Tag: elitism

  • Netizens Angry Over NTU’s Elitist Email

    Netizens Angry Over NTU’s Elitist Email

    An e-mail sent out by Nanyang Technological University’s (NTU) School of Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS) to its final-year students has raised the ire of a number of undergraduates and netizens.

    Last Wednesday, Mr Joel Chong, a final-year student at the HSS, uploaded a screen-shot of the e-mail, which asked for inspirational stories from its undergraduates.

    Besides stories from prodigies, outstanding undergraduates with multiple job offers awaiting them, and those who have overcome great odds, the school also asked for stories from “graduating VIP students from an important or well-known family, sons or daughters of politicians, professors, celebrities etc”.

    That line has angered a number of netizens, and Mr Chong’s post has since garnered more than 400 likes and over 700 shares.

    Speaking to The New Paper yesterday, Mr Jonathan Ang, 23, a third-year student at HSS, said: “Why does it even matter what your surname is? That group shouldn’t even be there at all, it’s not about phrasing but the subject matter itself that is wrong.”

    Miss Emi Morihata, 21, a third-year student at NTU’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communications and Information, was also disappointed with the HSS.

    “Their view of ‘inspirational stories’ is so superficial.

    “The fact that they are setting these narrow-minded measurements as indicators of an eligible candidate already shows that they are just doing it for the sake of publicity to showcase the school.

    “Graduation is a celebration of the students who have worked hard through the years. If they really want to highlight these hardworking people who overcame challenges during their academic life, such indicators won’t be on the e-mail in the first place.”

    Responding to Mr Chong’s Facebook post last week, a spokesman for NTU felt he had been unfair in singling out the particular line, causing “the spirit and meaning of our open request for nominations” to be “misinterpreted and distorted”.

    Responding to queries from TNP yesterday, an NTU spokesman said: “We understand the concerns raised and it was never our intention to focus on only individuals of certain backgrounds.

    “The highlighted line could have been better phrased.

    “Convocation is a celebration of our students’ achievements and knowledge, and as always, we will be as inclusive as possible and portray this by featuring stories of students from all walks of life.”

    Sociologist Tan Ern Ser felt the line in the e-mail suggested elitism.

    “In a meritocratic society, we celebrate achieved status – that is, achieved through individual merit, ability and diligence – rather than social background, which is not within our control.

    “Highlighting a person’s social background is not only elitist but also contrary to our core values.

    “Perhaps, the ones who penned those requirements have good reasons for doing so, and I am sure many would like to know what those reasons are,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

     

     

  • Study: Kids From Rich Families More Likely To Attend IP And GEP

    Study: Kids From Rich Families More Likely To Attend IP And GEP

    Children from higher socio-economic backgrounds are more likely to attend Integrated Programme (IP) secondary schools and their affiliated primary schools, as well as those that offer the Gifted Education Programme (GEP).

    This was a key finding of a recent study that examined class stratification in schools and if students from different schools had different levels of educational aspirations.

    The study was done by Ms Ong Xiang Ling, its principal investigator who is a Singapore Children’s Society research officer, and Dr Cheung Hoi Shan, a post-doctoral fellow at the National University of Singapore.

    Their work pointed to a disproportionate number of students from affluent backgrounds in IP and GEP schools.

    In the study, schools were divided into three groups and about 200 students from each group were polled. Type 1 were IP schools, their affiliated primary schools, as well as primary schools which offered the GEP. Type 2 were government-aided schools and autonomous schools which did not offer the IP, and Type 3 were government schools.

    Data showed that nearly 41 per cent of Type 1 secondary school students came from families with a monthly household income that exceeded $10,000, compared to 7 per cent in Type 3 schools. About 31 per cent of Type 1 students lived in private homes, compared to 2 per cent in Type 3. About 54 per cent of Type 1 students had at least one parent with university education, compared to 17 per cent in Type 3.

