Tag: students

  • Malaysian Manicurist Earns Accountant’s Wage Thanks To Ringgit’s Plunge

    Malaysian Manicurist Earns Accountant’s Wage Thanks To Ringgit’s Plunge

    There was no way she could have secured a job that would pay her RM5,000 ($1,681) if she had remained in Sarawak.

    “Impossible,” said manicurist Betty Sii, 25.

    “My highest education is PMR (Malaysia’s version of the GCE O Levels). Nobody will offer that kind of money there,” she added.

    The impossible, however, became possible when the exchange rate slumped to a low of RM3.03 to the Singapore dollar last Tuesday.

    “I was definitely happy (about the exchange rate) when I saw the news,” she said.

    “It means that I am earning about RM6,000 now. That wouldn’t have been possible at home.”

    According to the latest salary guide by recruitment company Kelly Services, RM6,000 is the monthly pay of an accountant with a degree and three years of work experience.

    “If I were in Sarawak, I could only dream of a pay cheque like that,” she added.

    With her $2,000 salary, Miss Sii is able to pay her $600 room rent here and give her mother – who lives in her hometown of Miri in Sarawak – a monthly allowance of RM1,000.

    Meanwhile, the attractive exchange rate has pushed Miss Sii to seriously consider a bigger financial commitment – buying a three-bedroom house back home.

    She claims to have been contemplating the idea for quite some time.

    “The property that I’m looking at would cost me about RM200,000 but I should be able to afford it with my current salary,” she said.

    “If I get a house for myself now, it would be good for me in the future.

    “Anything can happen, so at least if I start now, then I’ll have something waiting for me if I had to move back,” she added.

    MEASLY PAY

    Before she moved to Singapore in April 2013, Miss Sii tried working in Malaysia for about five months, taking up a job as a salesgirl in a retail store.

    “My basic pay was RM800. There was commission too but the most I ever got for it was RM200,” she said.

    Earning a measly pay cheque made life feel completely different to what it is like now.

    She said: “It was tough to live with that kind of pay.

    “Even if things are cheaper there, it’s really hard to live on RM1,000.”

    While the exchange rate makes it cheaper for Miss Sii to support her mother, she is worried about how the bad economy will affect prices back home.

    She said: “It’s a good thing for me but this also means that things over there could start getting more expensive and that’s my only worry.

    “If it does start getting expensive, then eventually, the increased exchange rate will not mean as much to Malaysians working here.”

    Miss Sii’s 36-year-old sister is also based in Singapore. Her sister works as a facial therapist.

    “My brother is working in a publishing house in Sarawak while my sister and I are living and working here in Singapore.”

    Being able to travel back home only twice a year is tough on Miss Sii but the bigger picture is more important to her than anything else.

    “I get homesick and I miss my family but I always try my best to focus on why being here is good.

    “Me being homesick is not as important as my mum being able to live comfortably back home.

    “And that is reason enough for me to look past everything else.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Parents, Pupils Will Get Time To Adjust To PSLE Changes

    Parents, Pupils Will Get Time To Adjust To PSLE Changes

    The makeover of the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) is still some time away, with the announcement to come next year at the earliest, said Education Minister Heng Swee Keat.

    Parents and pupils will be given enough time to respond and adjust to the changes when they are implemented, he added.

    Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had said two years ago in his National Day Rally speech that the high- stakes exam would be revamped, and the aggregate T-score done away with.

    Instead of getting a score out of 300 points, pupils will get grade bands – similar to how students get graded from A1 to F9 for the O levels or A to E for the A levels. The grades will then be converted to points to be used for admission into secondary schools.

    Mr Heng said the Ministry of Education (MOE) is already putting diverse programmes in place in primary and secondary schools to meet the needs of different children. For instance, each secondary school has to develop two distinctive programmes by 2017 to cater to students’ interests.

    “It is about choosing the school that has the programme, the emphasis and the fit, rather than about that one school that you must go to,” he said.

    Recent SkillsFuture initiatives – such as the Earn and Learn programme for polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education graduates as well as the introduction of modular courses at the post-secondary level – also aim to send a message to parents and students that the emphasis is on lifelong learning and helping students enter their areas of interest, said Mr Heng.

    “Some of us may take a longer pathway to reach our peak. Some of us may take a shorter pathway, and some will take a path less travelled and go do something completely different,” he said.

