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Serious Anglo-Chinese School Falls From Grace! Kena Banished To Tengah And Forced To Take In Girls And Low SES Sinkies!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
acs_5.jpg


SINGAPORE - Come 2030, Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) will be moving from its current Barker Road campus in Newton to Tengah, as part of a major effort by the school to be accessible to as many pupils as possible.

The new ACS Primary, to be located in the up-and-coming Housing Board town in the west of Singapore, will also, from the same year, accept girls for the first time.

The Ministry of Education (MOE) announced this on Thursday along with plans for the opening and relocation of six schools to meet the growing demand for places from 2026.

Noting that the relocation of ACS Primary is a significant move, the ministry said it had been in discussion with ACS since early 2022 to relocate one of its primary schools to serve the wider community. This followed changes to the Primary 1 registration exercise in the same year to allocate more places to children with no prior links to schools.

The relocated ACS Primary will start operations in 2030 with only new Primary 1 pupils, in other words, those born in 2023. The school will have a larger capacity of 11 Primary 1 classes, up from eight currently.

The school at Tengah will be located together with a new special education (Sped) school for pupils with autism spectrum disorder who can access the national curriculum. The Sped school will be run by Methodist Welfare Services in partnership with ACS.

MOE said at a press briefing on Thursday that pupils at the current Barker Road campus will not need to make the 12km shift to Tengah. To minimise disruptions, existing pupils will remain until graduation in Primary 6.

Both school sites – at Barker Road and Tengah – will, for a number of years, be run concurrently. The Barker Road campus will continue to admit only younger male siblings for Primary 1 from 2030, as long as they have an older sibling studying at the same school, for the convenience of families of existing pupils.

At the same time, both male and female siblings of existing ACS Primary pupils will be eligible for Phase 1 priority for Primary 1 registration at the Tengah campus.

The plan is for the original ACS Primary campus to consolidate with ACS (Junior), which is also in Newton, in 2033, before combining their operations at the Barker Road campus, tentatively in 2039.

In a statement on Thursday, Mr Richard Seow, chairman of the ACS board of governors, said: “From its founding, Bishop Oldham’s vision for ACS was to serve the needs of the nation and the community by filling a critical gap and to develop servant leaders.

“With the changes announced by MOE today, we are strengthening the school’s commitment to these values. ACS has always set out to be a beacon of truth and light, to serve those most in need, and this is best done by increasing the diversity of our student base.”

He added: “By relocating ACS(P) to Tengah to serve a new neighbourhood as a co-ed school, the ACS family will serve more students’ educational and co-curricular needs. This achieves a more inclusive educational offering as one of Singapore’s mission schools.”

Special education has been another area that ACS has been mulling over, said Mr Seow.

“We are deeply grateful to have this honour of serving students with special needs by providing them with quality education. It is a vision the ACS board of governors has had for a long while now, and we are truly appreciative that our constant discussions with MOE over the years have culminated in this humbling opportunity to serve humanity in a new way,” he said.

“With access to resources and cutting-edge Sped pedagogies, we aim to contribute to the upliftment of special education in Singapore.”

The Sped school, which has not been named, is set to begin operations in 2026 at an interim site that previously housed Chua Chu Kang Secondary School. It will then relocate to its permanent campus in Tengah, tentatively in 2031.

ONLINE-230210-Schools-amacs092028129_1.jpg


Injecting more diversity
In an internal letter on Thursday to alumni and other stakeholders, ACS said the move to Tengah was the result of a year-long discussion between its board of governors, MOE and government leaders on how it could better serve the community in the heartland and inject more diversity into its student profiles, especially at the Primary 1 intake.

“By moving to Tengah, we now have the opportunity to expand the ACS family to a new residential estate, which is likely to have a diverse population comprising people of varied socioeconomic, ethnic and religious backgrounds. To that end, we strengthen our commitment to Bishop Oldham’s mission of serving the community and the nation by bringing quality education to a wider cross section of society,” the letter said.

In a Facebook post on Thursday, Education Minister Chan Chun Sing thanked the Methodist Church, ACS board of governors and alumni for their leadership in serving a wider community in a different geographical area, in the special needs sector and getting ACS (Primary) to become a co-educational school.

Alumni like Dr Lam Pin Min, former senior minister of state for transport and health, said it was with “mixed feelings” that he received the news.