    The fact that there is a significant disparity in secondary schools, where entry is supposed to be by merit, points to a possible perpetuation of class differences in schools, said the researchers. Dr Cheung said: “The observation from many news reports… does point to some form of social stratification in our schools; so in elite schools you tend to have families represented by higher socio-economic status (SES) and in other neighbourhood schools you tend to have the reverse.”

    She added: “We see SES differences also in secondary schools, where entry is supposed to be determined in large part by the children’s results in the PSLE. Entry is not about distance or alumni associations, yet we also see marked SES differences in elite secondary schools. So it may point to a perpetuation – if you started off with high SES, chances are because you have more resources, you are better prepared for PSLE, so you are more likely to get into good secondary schools.”

    Said Ms Ong: “Higher SES children are more likely to be in Type 1 schools, and being in Type 1 schools makes them more likely to have high confidence in attaining at least a university degree. Then it would mean that there could be a perpetuation of class differences, because research has shown that if you have high confidence of attaining a university degree, you are more likely to actually get a university degree.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

     

  • Elitism Quotes By PAP

    Elitism Quotes By PAP

    Small collection of quotes by PAP Ministers etc. on the “aristocracy mentality.” Thanks to readers for contributing some of these 🙂

    1. “Without a natural aristocracy. . .society will lose out.”
    — Lee Hsien Loong, 2015

    2. “I don’t respond to anything on The Real Singapore, which is a Facebook page and website written by morons, commented on by morons, and read and shared by morons.”
    — Calvin Cheng, 2014

    3. “The problem today is that PAP is a bit too elitist. . .they don’t feel for the people; overall, there is a lack of empathy.”
    — Ngiam Tong Dow, 2013

    4. “Maybe it made lesser mortals envious and they thought maybe he was a little bit boastful.”
    — Charles Chong, MP (on senior civil servant Tan Yong Soon’s S$46,000 five-week courseat a prestigious French cooking school)

    5. “I feel my own angst riding with the common people. But I suppose it’s good to get the feel from the ground every now and then, to connect with the peasantry.”
    PAP Supporter and former Law Society employee, Nicholas-Seth Leong on his second MRT trip in 2012

    6. “Please, get out of my elite uncaring face.”
    — Wee Shu Min, scholar-daughter of former MP Wee Siew Kim

    7. “Remember your place in society before you engage in political debate… Debate cannot generate into a free-for-all where no distinction is made between the senior and junior party… You must make distinctions – What is high, what is low, what is above, what is below, and then within this, we can have a debate, we can have a discussion… people should not take on those in authority as ‘equals’.”
    — Former Foreign Minister George Yeo (1994)

    8. “They (top civil servants) get paid more, they’re highly educated, and they have bigger egos, bigger than any government employees I’ve met anywhere else in the world. It’s not good or bad, but they consider themselves superior to almost any government employee in the world.”
    — Renowned executive coach Marshall Goldsmith on civil servants’ ego in Singapore (2011)

    TanChooLeng

    9. “$600,000 a year is peanuts.”
    — Mrs. Goh Chok Tong (2004)

    gohchoktong

    10. “We are our own check. The integrity of our leaders, of our MPs. That’s where the check comes from.”
    — Goh Chok Tong, 26 August 2015

    11. “I didn’t ask for it. That was the rate for the job, that’s what I accepted. You don’t like the rate, I can’t help it.”
    President Nathan who doesn’t feel he needs to defend his high salary which was criticised extensively online. (The Sunday Times, 7 Aug 2011)

    12. “I don’t think that there should be a cap on the number of directorship that a person can hold.”
    — PAP MP John Chen who held 8 directorships

    13. “It’s not for the money because some of the companies pay me as little as $10,000 a year.”
    — PAP MP Wang Kai Yuen who held 11 directorships

    14. “One evening, I drove to Little India and it was pitch dark but not because there was no light, but because there were too many Indians around.”
    — Former PAP MP Mr Choo Wee Khiang, in a speech in Parliament in 1992

