9 year old sinkie prodigy proves LKY is right

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Prodigy boy, 9, scores A* for two O-level maths papers
Published on Mar 31, 2013
8:51 AM

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Anthony Yip, taking part in an aquathlon and with his family (above from left) mother Dr Joanna Lin, 49, sister Michelle, 18, and father Dr Kevin Yip, 51. -- PHOTOS: VALENTINE CAWLEY, KEVIN YIP

By Eve Yap

Anthony Yip took two O-level mathematics papers last year as a private candidate and scored A* in both. He was then nine and a Primary 4 pupil at Henry Park Primary School.

He says he finished the two-hour papers much earlier than his older peers but did not want to draw attention to himself by handing in the paper first. He says: “I waited till the first person handed in the paper, then I handed in mine.”

His father, orthopaedic surgeon Kevin Yip, 51, says the boy had three months’ worth of twice-weekly tutoring before the examinations. The O-level examinations are normally done by those nine years older.

“We were just trying him out to see if he was a prodigy like his siblings,” says Dr Yip, who is married to Dr Joanna Lin, 49, an oncologist.

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Ainan Cawley (far right) with (from left) his father Valentine, 45, brothers Fintan, nine, and Tiarnan, seven, and mother Syahidah Osman, 34. -- PHOTOS: VALENTINE CAWLEY, KEVIN YIP

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Anthony Yip (above), taking part in an aquathlon and with his family mother Dr Joanna Lin, 49, sister Michelle, 18, and father Dr Kevin Yip, 51. -- PHOTOS: VALENTINE CAWLEY, KEVIN YIP

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At 19, Terry Gani is the youngest National University of Singapore student to complete an engineering degree. -- PHOTO: JOYCE FANG

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Pianist See Ning Hui (centre), 17, with her older friends, harpist Dora Lim, 20 (left) and pianist Chan Jia Ying, 19. -- PHOTO: COURTESY OF SEE NING HUI




 
Is he innovative and creative enough to invent new stuffs to help the world. Or just some sinkie who learn to follow orders early in life and PAP promote it like some gifted child.
 
Expect more kiasu Sinkie parents to crowd Henry Park Primary School during the next enrolment. :rolleyes:

Some may even offer to have sex with the principal so his/her kid can get a place in the school. ;)

More work for CPIB? :cool:
 
Not only Henry Park but even some of the more popular neighbourhood schools are in a similar boat. You feel sorry for the parents who in many cases have volunteered for a year and still did not get the schools. Quite a bizarre situation. The rich do have 2 advantages, ability to rent close to the school and can afford for one parent not to work and volunteer.



Expect more kiasu Sinkie parents to crowd Henry Park Primary School during the next enrolment. :rolleyes:

Some may even offer to have sex with the principal so his/her kid can get a place in the school. ;)

More work for CPIB? :cool:
 
Is he innovative and creative enough to invent new stuffs to help the world. Or just some sinkie who learn to follow orders early in life and PAP promote it like some gifted child.

Totally agreed. For Sinkieland to move forward, it needs innovation and creativity.
 
Totally agreed. For Sinkieland to move forward, it needs innovation and creativity.

I third to support this notion that IQ alone is not enough.. you need to be creative.. and if you are innovative too, that is a plus point.

Why do we need so many exam-smart ppl? We need passionate leaders who can motivate masses to answer a good call-to-arms.

So this kid is smart and pass exams with flying colours, great! Can he communicate with his peers and others? Can he illicit respect and charm the pthers to listen to him? This will need experience and EQ.. IQ alone just don't cut it anymore.
 
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