    “There are many good pathways and I don’t need to cram at just the PSLE level and say that I must get into that one school.”

    The MOE is still in the process of implementing programmes in secondary schools – especially in neighbourhood schools – to create differentiation, said Mr Heng.

    These initiatives to create a more diverse secondary school landscape, with different schools offering different niche areas, will come before the PSLE revamp.

    “Some parents believe that a certain school will help their child succeed better… It will take some time for this mindset to change,” said Mr Heng, adding that the end goal is not just about grades, but also about finding success in life.

     

    Source: http://youthphoria.stomp.com.sg

  • Students Get Intimate On Staircase While In Uniform

    Students Get Intimate On Staircase While In Uniform

    Stomper A came across two teenagers in uniform engaging in a public display affection at a staircase landing.

    In the video, a female teenager looked to be lying down face first on her male partner.

    The Stomper said in an email that the couple were kissing each other.

    See what happened in the video below.

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

  • School Bus Provider Charged With Cheating

    School Bus Provider Charged With Cheating

    A schoool bus provider who allegedly failed to provide transport services to several primary schools and pre-schools as he had promised was charged in court on Wednesday with four counts of cheating.

    Adrian Lee Chong Boon, 38, the director of Sindoz Group Pte Ltd, collected at least $50,000 in bus fees from five schools, according to a report by The Straits Times in January.

    Parents of children at Red Swastika School told The Straits Times they had been unable to reach Lee to finalise details of the transport for their children, after they had paid him their deposits.

    On the first day of school, some primary school children from Coral Primary School waited for an hour for the bus to pick them up.

    Following concerns raised by parents, the two schools terminated their contracts with Sindoz, citing its unsatisfactory services.

    Three pre-schools later came forward to say they had paid deposits ranging from $3,000 to $7,000 to the company but were similarly left in the lurch.

    Lee has been released on a $15, 000 bail and his case will be mentioned in court again on Aug 6.

    If convicted of cheating, Lee will face up to three years’ jail, a fine or both.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Indranee Rajah: Heroes Of Sabah Quake And Singaporeans’ Reactions A Reminder Of What It Means Be Part Of Singapore Family

    Indranee Rajah: Heroes Of Sabah Quake And Singaporeans’ Reactions A Reminder Of What It Means Be Part Of Singapore Family

    Being Singaporean

    On this National Day of Remembrance, it was brought home to me once again what it means to be Singaporean.

    This day was for us to remember those who died in the Sabah quake -Terrence (the teacher), Daanish (the adventure guide) and Peony, Ameer, Emilie, Matahom, Rachel and Sonia (the students), while we hope against hope for Mohammad Ghazi and Navdeep Singh who are still missing.

    At the SEA Games, we scored golds, including getting our first ever netball gold yesterday, and breaking the 50m freestyle record today.

    Happiness mingled with sadness.

    I visited Sonia’s wake today. I was touched by her family’s strength and fortitude. Her parents mourned her death but they also celebrated how much she achieved in her young life. They said to know her was to love her.

    In their grief, they generously remembered others, making it a point to tell Minister Heng Swee Keat and myself how much they appreciated the support from the principal and teachers of TKPS, as well as the MOE team in Sabah, with an especial word of thanks for DS Lim Boon Wee, and to the SAF for bringing them and Sonia home.

    Her mum said Sonia was an avid netball player. She played Wing Defence. She had attended the first few matches of our national netball team in the SEA Games to cheer them on before leaving for Sabah and was sorry that she was going to miss the netball final because of her trip.

    Her uncle told me that our national netballers came to see Sonia today. They came to show their support for family of the girl who had supported them. They gave Sonia the hexagonal light medallion from the SEA games pack, signed with their names – so she now has her own SEA games netball “medal”. Their thoughtful gesture and solidarity for Sonia meant a lot to the family.

    Also attended Terrence’s wake this evening. CNA reported a parent as saying that Terrence had “helped a bunch” before going back up again to help others. His selflessness saved others. His family can be proud of him, even as they mourn him. Friends, NS mates, ex-students, teacher colleagues, neighbours and relatives were all there to lend support the family.

    This reminded me anew what it means to be Singaporean – strength,courage, duty, kindness – and being there for each other, in joy or sorrow, good times and bad. This is what it is to be part of the Singapore family.

     

    Source: Indranee Rajah