    15. “Smaller Medisave means you’re lazy and work less.”
    Khaw Boon Wan (2013)

    16. “There’s no ladder to climb when the top rung is reserved for people with a certain name.”
    — Forbes (2009)

    17. “The elite’s privileged position in decision-making and exclusive formulation of organisational policies will only serve to reflect the elite’s self-interests instead of that of the masses.”
    — Classical elite theorist Robert Michels, via Soh Yi Da

    18. “Our funds are accountable to the government. I would not believe that transparencyis everything.”
    — PM Lee Hsien Loong, The Telegraph UK

    19. “As an anti-PAP retired civil servant, I can tell you that all the PAP media events are staged with great care. Every photo opportunity is meticulously planned. As a former government press officer told me, we must manipulate the message.”
    TRE Comment

    20. “We are same — same but different.”
    — Lim Swee Say via Teo Chee Hean (2015)

    21. “The reality as societies developed is that leaders often come from the same social circles, educational backgrounds and even family trees.”
    — Lee Kuan Yew, 2011

    22. We decide what is right. Never mind what the people think.”
    — Lee Kuan Yew, 1987

    23. “In short, the elite.”
    — Lee Kuan Yew, 1966

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    Source: https://jesscscott.wordpress.com

  • Deconstructing Arguments Of Young Singaporean Elitist

    Deconstructing Arguments Of Young Singaporean Elitist

    ‘Elitism’ can be good for society

    It’s very interesting to me whenever a teenager thinks that he has something important or meaningful to say about society. I used to blog about social issues as a teenager myself, and it wasn’t too long ago– so I like to think that I relate to the civic-minded young ones. [1]

    The first and most important thing we need to remember about young teenage thinkers is that they’re most probably dependent on their parents.

    This does not automatically discredit their perspective, but it does shape it tremendously. [2]

    Or, to look at it from another point of view, there’s a lot about society you simply don’t know about until you start paying for the roof over your head and the water coming out of your taps.

    How does this play out in Russell’s argument?

    He claims that “equity is better than equality”, but he has no proposal for actually increasing the net amount of equity in Singapore.

    So all he’s really saying is that the status quo works well for him, and he’d like things to be kept that way, thank you very much.

    Which is quite rational from his perspective. Why should commoners get access to the privilege that HE inherited?

    (Actually there’s a good reason: because it’s a step towards increasing the net amount of equity in Singapore. But he avoids talking about this, probably because he’s a teenager who isn’t actually accountable for anything yet.)

    Let me go through Russell’s argument, bit by bit:

    In recent years, we seem to have collectively confused equity with equality.

    Well, maybe. Let’s see.

    Equality is making everyone stoop down to the lowest common denominator of society – everyone does the same thing and all are given equal probabilities.

    Straw man! We’re conflating equality of opportunity here with a sort of imposed collectivism. Imposed collectivism typically leads to the shittiest kind of equality, AKA “we’re all equally miserable”.

    Also, “Making everyone stoop down to the lowest common denominator” implies some sort of Down to the Countrysidemovement. Like we’re deliberately weighing people down so that they can’t be excellent (see: Vonnegut’s Harrison Bergeron).

    Vonnegut’s story demonstrates “making everybody stoop down”, where people are literally policed and maimed. Giving the disenfranchised access to education is a totally different thing.

    Equity entails everyone doing what their abilities allow them to do, and everyone being given equal opportunities to succeed; only the most outstanding grab those opportunities.

    That’s the end goal that pretty much everybody agrees is a good thing.

    The challenge is that we often disagree about how to get there.

    If we take a modern society and reduce it back to an agrarian one, where everyone puts in equal effort, we achieve equality but not equity – because we are taking people with the capability to be, for instance, lawyers and doctors, and making them do the same menial tasks as everyone else.

    What is up with the “reduce modern society back to an agrarian one” motif?

