Arts - Singapore Sports School -
Pathlight Northlight Schools
18
Education Policies Practices in Singapore
  • Leveling up for all economic-social classes?
  • Financial Assistance Schemes
  • Government Bursaries
  • Edusave Scheme (1993)
  • to maximise opportunities for all Singaporean
    children
  • rewards students who perform well or who make
    good progress
  • provides students and schools with funds to pay
    for enrichment programmes or to purchase
    additional resources.

19
Summing Up
  • What are the features of our education system?
  • Do you agree with what the government has done so
    far?
  • What would you do differently?

http//www.moe.edu.sg/
20
Practice Question
  • Instilling and reinforcing national loyalty
    through National Education is the main
    consideration of our education system.
  • Do you agree with the statement? EYA
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