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Elite Scholars' University "Real Degrees" Vs FT 's Faked Degrees

shiokalingam

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Bro n Sis ,


So much has been written on FT's weak / inferior U Degrees and

or Faked Degrees.


Can Bro n Sis share some lights on Elite Scholars Degrees From


the likes Of Oxford , Cambridge , MIT & Harvard ???


Any one got Inside Info On their Professors ?


Many Thanks.:confused::confused::confused:
 

shiokalingam

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Is Singapore’s scholar system outdated ?


By Yahoo! Singapore | SingaporeScene – Thu, Jan 19, 2012



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With the world, particularly Singapore, having undergone drastic political and technological changes, is the scholar …




COMMENT


By Seah Chiang Nee


When a former navy chief was appointed to manage Singapore's water supply, including combating floods, it hardly raised an eyebrow.

It was business as usual for a city which is used to being led by military chiefs or scholars of whatever discipline. The latest, Rear Admiral (NS) Chew Men Long became head of the Public Utilities Board (PUB).

He joined several military scholar-leaders that included Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and his deputy Teo Chee Hean. Former Navy chief Lui Tuck Yew runs public transport.

Few ministers in Singapore are non-scholars, and many hail from foreign Ivy League universities. At the top are President's Scholars.

The institution of selecting the academic brightest to administer Singapore was introduced and fine-tuned into a sort of sacred cow by former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew.

Lee was an admirer of China's imperial exam system used by emperors to have "the brightest" to be administrators and magistrates to help run the vast country.

In Singapore, the system had worked well for decades. In one year, there were 12 former scholars in a 19-member Cabinet.

But with the world, particularly Singapore, having undergone drastic political and technological changes, is the scholar system outdated?

Can the ancient Chinese way of appointing leaders still have a role in building and running a modern world city?


A practice under fire

Already, in the face of recent infrastructure breakdowns and a spate of government mistakes, a section of the population appears to be losing confidence in scholars doing the job.

The recent MRT fiasco, frequent return of floods, severe shortage of public housing, and healthcare woes are causing young Singaporeans to question the usefulness of this sacred cow.

So when former Rear Admiral Chew was appointed the PUB chief, what had been a traditional matter of unconcern started raising some hackles.

"What, another military man? Where are the professional engineers?" asked writer gunese. "I think floods are best left to engineers to solve rather than an elite army-man."

A major flaw of the system has been "mismatched" scholars who are from a totally different discipline doing a crucially important leadership task that he had never been trained for.

Like putting round pegs in square holes! The recent MRT disaster was an example.

Eight years ago, the government employed known retailer Saw Phaik Hwa to become its CEO, bypassing people with strong public transport and engineering backgrounds.

Saw was headhunted because the authorities thought she could rake in profit, rather than for her ability to serve rail commuters.

Temasek case

Even the PM's wife Ho Ching, CEO of the multi-billion dollar Temasek Holdings, was not spared criticism in the wake of her ill-timed global investment and large losses.

When she appointed a military officer in 2007, one critic wrote: "It is bad enough when we have an engineer with no fund management background running our US$100bil national wealth fund.

"Now, we learn of a career soldier (former defence chief Ng Yat Chung) being hired by Ho to be its Portfolio Management managing director."

Ng has just been appointed as the new CEO of Neptune Orient Line.

The history of Temasek, and several infrastructure state boards and ministries is peppered with names of ex-armed forces commanders, all scholars, for a good reason.

There is a history behind it. The system's architect, ex-PM Lee believes that academic excellence is the best tangible assessment of human intelligence and leadership potential. If you are intelligent, you can shine in any work or position after some training.

Will Lee's successors eradicate the scholarship system for something else? If it is left to the markets, then it is sunk.

To some Singaporeans, there are few common features between running the military and large-scale world investments; they consider it a "mismatch" of tasks and talents.

Increasingly, the new global economy requires innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship more than straight As that show up in exam grades.