    Also, what are these horrible menial tasks that everybody does except lawyers and doctors? Washing their own underwear? The horror.

    It is a natural consequence that students from affluent backgrounds get into better schools because their parents are likely more well-heeled and can afford better-quality education for them.

    Oh man, that’s not even half of it. Parents from affluent backgrounds also are likely to read more, read to their kids more, have more thoughtful conversations at the dinner table, have better connections and so forth. Check out this great comic: On a plate

    differences

    There is no point aiming for equality for the sake of equality, and giving up equity.

    Ah, but you see, the point is to GAIN equity by reducing inequality. The point is to GAIN more high-quality doctors and lawyers from the people who don’t currently have access to opportunities.

    Did you seriously think that the Principal of RI is saying “let’s give up equity for the sake of equality”? Equity bad, equality good?

    […] when we stream students according to their abilities, it is only natural that students whose families can afford better quality education make it to better institutions.

    Try to avoid “it is only natural” statements, because they’re actually non-arguments. It’s only natural for a 17-year-old to write things like this. It’s only natural for people to desire and persue equality.

    Everything is only natural, ergo it’s redundant to talk about it.

    A natural consequence that stratifies society does have its own purpose for the well-educated, critical minds to mingle together to build Singapore up to greater heights.

    Don’t pretend that “natural phenomena” has noble intentions. It only seems to because it serves your interests.

    The idea that a country will be brought to greater heights by a circlejerking elite is a romantic one, but it’s BS.

    Intelligence is an asset; and we cannot allow ourselves to prioritise equality over intelligence and equity.

    Again, the idea that equality takes precedence over equity here is utterly mislaid.

    The fundamental point that you’re missing is that addressing inequality is a necessary step towards creating more equity. We don’t need to send doctors and lawyers to the countryside. We need to give rural children the opportunity to read and write.

    RI is often touted as a factory for future leaders – why would we want to draw resources away from the nurturing of our future leaders, or worse still, level the playing field?

    Oh, that’s a pretty simple one. Because leaders aren’t made better by throwing more resources at them, or by putting them on a pedestal.

    Leaders need perspective. Leaders need empathy. Leaders need to see the big picture. Leaders need to mingle with everybody, not just the equity-laden, menial-task-avoiding elites. Leaders are nurtured in difficulty and struggle, not with silver spoons.

    You see, Russell, you fundamentally misunderstand the pursuit of maximizing equity for a society, and you fundamentally misunderstand leadership.

    We should relook the way we go off the well-trodden path, and ensure that we do not shake up the status quo just for the sake of doing so.

    The status quo will get shaken whether you like it or not. What you should actually relook, though, are the assumptions in your own thinking.

    Here are a couple of quotes worth ruminating on:

    Elizabeth Warren: “There is nobody in this country who got rich on their own. Nobody. You built a factory out there – good for you. But I want to be clear. You moved your goods to market on roads the rest of us paid for. You hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. You were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for. You didn’t have to worry that marauding bands would come and seize everything at your factory… Now look. You built a factory and it turned into something terrific or a great idea – God bless! Keep a hunk of it. But part of the underlying social contract is you take a hunk of that and pay forward for the next kid who comes along.”

    Lee Kuan Yew: “The successful have forgotten that without the peace and stability that made their education, their job or their business opportunities possible, they would never have made it. But having made it, they think they made it on their own. Some students from the top schools like Raffles Institution or Hwa Chong, they go abroad and they think that they had done it on their own. They don’t owe the government or society anything. They are bright chaps, but how did they make it? Because we kept a balance in society. With peace, stability, we built up our education system and enabled the brightest to rise to the top.”

    _____

    [1] If you’re bored enough to dig into my archives, you’ll find that I too was a presumptuous little twit who thought he had a valuable perspective that the world ought to know about. What changed? I moved out, bought a flat, and pay my own bills. Lol.