“I spent a good part of my education at ACS (Primary) and ACS Secondary (both all-boys schools) and had benefited tremendously from the holistic education provided. Much of my childhood education memories were from the previous locations of Coleman Street and then Barker Road campus respectively,” he said in a Facebook post.

“In the grand scheme of things, this is a positive move as many more Singaporeans, including daughters of ACS alumnus, will be able to benefit from the same experience I had. In addition, the new Sped school also presents opportunities for ACS students to interact with differently abled peers through learning and playing together.”

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...to-move-to-tengah-and-take-in-girls-from-2030
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
The school at Tengah will be located together with a new special education (Sped) school for pupils with autism spectrum disorder who can access the national curriculum. The Sped school will be run by Methodist Welfare Services in partnership with ACS.

It looks like ACS has been ordered to accept retards, along with low SES students. This will teach ACS boys to not be so arrogant.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Come 2030, Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) will be moving from its current Barker Road campus in Newton to Tengah, as part of a major effort by the school to be accessible to as many pupils as possible.

The gaslighting by the propaganda media is truly incredible. :roflmao:
 

gsbslut

Stupidman
Loyal
acs_5.jpg


SINGAPORE - Come 2030, Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) will be moving from its current Barker Road campus in Newton to Tengah, as part of a major effort by the school to be accessible to as many pupils as possible.

The new ACS Primary, to be located in the up-and-coming Housing Board town in the west of Singapore, will also, from the same year, accept girls for the first time.

The Ministry of Education (MOE) announced this on Thursday along with plans for the opening and relocation of six schools to meet the growing demand for places from 2026.

Noting that the relocation of ACS Primary is a significant move, the ministry said it had been in discussion with ACS since early 2022 to relocate one of its primary schools to serve the wider community. This followed changes to the Primary 1 registration exercise in the same year to allocate more places to children with no prior links to schools.

The relocated ACS Primary will start operations in 2030 with only new Primary 1 pupils, in other words, those born in 2023. The school will have a larger capacity of 11 Primary 1 classes, up from eight currently.

The school at Tengah will be located together with a new special education (Sped) school for pupils with autism spectrum disorder who can access the national curriculum. The Sped school will be run by Methodist Welfare Services in partnership with ACS.

MOE said at a press briefing on Thursday that pupils at the current Barker Road campus will not need to make the 12km shift to Tengah. To minimise disruptions, existing pupils will remain until graduation in Primary 6.

Both school sites – at Barker Road and Tengah – will, for a number of years, be run concurrently. The Barker Road campus will continue to admit only younger male siblings for Primary 1 from 2030, as long as they have an older sibling studying at the same school, for the convenience of families of existing pupils.

At the same time, both male and female siblings of existing ACS Primary pupils will be eligible for Phase 1 priority for Primary 1 registration at the Tengah campus.

The plan is for the original ACS Primary campus to consolidate with ACS (Junior), which is also in Newton, in 2033, before combining their operations at the Barker Road campus, tentatively in 2039.

In a statement on Thursday, Mr Richard Seow, chairman of the ACS board of governors, said: “From its founding, Bishop Oldham’s vision for ACS was to serve the needs of the nation and the community by filling a critical gap and to develop servant leaders.

“With the changes announced by MOE today, we are strengthening the school’s commitment to these values. ACS has always set out to be a beacon of truth and light, to serve those most in need, and this is best done by increasing the diversity of our student base.”

He added: “By relocating ACS(P) to Tengah to serve a new neighbourhood as a co-ed school, the ACS family will serve more students’ educational and co-curricular needs. This achieves a more inclusive educational offering as one of Singapore’s mission schools.”

Special education has been another area that ACS has been mulling over, said Mr Seow.

“We are deeply grateful to have this honour of serving students with special needs by providing them with quality education. It is a vision the ACS board of governors has had for a long while now, and we are truly appreciative that our constant discussions with MOE over the years have culminated in this humbling opportunity to serve humanity in a new way,” he said.

“With access to resources and cutting-edge Sped pedagogies, we aim to contribute to the upliftment of special education in Singapore.”

The Sped school, which has not been named, is set to begin operations in 2026 at an interim site that previously housed Chua Chu Kang Secondary School. It will then relocate to its permanent campus in Tengah, tentatively in 2031.

