Category: Sosial

  • Singapore’s Exam Smarts Could Come At Expense Of Innovation

    Singapore’s Exam Smarts Could Come At Expense Of Innovation

    While the Republic’s education system has cultivated students who are top performers in international exams, this could come at the expense of encouraging innovation. And teachers here must be less risk-averse, if Singapore wants an education system that creates innovators.

    These were among the views expressed by various experts at an education conference yesterday, which was organised by the International Association for Scholastic Excellence. The conference was attended by about 1,000 delegates from all over the world, among them school leaders and educators.

    Speaking to TODAY on the sidelines of the summit, Dr Tony Wagner, an expert-in-residence at Harvard University’s Innovation Lab, described Singapore’s education system as one rooted in a long history of “testing for meritocracy” and “testing for equality of opportunity”.

    “The challenge for Singapore is to realise that the current testing and grading system is not going to develop young innovators; it’s only going to develop good test-takers,” said Dr Wagner, who was one of the summit’s featured speakers. It also encourages “bad behaviour”, where parents spend large sums of money on sending tuition classes for their children, while teachers have to prepare students for major examinations at a young age, he added.

    Singapore could delay major tests for admission to institutions of higher education as well as change assessment methods to one that adopts essay-based exams, simulation and interviews, he suggested. For instance, Dr Wagner shared during his speech that he uses only three grades in his classes: A, B or incomplete. If students do not meet standards, they were graded incomplete, rather than given a fail grade.

    Singaporean students have fared well in international assessments, most recently in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) test in 2012, in which the 15-year-olds who sat for the test emerged tops when it came to problem-solving skills. Students here have also been ranked among the best performers in the areas of mathematics, science and reading literacy skills.

    When an audience member pointed out that high-stakes tests are often used to gain admission to schools such as Harvard and Cambridge University, Dr Wagner suggested that parents forgo these options and consider schools such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which started inviting admission candidates to submit portfolios in place of taking tests.

    Experts today also suggested that local teachers be trained differently. While educators here are among the most informed on the evidence of effective teaching and learning, they have also developed an aversion to risk-taking, said Mr Simon Breakspear, founder and chief executive officer of LearnLabs, an education consultancy.

    “But the challenge in education…is to know how to make it work in our context, and this is where risk-taking is going to be required. There is a tendency here to do what’s worked before and not do anything that would be seen to be stepping out of the norm,” he said.

    If educators are not regularly taking risks in designing teaching and learning, it will be difficult for Singapore to evolve into a system that creates innovators, he added.

    Dr Stephen Murgatroyd, president of Murgatroyd Communications and Consulting, who also spoke at the conference, said the testing regime in Singapore has left some children behind.

    “Unless you can afford the high cost of tutoring in addition to classroom work, you’re not going to make it to the university, college route… In the pursuit of meritocracy,…you’re actually losing a lot of talent,” he said.

    Asked about Singapore’s SkillsFuture initiative, he also said he could not understand Singapore’s preoccupation with skills, and that the education system should focus on developing talent instead.

    “Kids who start primary school this year will apply for jobs that don’t yet exist, so what skills do we need for these jobs that we don’t know anything about, we haven’t a clue. What are skills and competencies for all these unknown jobs? We have no idea,” he said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Rat Problems In Bedok South?

    Rat Problems In Bedok South?

    Residents at a cluster of blocks in Bedok South Avenue 3 are worried that their area may become “the next Bukit Batok hill” if the growing number of rats there is left unchecked.

    Many rodents have been spotted around blocks 69 to 72 in the past year. Some residents said they have seen swarms of 20 rats scampering around in a carpark at night.

    In December, a hilly area near Bukit Batok MRT station was infested by rats. This was blamed on leftover scraps from the indiscriminate feeding of stray dogs. More than 300 rats there were killed by pest controllers over two weeks.

    Bedok South residents who spoke to The Straits Times suggested several possible causes – a nearby garbage collection point and a food disposal area near a coffee shop in Block 69.

    East Coast Town Council (ECTC) said it was alerted to the rise in rat numbers by conservancy workers and residents last week, and has since taken measures to control the pests.

    Mr Adrian Theseira, managing director of Wipeout Pest Control Services, which is leading the extermination exercise, said it has found more than 30 rat burrows and nests across blocks 69 to 72.

    As of Monday night, it caught 38 rodents using traps in areas such as drains and rubbish chutes. The rats caught were killed. Since last Thursday, pest controllers have also placed poison in rat burrows.

    On Monday night, The Straits Times spotted more than 10 burrows, two live rats and a dead one on the pavement next to the coffee shop.

    An ECTC spokesman said residents can expect to see rat carcasses in the area during the exercise, which will last until early next month. Residents are advised to call the town council so it can send workers to remove the carcasses.

    She also urged residents to help control the rat population by eliminating food sources, possibly scraps left over from the feeding of stray cats and pigeons.

    The National Environment Agency (NEA) said it received several complaints about rats around Block 70 late last month. Inspections found 16 burrows and rat droppings in a bin centre and two food shops, which have since been given warnings.

    Its officers have spoken to the owners and occupiers of the shops on proper waste disposal.

    NEA also said it is working with the town council to step up estate cleaning and maintenance of the rubbish chutes

    The Straits Times understands that a metal disposal container was installed this year at the Food Park food court to improve its waste management. Before that, scraps went into pails without lids.

    Mr John Teo, 70, who lives in Bedok South’s Block 69, said the rat population grew in the last eight months. The taxi driver, who watches television with his friends at Food Park every night, added: “In the last two to three months, there are smaller ones appearing, which means they are breeding.”