    Incidentally, I think it’s very important to remember that news sites are uniquely incentivized to publish incendiary letters. If a letter published on straitstimes.com sparks outrage, that means a lot of traffic for straitstimes.com. It’s not hard to imagine the editors sorting through the letters and laughing amongst themselves, saying, “Wah, this one damn jialat, publish this one!”

    [2] One of the easiest ways to “win aguments” as a teenager is to just use bigger words and talk longer than everybody else. (You’ve got all the time in the world, and no bills to pay.)

    People will eventually find it too tedious to engage with you, and their disengagement means you’re the one left standing. Hooray, you win!

    ____

    Update: Got a great comment about this on Facebook:

    “I think your argument could be summarised into a “equity good not equals equality bad” essay rather than a slightly tedious point-counterpoint.

    Also, the only part I slightly disagree with is precisely the part you quoted above. I think you’re both arguing on a false dichotomy. More resources do to a certain extent allow for the development of better leaders. It can pay for programmes that stretch the capabilities and capacities of participants beyond what normal programmes allow. It can also create opportunities for experiences that are beyond a smaller budget. The problem is that those things are easy to programme, but what we’re missing is the perspective and empathy that you’ve rightly pointed out. We need to be doing more of that, which doesn’t necessarily mean we have to scrap the other good developmental programmes that are already in place.”

     

    Source: www.visakanv.com

  • Elitism Is Good For Everyone

    Elitism Is Good For Everyone

    If ever there was a letter placed in the Straits Times to justify the status quo in Singapore, and just a month after the prime minister proclaimed the societal benefits of a “natural aristocracy” in the conservative citystate, it is this remarkable missive by Mr Russell Tan Wah Jian.

    Having graduated from Raffles Institution (RI) last year, I have witnessed the transformation of the school and would like to share my thoughts on the matter (“RI now a ‘middle-class’ school / ‘Make RI a better school for S’pore’” and “RI population less diverse now, say many alumni“; both published on Aug 4).

    Singapore is a society built on the core tenets of meritocracy, fairness and equity. However, in recent years, we seem to have collectively confused equity with equality.

    Equality is making everyone stoop down to the lowest common denominator of society – everyone does the same thing and all are given equal probabilities. Equity entails everyone doing what their abilities allow them to do, and everyone being given equal opportunities to succeed; only the most outstanding grab those opportunities.

    Often, what constitutes equality does not equate to equity. If we take a modern society and reduce it back to an agrarian one, where everyone puts in equal effort, we achieve equality but not equity – because we are taking people with the capability to be, for instance, lawyers and doctors, and making them do the same menial tasks as everyone else.

    RI’s principal, Mr Chan Poh Meng, highlighted the pursuit of equality – but what for? It is a natural consequence that students from affluent backgrounds get into better schools because their parents are likely more well-heeled and can afford better-quality education for them.

    There is no point aiming for equality for the sake of equality, and giving up equity.

    Elitism, in reality, is just the darker side of meritocracy. What has come about is a natural consequence of meritocracy – when we stream students according to their abilities, it is only natural that students whose families can afford better quality education make it to better institutions.

    It is no fault of the school or the students or the precedence that previous principals have set. If anything, it is the fault of meritocracy.

    But maybe that is not a fault at all. A natural consequence that stratifies society does have its own purpose for the well-educated, critical minds to mingle together to build Singapore up to greater heights. Intelligence is an asset; and we cannot allow ourselves to prioritise equality over intelligence and equity.

    RI is often touted as a factory for future leaders – why would we want to draw resources away from the nurturing of our future leaders, or worse still, level the playing field?

    We should relook the way we go off the well-trodden path, and ensure that we do not shake up the status quo just for the sake of doing so.

    Just in time for elections…

    The comment thread makes for interesting reading too, and not all were as supportive as Mr Kevin Lee, who intoned: “You’re a bloody cunt for writing this piece of hot steaming shit.”

     

    Source: www.mumbrella.asia