Tag: MOE

  • This Principal Is The Reason Why Other Teachers Are Jealous Of Those Working At West Spring Primary School

    This Principal Is The Reason Why Other Teachers Are Jealous Of Those Working At West Spring Primary School

    At West Spring Primary School, teachers are banned from replying to work-related e-mails and texts before 7.30am and after 5pm on weekdays, as well as over the weekend.

    They also get two days in the work week when they can leave for home immediately after class, at about 2pm.

    This is its principal, Mrs Jacinta Lim’s way of ensuring that her teachers have a work-life balance.

    She implemented this when she became principal of the school, which opened in 2014.

    Mrs Lim told The New Paper: “It stems from my personal conviction that a good balance of work and private time is important.

    “When my staff is well rested, they will be happy teachers. When they are happy, the children will be in good hands. It’s what I tell parents during briefings too.”

    Her efforts won her the Work-Life Leadership Award by the Tripartite Committee on Work-Life Strategy in 2014.

    Last year, West Spring was also named one of the 15 exemplary employers by Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (Tafep) for not just prioritising work-life harmony, but also setting aside time for cohesion programmes to help employees bond, and having a mentorship coaching programme to ensure that all staff receive professional development support and guidance for their career growth.

    To ensure her “e-mail and text during work hours” rule sticks, Mrs Lim nags at her staff to “sing the same tune”.

    She said: “The moment you start giving in a little, eventually nobody is going to adhere to the rule.

    “For me, I play the role of the gatekeeper to ensure things don’t get moved down to the teachers.

    “There are some teachers who are very nice and see it as their responsibility to respond (to parents) on weekends or at night. There’s a limit and I’ll draw the line.”

    Initially, Mrs Lim received “feedback” from parents about her hard-handed approach, but she did not relent.

    “If we take things easy and sway, parents may grow to become demanding. At the end of the day, it’s about mutual respect,” she said.

    The Ministry of Education provides guidelines on educators’ interaction with parents and the community, via the Code of Professional Conduct.

    The underpinning principles include building mutual trust and respect with parents in making decisions that are best for the child, and exercising professional integrity and judgment in communicating and working with parents.

    West Spring Primary School teacher Lim Ker Wee, 39, gives his work mobile number to parents because it allows him to update parents on the pupils’ progress and vice versa.

    The teacher of seven years said parents usually text about their children’s school work, or when their children have to miss school for various reasons.

    He told TNP: “When I started teaching, my colleagues told me it’s not really advisable (to give out numbers), but the landscape is changing.

    “What we emphasise here is mutual respect. I will let my class know that my number is available to all, but their parents must also know when is the right time to contact me. Once we agree on that, I don’t see a problem.”

     

     

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • More Than 2 Years But Still No Muslim Stall At Nan Hua Pri School Canteen

    More Than 2 Years But Still No Muslim Stall At Nan Hua Pri School Canteen

    *Renting of Muslim Stall at Nan Hua Primary School*

    (this post/advertisement/invitation will expire after 15 Feb)

    Dear all. It’s been more than 2 years since the Muslim staff and pupils have any Muslim stall. My school has been trying to publicise and advertise for interested stallholders, but to no avail. I hope to have some luck posting in this FB group.

    • Stall Rental: $15/mth
    • Payment to cleaner: $8/school day
    • Own registration for water and gas with PUB
    • Electricity usage will be billed by school based on meter reading
    • Operating hours: 9.00am to about 2.00pm on school days
    • Peak hours:
    Recess time: 9.30am to 11.00am
    Lunch time: 1.30pm to 2.00pm
    Address: 30 Jalan Lempeng S128806 (opposite Clementi Fire Station)

    Please call Mr Phua (Admin Manager) at 67788050 if you are interested and/or want to view the stall.

    Thank you.

    P/S: There is a generous individual who is willing to help the eventual successful applicant for the malay stall with a $500 interest-free loan. This is to help with the licensing fee, rental and initial costs. The individual will contact the successful applicant directly. His niat is to enable the muslim students and teachers to have easier access to halal food.

    God bless the above-mentioned generous loan 😇

    Regards,
    Md Faizal
    PE Teacher
    Nan Hua Primary School

     

    Source: Mohamad Faizal in Halal Cafe & Restaurants in Singapore

  • Best O-Level Results In At Least Three Decades

    Best O-Level Results In At Least Three Decades

    The class of 2016 has set a record. Students who took the O levels last year have outperformed their seniors, with 84.3 per cent of the cohort attaining at least five passes.

    This surpasses the 83.8 per cent set by the 2015 cohort. Then, it was Singapore’s best showing at the national exam in at least three decades.

    A total of 30,292 students took the O-level exam last year, compared with 29,723 students in the class of 2015.

    In a joint press release, the Ministry of Education (MOE) and the Singapore Examinations and Assessment Board (SEAB) said on Wednesday (Jan 11) that the results “are comparable to that of 2015”.