Secondly, with large-scale immigration, Singapore employers seem to opt for lower-trained employees rather than high fliers and post-graduates.

I have several nieces and nephews who are working on the strength of their general degrees and do not mention their Master's degrees.

On many occasions when they applied for a job with the higher degrees, the boss would say: "Sorry, we don't need it. You are over-qualified."

It meant they were doubtful if the employee would stay long in the company and would move as soon as he or she got a higher posting. A recent published survey backs the argument that people are losing faith in higher education.

The number of Singaporeans (aged between 16 and 65 years) who had no intention to pursue further education has reached three-in-ten last year up from a fifth in 2009.

But judging from public perception, the love for scholars will not disappear. From teachers to political leaders, the public here want them highly educated.

Ill-educated candidates will continue to lose out. It looks like this sacred cow will still be around for a while.



A former Reuters correspondent and newspaper editor, the writer is now a freelance columnist writing on general trends in Singapore. This post first appeared on his blog www.littlespeck.com on 14 January 2012.


https://sg.news.yahoo.com/blogs/singaporescene/singapore-scholar-system-outdated-033716654.html
 

shiokalingam

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The Scholar system is Broken




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On 24 January 2009 at about 11pm, a scholar gained notoriety by strolling down Lorong Mambong in Holland Village on a crowded Saturday evening with nothing on but her birthday suit.


An alumni of the University of Cambridge at which she studied in 2003, she was sent on an A*STAR National Science Scholarship (NSS) to study infection biology in Sweden's Karolinska Institutet in 2007. A MENSA member with an IQ of over 148, she was also a champion skater who had represented Singapore at Skate Asia, the largest ice-skating competition outside the US.


Together with Jan Philip, 21, a Swedish student on an exchange programme, the attention getter was charged in court for appearing nude in public. Philip was offered bail of $5,000 and his passport was impounded. But the Singaporean did not have to post bail and her passport was not confiscated. Being a scholar has its privileges.


Despite being fined $2000 for breaking the law, A*Star in its infinite wisdom, chose to give her a warning only, and allowed her to keep the full scholarship. Now in 2014, the streaker makes it plain she is not interested in her bonded employment at all, but is merely marking time to serve out her bond instead of having to face paying, as of 30 September 2014, around $741,657 in order to quit.


Instead of working hard towards a cure for an infectious disease, say Ebola, she decided to go into song and dance and fund art projects "in all genres, including (but) not limited to fine art, visual art, dance, music, circus, theatre, film and literature” with a $1,000 a month grant. Money deducted from a salary that is paid by honest taxpayers, meant to finance a professional obligation she has no intention to fulfil.


The people who vetted and selected her for the umpteen years of expensive overseas education - we assume it must be the Public Service Commission or similar - are caught between a rock and a very hard place. In the private sector, such a maverick will be shown the door in a jiffy - with penalties to match. But to kick her out means admitting they made a bad mistake and committed serious error of judgment. The same judgment with which they have appointed other scholars to high office in various statutory boards and government linked companies, or even into parliament. Come hell or high water, they will never admit the emperor is not wearing any clothes.



Tattler

*The writer blogs at http://singaporedesk.blogspot.com
 

shiokalingam

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Republic’s scholar system may become obsolete​



Star, Malaysia
November 27, 2005

Insight Down South By Seah Chiang Nee

SINGAPORE'S early successes were built largely on the back of a scholarship system that – broadly speaking – followed imperial China as a way to recruit the ‘best and brightest” to serve the country.
For 1300 years of imperial examination history, China’s emperors had selected 100,000 state-level and more than a million provincial scholars to administer the vast country.

Although the details differed, the objective of ancient China and 21st Century Singapore was similar – aimed at getting the best scholars who do well in education to help run the country.

But it worked well under their respective circumstances.

For China, however, the method became outdated and was ended in 1911 because the world had changed. The imperial exam tested only literature, poetry and essays, but not science, maths or any of today’s modern studies that were needed by a changed world.

