Serious Tiong NTU PHD Candidate become Grab Food Delivery!

Pinkieslut

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From top universities, PHD candidate in NTU. First become Grab driver deliverying food, then go back to China to deliver food!

Apparently he got Sinkie PR, but did not get PHD, candidacy was not renewed!
 
Hi Ching already offered him a job in Temasek but he insisted to go back to China to serve his mother land 为国为民。
However , China economy is not in good shape and he can’t find a job there
 



From top universities, PHD candidate in NTU. First become Grab driver deliverying food, then go back to China to deliver food!

Apparently he got Sinkie PR, but did not get PHD, candidacy was not renewed!

Money talks
 
Still thinking..,,

YAHOO POLL: Do you think CCP is a good option to help you land a high-paying job?​

Could Workforce Singapore’s CCP help you transition into high-growth roles?​

Staff Writer
Staff Writer
Fri, 4 July 2025 at 5:30 PM SGT1-min read

Former actor Andrew Seow, best known for his role in Growing Up, has traded the screen for a badge, now serving as an auxiliary police officer. (Photo: zakiv4/Instagram)

Former actor Andrew Seow, best known for his role in Growing Up, has traded the screen for a badge, now serving as an auxiliary police officer. (Photo: zakiv4/Instagram)
Andrew Seow’s career switch has sparked curiosity about Workforce Singapore’s Career Conversion Programme (CCP). The former actor joined Aetos Security Management as an auxiliary police officer at 55, proving it’s never too late to start fresh.

CCP is designed to help mid-career individualstransition into new roles or industries. With 45,300 PMET vacancies and jobs paying up to $7,300 a month, the programme offers a structured pathway to reskill and succeed in high-growth sectors.
 

More students in Singapore juggle studying and working to support their families​

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ST20250703_202508000589 Azmi Athni dlamillie//Amillie Chan, 21, a bartender, at Nanyang Polytechnic, on July 3, 2025. ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI

Ms Amillie Chan worked up to five hours a day on weekdays and 12 hours a day on weekends – all while studying full-time.

ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI


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Polytechnics

Published Jul 07, 2025, 05:00 AM
Updated Jul 07, 2025, 11:45 AM

SINGAPORE – Throughout her three years in polytechnic, 21-year-old Amillie Chan spent every evening after class serving customers and preparing food at Mexican-themed fast food chain Guzman y Gomez.

Miss Chan, who graduated in May from Nanyang Polytechnic (NYP) with a diploma in food and beverage business, worked up to five hours a day on weekdays and 12 hours a day on weekends – all while studying full-time.

While there is no official data on the number of students who have to study and work to support their families, social service agency Allkin Singapore said that it has seen a more than threefold increase in the number of post-secondary students aged 17 and above who have to work while studying, from five in 2024 to 17 in 2025.
 
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