- Joined
- Jul 24, 2008
- Messages
- 33,627
- Points
- 0
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>More help for foreign students to adapt here
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->THE local universities are studying how they can better assist foreign students who need help adapting to campuses here, Education Minister Ng Eng Hen said yesterday.
He disclosed this when asked by Mrs Josephine Teo (Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC) whether more help and care should be made available for foreign students studying here.
She highlighted the recent cases of two foreign students - an undergraduate and a recent graduate - who, she said, had apparently committed suicide.
Indonesian student David Widjaja, 21, fell to his death at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) earlier this month. Just days later, NTU Chinese graduate Zhou Zheng, 24, was found dead in his room on campus.
Mrs Teo had asked whether a foreign student's ability to adapt here should be included as part of the admission criteria to the local universities.
Responding, Dr Ng said that the admission criteria for foreign students include academic results, English proficiency levels and - for some courses - interviews and entrance tests.
As there is also a cap on the number of foreign students - 20 per cent of a university's student intake - the admission criteria for them are higher than for local students, he noted.
News of the two tragic incidents had saddened him, but Dr Ng said he did not sense 'that compared to local students, there is a higher incidence of dropouts or suicides or misadventures'.
Both local and foreign students have easy access to help if they need it, he said.
'These incidents serve as an impetus for our management to relook the systems to see how they can improve their contact points for student affairs, for student well-being and to see how they can improve the access to help when someone feels (the need) for it,' Dr Ng added.
'But I know that the management at the universities, because of these incidents, are relooking and have relooked their system to see how they can be beefed up.' AARON LOW
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->THE local universities are studying how they can better assist foreign students who need help adapting to campuses here, Education Minister Ng Eng Hen said yesterday.
He disclosed this when asked by Mrs Josephine Teo (Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC) whether more help and care should be made available for foreign students studying here.
She highlighted the recent cases of two foreign students - an undergraduate and a recent graduate - who, she said, had apparently committed suicide.
Indonesian student David Widjaja, 21, fell to his death at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) earlier this month. Just days later, NTU Chinese graduate Zhou Zheng, 24, was found dead in his room on campus.
Mrs Teo had asked whether a foreign student's ability to adapt here should be included as part of the admission criteria to the local universities.
Responding, Dr Ng said that the admission criteria for foreign students include academic results, English proficiency levels and - for some courses - interviews and entrance tests.
As there is also a cap on the number of foreign students - 20 per cent of a university's student intake - the admission criteria for them are higher than for local students, he noted.
News of the two tragic incidents had saddened him, but Dr Ng said he did not sense 'that compared to local students, there is a higher incidence of dropouts or suicides or misadventures'.
Both local and foreign students have easy access to help if they need it, he said.
'These incidents serve as an impetus for our management to relook the systems to see how they can improve their contact points for student affairs, for student well-being and to see how they can improve the access to help when someone feels (the need) for it,' Dr Ng added.
'But I know that the management at the universities, because of these incidents, are relooking and have relooked their system to see how they can be beefed up.' AARON LOW