The question now is whether Singapore’s scholarship system of selecting the best has also outlived its days in the 21st Century that needs entrepreneurial and innovative skills.

The government spends millions to provide some 200 to 250 university scholarships each year to the best students here based on examination results, out of 1200 to 1400 applications received by the Public Service Commission.

Competition, just like in ancient China, is strong and the successful are chosen for the crème de la crème schools. They are sent to the best universities abroad and given high-paying official positions.

The Chinese imperial system was a method to evaluate ability and select officials in dynastic China on the basis of merit rather than social position or political connections.

Similarly, Singapore leaders also advocate meritocracy. Lee Kuan Yew was an admirer of Confucian teachings, which formed a big subject in the imperial exam.

But both systems had unintended side effects. In China, the majority of those who sat for the exam were from the wealthy class.

In Singapore, a recent report said that 75% of scholarship winners lived in private condos or landed property, the rest in cheaper public housing estates. The rich continue to have an edge.

Lee, now Minister Mentor, admits that academic grades cannot determine the best intelligence or capabilities but until a better way is found, he said they remain the criteria.

But in the innovative world, can it continue to work when circumstances are changing so rapidly? Today private enterprise and human innovation, not knowledge of science and engineering, are the new gods needed for survival here.

Some Singaporeans believe that Lee’s scholars’ class may also become obsolete just as the imperial examination went out of fashion.

In fact, the Lee government had exceeded imperial China in recruitment.

Over the years, the large intake of scholars into the bureaucracy and military leadership was so heavy that it has created a hole in the economy. It has deprived the state of a rich source of potential entrepreneurs.

The brightest students are filtered into a secure, well-paid bureaucracy where they developed an ability to ‘play safe’ and avoid taking risks so that they can keep their jobs, the opposite of the new Singaporean we need.

Despite of – or because of – the scholar class, Singapore remains sadly behind its trade rivals in entrepreneurial spirit and capabilities.

It has led Lee to get the government to release up to half of its state-supported civil service scholars to move into starting enterprises, with questionable results.

For years scholars have been running state-owned enterprises, but it is not the same as taking risks with their own money and careers. Few are prepared to take personal risks to start their own companies.

Good grades may not make good businessmen and often have nothing to do with them.

Scholars may produce good bureaucrats and administrators but they do not necessarily have sound judgment, market ideas or profits, qualities needed in the new economy.

Dr Phua Kai Lit, a sociologist who received his PhD from Johns Hopkins, wrote that Singapore had become a country “increasingly ruled by economists, engineers, and other technocratic experts with First Class Honours undergraduate degrees, Oxbridge and Ivy League Master's degrees and PhDs.”

“Whether this society truly fulfils (the Singaporean) dream and meets his expectations is a question worthy of debate,” he said.

Another reason why it may not survive long is that it promotes an elitist class, which despite the leaders’ best efforts, is growing more unpopular with the new generation.

Actually, offering high civil service jobs to scholars is not uncommon in many countries – but not in politics. The unique feature in Singapore lies in its use to select Cabinet ministers and members of Parliament in the ruling party.

In other democratic countries winning elections is a deciding factor, but the predominant strength of the People’s Action Party virtually rules out this criterion.

R.K. Vasil wrote in 1992, “The PAP has established a unique system of recruitment of its top political leaders and Ministers.

“Talented individuals are 'spotted' and have to pass through a barrage of observations, interviews, attachment to a veteran MP and, allegedly, even psychological tests before being offered safe parliamentary seats to contest (under the PAP banner) in General Elections.

“After winning these safe seats, they may be offered responsibility as junior ministers and if they pass this test, they would then be offered higher level positions with greater responsibilities”

For the present, nothing much will change but, as the leaders themselves say, nothing remains the same for long in this fast-moving world.

o Seah Chiang Nee is a veteran journalist and editor of the information website littlespeck.com


http://www.singapore-window.org/sw05/051127st.htm
 
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