    Another resident, Mr Tan Teck Chin, 47, said: “It’s a bit uncomfortable to eat and see rats so near.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 15 Year Old Arrested, Suspected Involvment In Loanshark Harassment Cases

    15 Year Old Arrested, Suspected Involvment In Loanshark Harassment Cases

    A 15-year-old boy has been arrested for his suspected involvement in a series of loanshark harassment cases.

    Police said a case was reported on April 3, in which the front door of an HDB unit at Woodlands Street 82 was set on fire.

    Through ground enquiries and police camera images, officers from Jurong Police Division arrested the suspect at Block 351 Tampines Street 33 on Monday at about 4.30pm. He is believed to be involved in other similar cases, said police in a statement on Tuesday.

    Under the Moneylenders Act 2010 (Revised Edition), first-time offenders found guilty of loanshark harassment could be jailed for up to five years, fined a minimum of $5,000 and up to $50,000, and caned between three and six strokes.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Goh Hoo Siang, A Singapore PR, Jailed Four Weeks For Insulting Modesty Of Female Tenant

    Goh Hoo Siang, A Singapore PR, Jailed Four Weeks For Insulting Modesty Of Female Tenant

    An unemployed man was jailed for four weeks on Monday for taking a video of his tenant in the shower.

    Malaysian Goh Hoo Siang, 34, who is a Singapore permanent resident, admitted to insulting the modesty of the 25-year-old woman at his home in Woodlands on July 15 last year.

    The victim, a Malaysian, and her sister, were tenants at the time.

    The court heard that between July 9 and 10 last year, Goh bought a thumbdrive with an attached pinhole camera and video recording capabilities from Sim Lim Square.

    On July 15 he was at home with his daughter when he decided to put the recording device under the basin in the kitchen toilet, to film the victim and her sister. He turned on the recording device and left the toilet.

    The victim returned home that evening and took a shower.

    Towards the end of the shower, the recording device fell off. She picked it up and left the toilet.

    When Goh went in to get the device, it was gone.

    The victim saw part of the video on her laptop. She and her sister quickly left the flat to make a police report.

    In his mitigation, Goh pleaded for a chance to turn over a new leaf. He tendered a medical memo from Khoo Teck Puat Hospital stating that he suffers from voyeurism – sexual interest in spying on people engaged in intimate behaviours.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Lee Zu Zhao pointed out that a recent High Court judgment stated that voyeurism does not deprive a person of self-control in the way that impulse control disorder does.

    He cited aggravating factors such as high degree of planning and pre-meditation in seeking a jail sentence.

    District Judge Crystal Ong agreed that a jail sentence was warranted. Goh had betrayed the trust of his tenant and managed to capture the victim nude while she was showering.

    Calling it a grave intrusion of privacy and a serious insult of modesty, she said that it was lucky that more footage had not been captured.

    Goh could have been jailed for up to one year and/or fined.

     

    Source:www.straitstimes.com

  • Marriage Dissolution Rates Increasing In Singapore

    Marriage Dissolution Rates Increasing In Singapore

    Marriage dissolution rates among recent marriage cohorts have increased compared to those in the past, the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) announced on Monday (Apr 6).

    Among those who married in 2003, 16.1 per cent had their marriage dissolved by the 10th year of marriage. In contrast, 8.7 per cent of the 1987 cohort had dissolved their marriage by that time, the ministry said.

    Similarly, 20.3 per cent of the 1998 cohort had dissolved their marriage by the 15th year of marriage, compared to 12.3 per cent of the 1987 cohort, it added.

    DIVORCE RATES TWICE AS HIGH FOR YOUNGER GROOMS

    Among “younger grooms”, who were aged between 20 and 24 years old, there is a higher proportion of dissolved marriages.

    Divorce rates for younger grooms in civil marriages are twice as high, compared to those aged 25 and above. Thirty-three per cent of marriages involving younger grooms who married in 1998 ended in divorce before their 15th anniversary, the ministry said.

    However, recent cohort Muslim divorce rates before the 5th year of marriage has bucked the trend. Divorce rates decreased from 14 per cent for the 2003 cohort to 11.4 per cent for the 2008 cohort, MSF noted.

    “The improvement may be due to community initiatives in marriage preparation, enrichment and counselling for Muslim couples. Since the Marriage Counselling Programme for Muslim marriages began in 2004, more than 27,000 referrals were made. Forty-four per cent of couples in the programme decided not to proceed with divorce,” the ministry said.

    The rise in Singapore’s marriage dissolution rate is in line with similar trends in other developed countries, and generally remains lower than those in countries such as the UK and New Zealand, MSF added.

    NEW MARRIAGE PREP PROGRAMME IN MAY

    In the same press release, MSF said it will be rolling out a new marriage preparation programme called Prevention and Relationship Enhancement Programme (PREP) from May this year.

    This 12-hour programme is a more comprehensive version of the free two-hour Introduction to PREP course, which had been attended by more than 400 couples at the Registry of Marriages since the start of the year.

    The programme will be held over two days, covering topics such as communication, conflict management and commitment. It is free for the first 200 couples who sign up, while couples who attend other such courses supported by the ministry will get a S$70 rebate.

    Non-profit organisation Families for Life (FFL) said it welcomes the new marriage preparation programme. “Too often, couples are overwhelmed by personal work schedules and wedding preparations, and as such, feel that they have no time to attend such programmes. Such free programmes at ROM and convenient community touchpoints are likely to boost interest and participation among couples,” said FFL council member, Anita Fam.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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