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Serious Aussie article calls education system Soul Crushing on school kids, will PAP sue?

Papsmearer

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[h=1]Behind the world’s best students is a soul-crushing, billion-dollar private education industry[/h]
Singapore has topped the global Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) rankings in math, science, and reading, while countries including Australia, France, and the UK sit in the bottom batch of OECD countries for achievement in these areas.
So what is Singapore doing right, and do other countries want to emulate it?
Clearly there are things to learn. Singapore has invested heavily in its education system. Its teachers are the best and brightest, and it has developed highly successful pedagogic approaches to science, math, engineering, and technology (STEM) teaching, such as the “Maths Mastery” approach.
Culturally, Singaporeans have a strong commitment to educational achievement, and there is a national focus on educational excellence.
Success in PISA rankings and other global league tables are an important part of the Singapore “brand.” Singaporean academic Christopher Gee calls this the “educational arms race.” Highly competitive schooling is the norm.
[h=2]Role of private tuition[/h] Public discussion in Australia around why we are not doing as well as the Singaporeans is largely focused on what goes on in that country’s schools.
Yet there is one thing missing from the reporting on Singapore’s success: the role of private tuition (private tutors and coaching colleges) and the part it plays in the overall success of students in the tiny city-state. Here are some startling figures:

  • 60% of high school and 80% of primary school age students receive private tuition
  • 40% of preschoolers receive private tuition
  • Preschoolers, on average, attend two hours of private tuition per week, while primary school aged children are attending, on average, at least three hours per week
Eight out of 10 primary school aged students in Singapore receive private tuition, either by way of private tuition or coaching colleges. In 1992, that figure was around 30% for high school and 40% for primary school. The hours spent in tuition increase in late primary school, and middle-class children attend more hours than less well-off families.
The number of private coaching colleges has also grown exponentially in the last decade, with 850 registered centers in 2015, up from 700 in 2012.
[h=2]Impact on family income[/h] According to Singapore’s household expenditure survey, private tuition in Singapore is a SGD$1.1 billion (US$768 million) industry (for a nation with a population of about 5.6 million), almost double the amount households spent in 2005 ($650 million). How does that look at the household level?
Thirty-four percent of those with children currently in tuition spend between $500 and $1,000 per month per child, while 16% spend up to $2,000.
Considering the bottom-fifth quintile of households earn about $2,000 per month—the next quintile is around $5,000—this is a very large chunk of the family budget. Imagine a family with two or three children, and we get a sense of the potential socioeconomic inequalities at work when educational success depends on private tuition.
Surveys show that only 20% of those in the lowest two income brackets (a monthly income of less than $4,000) have a child in tuition.
[h=2]Tuition centers[/h] Tuition centersand coaching colleges range from more affordable neighborhood-and community-based centers to large national “branded” coaching colleges with outlets in major shopping malls across the island.
The quality of tuition received is very much linked to how much one can afford to pay. It is big business.
The marketing strategies of the coaching colleges are very good at inducing anxiety in parents about fear of failure unless they are willing to pay to help their children get ahead.
Many parents complain that the schools “teach beyond the text.” That is, there is a perception that some teachers assume all the kids in the class are receiving tuition and thus teach above the curriculum level. Imagine the impact on those few children who are not receiving extra help.
[h=2]Start them young[/h] Singapore’s Primary School Leaving Exam (PSLE) is a seriously high-stakes exam that determines not just what high school a child will enter, but whether a child is streamed into a school that will fast track him or her to university.
Singaporeans do not have an automatic right to enrolltheir children into the “local” high school.
All high schools are selective and the best schools have the pick of the PSLE crop. Primary students are streamed into four types of high school: the top ones feed students direct to university via the A-Level exams, while the bottom “technical” and “normal stream” schools feed into the institutes of technical education and polytechnics, with a much more complex pathway towards university.
The PSLE exam induces in 11- and 12-year-olds the same level of anxiety seen in teenagers sitting the Higher School Certificate (HSC) or Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) in Australia.
Many middle-class parents believe the “race” starts early.
Parents are increasingly expected to have their preschool aged child reading and writing and with basic math skills before they even enter school—and this is frequently achieved through private preschools and “enrichment” tuition.
While there is much to genuinely admire about Singapore’s educational success story, there is a question about the role of private enterprise (private coaching colleges) in shaping childhoods and stoking parental anxieties.
A potential concern when private tuition reaches this saturation point is that schools come to assume the level of the “coached child” as the baseline for classroom teaching.
Many Singaporean parents I have spoken to bemoan the hyper-competitive environment that forces their children into hours of extra tuition, which impacts family time and relationships and reduces opportunities for childhood free play, developing friendships, and simply getting some decent rest. Many feel they have no choice.
Singaporeans have a term for this pathology: “Kiasu,” which means “fear of falling behind or losing out.” Policymakers, and indeed reporting, needs to be cognizantof exactly what produces these outlying educational success stories.
This is not to argue Singapore’s success is entirely due to out of school coaching. Singaporean schooling excels on many fronts. However given the levels of private tuition, it needs to be seen as a key part of the mix.
 

tanwahtiu

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Kettle call pot black.