ONLINE-230210-Schools-amacs092028129_1.jpg


Injecting more diversity
In an internal letter on Thursday to alumni and other stakeholders, ACS said the move to Tengah was the result of a year-long discussion between its board of governors, MOE and government leaders on how it could better serve the community in the heartland and inject more diversity into its student profiles, especially at the Primary 1 intake.

“By moving to Tengah, we now have the opportunity to expand the ACS family to a new residential estate, which is likely to have a diverse population comprising people of varied socioeconomic, ethnic and religious backgrounds. To that end, we strengthen our commitment to Bishop Oldham’s mission of serving the community and the nation by bringing quality education to a wider cross section of society,” the letter said.

In a Facebook post on Thursday, Education Minister Chan Chun Sing thanked the Methodist Church, ACS board of governors and alumni for their leadership in serving a wider community in a different geographical area, in the special needs sector and getting ACS (Primary) to become a co-educational school.

Alumni like Dr Lam Pin Min, former senior minister of state for transport and health, said it was with “mixed feelings” that he received the news.

“I spent a good part of my education at ACS (Primary) and ACS Secondary (both all-boys schools) and had benefited tremendously from the holistic education provided. Much of my childhood education memories were from the previous locations of Coleman Street and then Barker Road campus respectively,” he said in a Facebook post.

“In the grand scheme of things, this is a positive move as many more Singaporeans, including daughters of ACS alumnus, will be able to benefit from the same experience I had. In addition, the new Sped school also presents opportunities for ACS students to interact with differently abled peers through learning and playing together.”

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...to-move-to-tengah-and-take-in-girls-from-2030
r.i. also banish to bishan long ago what
 

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
obigood, kena banished to a shit corner aka no man's land. To co-exist with an airbase and acres of cemeteries.:biggrin:
 

countryman

Alfrescian
Loyal
What a downgrade! From prestigious Barker rd to Tengah...
It's like shifting your Hermes boutique from Orchard rd to Sengkang!
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
What a downgrade! From prestigious Barker rd to Tengah...
It's like shifting your Hermes boutique from Orchard rd to Sengkang!

In an internal letter on Thursday to alumni and other stakeholders, ACS said the move to Tengah was the result of a year-long discussion between its board of governors, MOE and government leaders on how it could better serve the community in the heartland and inject more diversity into its student profiles, especially at the Primary 1 intake.

Evidently someone on the school board or one of the PAP vermins benefited from this arrangement, using fluff words like 'community' and 'diversity' as persuasion.

I would keep a close eye on the 'redevelopments' of the soon-to-be vacant school campus, and follow the money involved. :cool:
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
I would keep a close eye on the 'redevelopments' of the soon-to-be vacant school campus, and follow the money involved

The barker road campus would be taken over by the other ACS primary school. It looks like ACS has two different primary schools.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Property experts say Tengah's property prices to shoot through the roof thanks to PAP's wisdom in moving ACS into Tengah. Majulah PAP!

yaohui-pixgeneric-5448_2.jpg


SINGAPORE - The relocation of Anglo-Chinese School (Primary) from its current Barker Road campus in Newton to Tengah in 2030 will likely boost interest in upcoming homes in the new town, said property analysts.

They predicted that future Build-To-Order (BTO) projects in Tengah would see an increase in applicants, particularly for those located within 2km of the new ACS Primary. Two upcoming executive condominium (EC) projects in Bukit Batok West, which fall within 1km of the school, are expected to see higher demand as well.

Announcing the relocation on Thursday, MOE said the new ACS Primary will also accept girls for the first time from 2030.

Properties near popular primary schools are often highly sought after by both home owners and investors hoping to rent out their units, as priority admission is given to those who live nearer to the schools.

OrangeTee & Tie’s senior vice-president of research and analytics Christine Sun said properties near popular schools can draw a price premium of up to 15 per cent, and prices of these homes tend to rise faster than others in the same district, based on transaction data from recent years.

For instance, condo resale prices within 1km of ACS Primary at the current Barker Road campus in District 11 of Newton and Novena is around $2,116 per sq ft (psf) – about 18.1 per cent higher compared with the median resale price of $1,791 psf in the same district, said Ms Sun.

Meanwhile, rental demand and resale prices of properties around the current ACS Primary in Barker Road could dip slightly after the school relocates in 2030 but should not be greatly affected as there are other schools within the area and its prime location will prop prices up, said analysts.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...on-rates-interest-in-bukit-batok-ecs-analysts
 
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