    MOE and SEAB added that 96.5 per cent of the students attained at least three passes, while 99.9 per cent passed at least one subject. These results were largely similar to the previous batch’s 96.1 per cent and 99.9 per cent respectively.

    However, the performance of private candidates slipped slightly.

    Of the 1,865 private candidates who also took the exam, 90.2 per cent got at least one pass. This figure is slightly lower than the previous batch’s 90.5 per cent.

    Students went back to their secondary schools at 2pm on Wednesday to collect their results.

    Schools across the island celebrated not only their top scorers in the national exam, but also students who had shown great improvement, overcome odds in their lives, or exhibited exemplary values.

    In a Facebook post on Tuesday (Jan 10), Education Minister (Schools) Ng Chee Meng urged students collecting their results to appreciate their teachers and loved ones for their support, believe in themselves and challenge their limits.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Desperate Father: Will My Son Ever Get A Place In Autism SPED School When Even My Own MP Cannot Help?

    Desperate Father: Will My Son Ever Get A Place In Autism SPED School When Even My Own MP Cannot Help?

    NOT ASKING FOR THE MOON…Just A Place For My Son In Autism Sped School…!!!

    I rarely post on social media. But today is an exception. Today I can’t help but to post this.

    After much persuasion from my wife… today after work, I accompanied both my wife and son to Eden School / Eden Centres for Adults / Eden Children’s Centres / AAS for Autism, in hopes to plead for a slot this year for Nabil in there.

    After meeting with the in charge for enrollment, to our disappointment we were told that the earliest most possible intake for Nabil is next year in January 2018.

    He’s of a P2 age this year…it’s been 2 lengthy years already..how long more do you expect my son to wait… I can’t help feeling the negative vibes that Nabil is like not being considered for a place at all when being told to go and try for other sped schools or private schools…..this is easier said than done.

    It is beyond my understanding why distance between school and home is not being considered during a sped school enrollment just like how it is being applied in mainstream primary schools.

    Really could not comprehend the system how a student who resides in as far as pasir ris and tampines are prioritized and get a slot in Eden (Bt Batok) while we the apparent west residents (CCK) are left hanging precariously by the hook.

    We as parents are truly exhausted. Have tried numerous means of help…even to the extend of approaching the Member of Parliament of our area Mr Zaqy Mohamad in hopes to expedite the enrollment but till today..we have yet to receive even a reply from him regarding the matter regrettably.

    It is just emotionally tiring and draining to say the least…as a husband, seeing your wife shedding her tears helplessly in public as we step out of Eden School earlier on while hugging my son was the last straw for me!

    Seek help from Ministry of Education, Singapore you say?? How could we when in the first place, they couldn’t even help to issue a student ezlink card for Nabil just because he has yet to get enrolled into a school. Yes. My son all this while has been paying adult fare whenever he took the train since he turns 7. How justifying is this…?! You see how my son has been tossed back and forth all these while….

    The system got to change…someone has got to look into the cases which falls through the cracks…that’s where our unheard voices are being suppressed unfairly….?

     

    Source: Aqil Alid

  • Former Army General Teach Teachers How To Teach Students

    Former Army General Teach Teachers How To Teach Students

    Former Chief of Defence Force-turned-Education Minister Ng Chee Meng talked down on more than 500 principals and teachers at the Appointment and Appreciation Ceremony for Principals today (Dec 29).

    The former army general who has never been a teacher a day in his 25 years-long career in the military, told educators that they should not “intervene too early” and that students should be allowed to learn from their mistakes:

    “Students need to learn to be resilient and self-reliant, as well as learn from their mistakes. Are we, out of the best intentions, preventing our students from going through setbacks and failures and in the process, learn and build resilience? Perhaps we need to let our students learn from their own mistakes, find their own solutions, and put in the necessary hard work or corrective action to eventually succeed. School leaders, teachers and parents alike, may need to learn how to selectively stand back and be an observer rather than intervene too early.”

    Education Minister Ng Chee Meng shares half the education ministry portfolio with Minister Ong Ye Kung, despite having workload not as strenuous as the Transport Ministry or Foreign Affairs Ministry – both which saw major hiccups in recent years.

    Minister Ng Chee Meng continued his lecture-speech on the principals and teachers:

    “The importance of cultivating in students an attitude of lifelong learning, one that comes from a joy of learning, and of the need to prepare students for an increasingly connected and high-tech workplace to reduce the growing skills gap between what we learn in schools and the jobs (graduates) are applying for. The schools’ Applied Learning Programmes can help prepare our students for the future workplace as they can learn innovation, and nurture an entrepreneurial attitude in their learning.”

    Minister Ng Chee Meng was brought in to Parliament through the GRC election system and was fast-tracked to a  full ministerial position without any merit. He currently draws S$1.1 million a year alongside another inexperienced Education Minister, with both ministers double taxing the Education Ministry’s ministerial salaries budget. Under the two Education Ministers, two students have committed suicide due to academic stress in 2016. There is also no significant changes in the education system either.

     

    Source: http://statestimesreview.com