Aussie angmoh hv worst ways of school program. Any school can start at different week of school term. At term 4 many cut short 8 week to 6 weeks to cho boh lan get lazy.

Spend most of their time going camping and sports thinking they are great in sport but actual fact take sport to excuse learn more new lessons.

Can anyhow cut short school teaching time fm 8 wk to 6 wk or more. Come winter get lazy complain too cool and cut school week.

End up only teach 40 weeks rest cho boh lan.

Better for them to start opium trade make 2000% profit at the expense of Chinese.
 

Papsmearer

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Kettle call pot black.

Aussie angmoh hv worst ways of school program. Any school can start at different week of school term. At term 4 many cut short 8 week to 6 weeks to cho boh lan get lazy.

Spend most of their time going camping and sports thinking they are great in sport but actual fact take sport to excuse learn more new lessons.

Can anyhow cut short school teaching time fm 8 wk to 6 wk or more. Come winter get lazy complain too cool and cut school week.

End up only teach 40 weeks rest cho boh lan.

Better for them to start opium trade make 2000% profit at the expense of Chinese.

I see, so is that why so many international students go to Australia to study because they are the worse?
 

Narong Wongwan

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Tanwahtiu is another frog in the well.
His hatred for AMDK clouds his judgement and logic.
Sinkie kids are only book smart at best. Look no further than scholar paper generals
 

JohnTan

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Australian education system is amongst the worst. For many years, only the rejects of the great singapore education system go to Down Under for their degrees. Didn't the late Ah Gong once labelled the entire country 'white trash of asia'?
 

Ash007

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Australian education system is amongst the worst. For many years, only the rejects of the great singapore education system go to Down Under for their degrees. Didn't the late Ah Gong once labelled the entire country 'white trash of asia'?

Indeed, people like Mah Boh Tan shouldn't have gotten elected due to his studies in Aussie land.
 

JohnTan

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Indeed, people like Mah Boh Tan shouldn't have gotten elected due to his studies in Aussie land.

Mabok Tan is a moron. How could he, a highly educated scholar, get beaten by a dumbass like Chiam who did poorly in school?
 

The_Hypocrite

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Wat right have these oz ppl to kpkb? Look at their own backyard 1st..
Stalling NAPLAN results spark calls to raise expectations on teachers, students
BY NICOLE CHETTLE
UPDATED TUE DEC 13 11:27:56 EST 2016
Email Facebook Twitter WhatsApp
Up close shot of a hand writing on paper with a pencil.
PHOTO The report shows the gap between the haves and the have nots is growing, the Opposition says.
ABC NEWS: JESSICA HINCHLIFFE
Australians are being urged to raise expectations on teachers and students, after the latest NAPLAN report revealed the academic performance of primary and secondary students had flat-lined since 2015.

Key points:
The writing skills of Year 9s are worse than in 2011
The report comes on the back of lacklustre results in TIMSS and PISA
Indigenous education has shown signs of improvement
And when it comes to writing, Year 9 students have gone backwards since 2011.

The report, which was flagged in August, details the achievements of students in Years 3, 5, 7 and 9 in examinations held across Australia.

Robert Randall, the CEO of the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA), said expectations needed to be raised.

"We need to step up from a more relaxed 'she'll be right' approach and sort of say 'actually literacy and numeracy are fundamentally important'," he said.
The report comes on the back of lacklustre results this month in the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) and the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA).

"There are other countries whose results are better than ours," Mr Randall said.

"They are passing us if you like.

"We are above international averages. But the question now is, is that enough? Could we do better?"

Schools not meeting 'high standards we expect': Birmingham
The Federal Education Minister said politicians needed to work together to address the standards.

What is NAPLAN and is it important?
Expand
"Our performance as a country is not meeting the high standards we should expect with the growth in investment we have had in our schools in recent years," Senator Simon Birmingham said.

"In fact in some areas we have seen, at best, a plateauing and elsewhere measures are showing a decline in our performance."
Senator Birmingham said the report showed sector reform was required, including a focus on evidence-based strategies to boost student results.

Opposition education spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said the gaps between advantaged and disadvantaged students were unacceptable.

"All [disadvantaged students] are generally achieving lower than their peers from more advantaged families or more advantaged communities."

Indigenous education a bright spot
One of the areas that did show improvement was Indigenous education. For example, the Year 3 results detail a 17.1 per cent jump since 2008 in grammar and punctuation, and an increase of 12.3 per cent over the same period in reading.

Would you pass NAPLAN?

If you had to sit the Year 7 numeracy NAPLAN test today, how would you go?
Paul Van Holstein is the principal at Bradshaw Primary school in Alice Springs, where about 200 Indigenous students make up 40 per cent of the school population.

The school offers intensive literacy programs outside the regular curriculum that run for up to 20 weeks a year.

