Tag: Singapore

  • Difficult To Get A Job With General Degree And No Work Experience

    Difficult To Get A Job With General Degree And No Work Experience

    Hi Mr. Tan,

    I came across your blog and would like to share my thoughts and experiences with you.

    I have a diploma in business (merit) from a local polytechnic. After NS, I was rejected by NUS for a place in Business School but was offered sociology instead. Because of my interests in business, I did a minor in management and realised to my shock that 30% of those in business school were foreigners – from Vietnam, China, Malaysia who don’t even understand business terms!

    After a year, I lost interest in my course and just breezed through and scraped by with a basic pass degree. Although I admit this is my fault for not working hard and securing a comfortable government job like a few of my peers, but the whole idea is that the private sector is a completely different ball game although.

    When I graduated, I sent in hundreds of resume but only got two interviews. The reality for fresh graduates is that unless you have a law, accountancy or medicine degree where you have secured a training contract of some sort then you are safe. Civil service aside, the private sector is very unwilling to take on someone with a general degree with no experience.

    In fact, I have been unemployed for 2 years after graduating and helping our my mother in her restaurant. This has made me feel very inferior towards the S-pass holders from third-world countries!

    Eventually, I decided to put my diploma as my highest educational level and secured a part-time job as an admin executive earning $1,200 a month with a local SME working about 20 hours a week.

    I can tell you for a fact that the graduate employment surveys are bullshit! It is done on a voluntarily basis and only those who have secured jobs would have sufficient information to fill such as basic salary and so on. The reality is that the unemployed like myself are too ashamed to fill up the survey.

    Even for those who do, what does 15% of FASS (faculty of arts and social science) graduates who are unemployed SIX months after graduation is no joke, considering the amount they spent on their education. I would personally estimate that around 30% of my peers are unemployed and another 30% are like me underemployed doing jobs like estate and insurance agents which do not even require degrees!

    In my free time, I am also studying for an ACCA to enhance my future prospects after seeing how general degrees have no value in the job market while there are so many foreigners competing with Singaporeans who have served NS.

    I have really really lost faith in our PAP.

     

    Source: http://tankinlian.blogspot.sg

  • Walid. J Abdullah: On Freak Election Results And Voting For The Sake Of It

    Walid. J Abdullah: On Freak Election Results And Voting For The Sake Of It

    On freak election results and voting opposition for the sake of it:

    It is that time of the year when you hear people warning about a ‘freak election result’ and voters who ‘do not know what they are angry about’ and ‘want to vote opposition for the sake of it’. To be fair to the PAP candidates, i have not heard them use this card too much during hustings, so that is commendable. Unfortunately, some of their overzealous supporters choose to propagate this rhetoric. To which, I say:

    1) There is no such thing as a freak election result. If people have voted, they have voted. If on september 12, for instance, there are 89 PAP MPs, it is not a freak election result: people have made their choice. Likewise, there is no reason to state that it is a freakish result if PAP does not do well.

    2) The PAP WILL remain as the government: you can be sure about that. In fact, in all likelihood, they will retain their two-thirds majority. Quite comfortably, i believe. I shall justify this claim by detailing the different electoral contests in a later post.

    3) Do people realize how condescending they sound when they say this? It is as though any vote for the opposition is irrational, and the only non-freakish or right outcome is a PAP victory.

    4) Let us just look the logic of the claim. Let’s say John tells people that ‘we must be careful not to have a freak result.’ When you ask him why, he will say ‘because the people still wants PAP as the government.’ So when you ask him what is the evidence, he will say: ‘they have been voting for the PAP all this while’.

    So…

    Assertion: People want PAP as government.
    Evidence: Their voting patterns.

    Then you say, hang on a minute: let us say the PAP does not become the government. Why is that a freak result? If the evidence for people wanting PAP as their government is the voting pattern, then when the pattern changes, why don’t you trust the pattern and accept that the people do not want PAP as the government anymore?

    John would then go ‘errr, almost all the people i know want PAP as government and those who support the opposition, have no idea why they are doing so’.

    Then you would tell him: ‘the people you know, are not representative of the population. The voting results, are.’

    He would then go: ‘err, this is just what i feel.’

    Then you would say: ‘Well John, i feel like slapping you right now too, but that doesn’t mean my feeling is rational or justified.’

    5) If you believe that voters cannot be trusted to make the right choice, have voters been wrong all this while then?

    Singaporeans have voted for the PAP as our government 11 times since independence. For each of those 11 times, was their judgment sound or suspect?
    You can’t have your cake and eat it.

    6) Ultimately, claims like these only serve to obfuscate matters and distract us from what really matters: discussions on policies.