It also offers after-school learning clubs, and the programs are delivering impressive results.

"The number of our Aboriginal students achieving the national minimum standard is improving, which is something I'm really happy about, and we're also seeing some really great growth from Year 3 to Year 5," Mr Van Holstein said.

"We have some students that are making double or even triple the learning growth that they should be making across that two-year period."

The ABC spoke to several Aboriginal children at Bradshaw Primary School, including Year 3 pupil Hamish Collins, who admitted the test had been tough.

"It was a little bit hard for me. But I got better the second time I did it," he said.

The Federal Opposition said the report showed the gap between the haves and the have nots was growing.

"Kids who are growing up in rural or remote communities, Indigenous kids, kids with a disability, kids with English as a second language — all of these are generally achieving lower than their peers from more advantaged families, or more advantaged communities," Labor's shadow spokeswoman for education Tanya Plibersek said.

VIDEO 3:16
'I take my share of responsibility,' Minister says of NAPLAN results
Federal Education Minister Simon Birmingham discusses the NAPLAN results.
ABC NEWS
NAPLAN testing heading online
The next big change for NAPLAN will be online testing, to begin in 2017 with about 10 per cent of students participating in Western Australia, South Australia, Victoria, the ACT and Queensland.

Are you smarter than a fourth grader — from Kazakhstan?

Take the science and math test below to see how your knowledge stacks up compared to students in both Australia and Kazakhstan.
By 2019, every student will be completing the tests online, and ACARA is hopeful it will provide more information for teachers.

"Instead of every student doing exactly the same test, we're introducing what we call 'tailored testing' or 'adaptive testing'," Mr Randall said.

"So as the student progresses through the test they're switched to more demanding or easier items, depending on how they go on the first set of questions."

Mr Randall said that would allow educators to more accurately measure what students were capable of.

The new system has been trialled by students at Marion Primary School in Adelaide.

Headmistress Cheryl Ross said the online tests should provide results more quickly.

"I think the trickiest part will be for our Year 3s," she said.

"They're inexperienced in doing assessments online. And we're particularly mindful about their typing speed for writing. But I expect that we'll have an adjustment and be able to do that as a written assessment."
Parents and students can preview the online-style tests on the NAPLAN website before their school makes the switch by 2019.

Year 5 pupil Rosy O'Connor was optimistic about the change.

"The typing can be easier and makes sure that everyone can read it," she said.

"I think once we get used to doing it, it will be fine. It's just 'cause it's all very new."

A classroom.
PHOTO Other countries are "passing" Australia, ACARA chief Robert Randall says.

ABC NEWS: JONATHAN BEAL


More on this story:
NAPLAN: Would you pass the test?
Should we be worried about the latest results?
Literacy, numeracy skills stall in latest NAPLAN results
NSW students will need minimum academic standards to be HSC eligible
WA's NAPLAN performance 'outstanding', Minister says
POSTED TUE DEC 13 06:19:11 EST 2016
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Papsmearer

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Australian education system is amongst the worst. For many years, only the rejects of the great singapore education system go to Down Under for their degrees. Didn't the late Ah Gong once labelled the entire country 'white trash of asia'?

Yes, I agree with you. Only the rejects go there and even then they come back with a shit university degree from the Aussie education system.

Which is why that fucking reject Minister Penang Cow (University of Newcastle in Australia), Minister Iswaran (University of Adelaide), Foo Mee Har (University of New South Wales) etc. are all in the PAP?
 

syed putra

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You go to australian schools,you may end up playing world class rugby,of be a surf champion, or a swimming gold medalist without having to go to texas. Or end up being a world class scientist or miner or oil and gas drilling professional. or a top class farmer or animal breeder. or play in top bands such as Bothers Gibbs,or men at work,or Ac/Dc.or be a top class actor or singer.
these thing singapore schools just cannot compete except getting good results in exams.
 

JohnTan

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Yes, I agree with you. Only the rejects go there and even then they come back with a shit university degree from the Aussie education system.

Which is why that fucking reject Minister Penang Cow (University of Newcastle in Australia), Minister Iswaran (University of Adelaide), Foo Mee Har (University of New South Wales) etc. are all in the PAP?

I trust in Ah Gong's wisdom. If he selected them in spite of their aussie education, it means they are the exception.
 

frenchbriefs

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You go to australian schools,you may end up playing world class rugby,of be a surf champion, or a swimming gold medalist without having to go to texas. Or end up being a world class scientist or miner or oil and gas drilling professional. or a top class farmer or animal breeder. or play in top bands such as Bothers Gibbs,or men at work,or Ac/Dc.or be a top class actor or singer.
these thing singapore schools just cannot compete except getting good results in exams.

thats just talent that sinkies dont have,nothing to do with the education system,jap and korea forces their kids to cram even harder and go to cram school 12 hours a day,it doesnt stop them from having a huge talent pool of singers,writers,manga artists,innovators,entrepreneurs,inventors and architects and atheletes.
 
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