    Let us get back to those constructive discussions.

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • Happy Teachers Day! Be True To Yourself When You Vote

    Happy Teachers Day! Be True To Yourself When You Vote

    By AB

    To my fellow 33,000 colleagues in the teaching fraternity, Happy Teacher’s Day! I hope you had a good day of celebrations and that the students were kinder to you today.

    Just like you, I am a teacher in one of the schools in Singapore. Busy whole year round not just with the daily classroom management strategies and idiosyncrasies of every child, but also being swarmed with CCA, HDP reports, CP entries, setting exam papers, lesson plans, performance tasks, applied learning, learning journeys, scheme of works, …. just some of the terms we all are just so familiar with.

    I would say one of the toughest parts of our jobs is in guiding the child, either through our decisions of positive reinforcement, negative consequences, or as a last resort, punishments. We always hope that in our decision, our judgement is not clouded and that the child will be able to develop the correct traits and values to be future ready for Singapore and contribute back to society.

    I am proud of our schools, where there are measures in place to manage bullying. I do believe every teacher would be able to manage a situation in a class where there is bullying, whether it is physical, verbal or just plain taunting.

    As an educator, I am proud of this. As much as we are unable to change society overnight, it is our hope that when we start young with our children in schools, they will develop into concerned citizens with the right values, ready to continue bringing Singapore to new heights.

    As an adult watching the election unfold, I cannot say I am proud of some of our leaders. I am sure many of you are able to see that there is obvious bullying, intimidation, mud-slinging and even character assassinations. Are these not the exact traits of the very same bullies that we will always be quick to put down or speak up against in correction?

    To my fellow 33,000 colleagues in the teaching fraternity, do pardon my English and writing as I am actually a Mathematics teacher. It is just my hope that during this election, we take our vote seriously and ask ourselves if this were the type of traits we want in our leaders, our children, our future.

    Please be true to ourself and follow our heart in our vote.

    Happy Teacher’s Day! Majulah Singapura.

     

    Source: http://www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • Is SDP’s Damanhuri Abas Anti-LGBT Or Pro-LGBT?

    Is SDP’s Damanhuri Abas Anti-LGBT Or Pro-LGBT?

    Aiseyman! This elections, the SDP is coming back with a bang siol~ Contesting in 2 GRCs and SMCs, they look set to give the PAP a good run for their money in the West and North-Western parts of Singapore.

    SDP

    But let’s take a closer look at one of their Malay-Muslim candidates running in the Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC – Mr Damanhuri Bin Abas.

    SDP_damanhuri_3

    Mr Damanhuri is representing a party that believes in the values of democracy, pluralism, diversity. In line with their party values, SDP is also one of the few courageous parties that have come out in support of the repeal of Section 377A that criminalises gay sex because they are against discrimination by race, religion and sexual orientation.

    Mr Damanhuri himself has also said that he believes in a society where everyone is treated as equals.

    SDP_Damanhuri

    Yet on the other hand, Mr Damanhuri is not a proponent of equal rights for LGBT because he thinks that Section 377A should not be repealed! He even had a hand in drafting the FMSA statement supporting NUS professor Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied when he dehumanised lesbians by describing them as ‘diseases’ and ‘cancers’ of society.

    SDP_Damanhuri_2    

    SDP_Damanhuri_FMSA

    So which is which Mr Damanhuri? You cannot simply make such a big statement to say that you support equality, you will fight against the discrimination of Hijabi Muslimahs and Malay-Muslims in the military, but you yourself discriminate against the LGBT community!

    How are you going to reconcile SDP’s efforts in repealing Section 377A with your own beliefs against alternative sexual orientation?

    SDP_Damanhuri_rights

     

    Source: http://www.aiseyman.com

  • Aisha Alqadri: Thank You Damanhuri Abas For Speaking On The Tudung Issue

    Aisha Alqadri: Thank You Damanhuri Abas For Speaking On The Tudung Issue

    Thumbs up to ‪#‎YourDamanhuri‬! ??????

    A great speech at the rally, especially with regard to the tudung issue, in allowing the nurses to don the tudung as part of their uniform.

    “If the Madam Speaker of Parliament and the Malay/Muslim female MPs of PAP are allowed to don the white tudung, why are they still not allowing the nurses to do so? Don’t Mdm Halimah, Dr Intan Azura and Mdm Rahayu look like nurses in their all white outfit and tudung???”
    – Mr Damanhuri Abas
    Singapore Democratic Party

    A good one indeed!!!??????

    Why the double standard????
    ‪#‎GE2015‬ ‪#‎voteforchange‬

     

    Source: Aisha Alqadri

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