SPEECH BY MR THARMAN
SHANMUGARATNAM,MINISTER FOR EDUCATION, AT ACADEMY OF PRINCIPALS'
GLOBAL EDUCATION CONFERENCE, 8 NOVEMBER 2004, 9.00 AM
Mr Lim
Chuan Poh,
Permanent Secretary (Education)
Ms Seah
Jiak Choo,
Director-General of Education
Mr Wee
Heng Tin,
Advisor
to Ministry of Education
Mrs Loh
Leok Yeen,
Senior
Vice President, Investments, EDB Ventures Management
Mrs
Belinda Charles,
President, Academy of Principals, Singapore
Mrs
Carmee Lim,
President, Integrative Learning Corporation
Ms Nola
Hambleton,
President, International Confederation of Principals
Principals
Distinguished guests
Ladies
and gentlemen
I am
pleased to join you this morning to open the Academy of Principals’
Global Education Conference.
2 The conference comes at a time of change and refinement
in Singapore’s education system. We have a sound education system,
that has been a key source of strength for Singapore. Whether as
teachers, parents or students, Singaporeans take education
seriously, and set high aspirations for themselves. We have also
ensured that all our schools are well-resourced, staffed with
capable and reflective leaders, and thinking teachers. We have
avoided the large disparities in educational standards seen
elsewhere, between a few schools at the top and those for the
masses. You do not have to go to a school in a top residential
district to do well in Singapore.
3 Most importantly, it is a system that keeps looking
forward. The fundamentals in Singapore education have not only
served as well in the past but remain relevant to the future. But
it is precisely the fact that our fundamentals are in good working
order, that allows us to look ahead, identify the gaps that we need
to close, set new directions, and move forward with confidence.
4 The process of reflection and change that is taking place
in our schools is not just a matter of educational debate. It is
the key to how Singapore will keep its edge as a city, and retain a
special advantage for Singaporeans in a new world, 15-20 years from
now. It is how we will make our mark, not just by being competent
and efficient but by being a leading Asian hub for new ideas, for
business innovation and for enterprise.
5 Our key strength will be in our intangible chacteristics.
We will not be the cheapest player in Asia. But we are unique in
our multicultural orientation, in being a trusted player, and in
being open to business and people from all over the world. We will
only be useful to China, India and Southeast Asia if we retain these
special characteristics. We have to keep our open and cosmopolitan
character, rather than make ourselves just like them. It is how we
will stay relevant.
6 We also
have to
nurture Singaporeans who are willing to be different. We need
Singaporeans with different talents and different ways of thinking,
willing to test ideas and new approaches off each other, and with
people from around the world who will be part of what defines
Singapore.
7 But it is equally
important that we build strength of character among our young - a
willingness to bounce back from mishaps or failure and try again.
And a willingness to stand and fight in a team. These are critical
skills for the future. They will help our young
push and redefine the
boundaries, and to create new opportunities for themselves and for
Singapore.
8 To nurture these habits of mind and character, we have to
begin young. They are habits that are formed quietly, over years of
schooling - in the classroom, on the performing stage or on the
playing field. They require a total approach to education, that
extends well beyond preparing our students for their examinations.
That is why our schools are placing greater importance on providing
an all round education for their students.
Evolving the Assessment System
9 We are gradually moving towards a new balance in
education, so as to develop these life skills that our young need
for the future. We must arouse a passion among our young for
knowledge and learning that carries through life. We have to place
equal emphasis on the non-academic curriculum, that will help them
make the most of their years together in school, interacting,
roughing it out with each other and making friendships. And most
fundamentally, we have to accept and promote more diverse measures
of merit, even if they cannot be summarised in a single score.
11 But we also have to keep evolving our teaching and
assessment methods, so that we reduce the need for students to
memorise large amounts of information for their examinations. We
have to encourage students to learn more actively and independently,
and be less reliant on model answers and lecture notes. We cannot
make this move in a big leap, but have to take gradual steps to take
us forward towards our goals in education.
12 Our secondary and JC curriculum and examination system was
inherited from the British. Over the years, we have made several
refinements and changes to the system. We have selectively adopted
practices from other countries, and made innovations of our own to
serve our changing educational needs and remain relevant to a
changing international environment.
13 The most major change we undertook, a decade ago, was the
introduction of a technical stream of education in secondary
schools, leading to the ITEs at the post-secondary level. It
recognised the different needs of our academically-oriented and
technically-inclined students, so as to allow the vast majority of
students to complete a secondary school education and go on to a
good, post-secondary education. It is an approach that has served
Singapore well. Even as we introduce flexibilities in the system,
for example to loosen the streaming system, we will preserve the
integrity of the technical route in education.
14 We took greater ownership over our A-level examinations in
2002, while continuing to tap on the expertise of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES). The introduction of
the broader and more flexible A-level curriculum in Singapore in
2006, will be the next major change in our curriculum and
examinations. It will also involve a reduced overall curriculum
load for JC students.
Greater Control of GCE O-Level Examination
15 Just as we took greater ownership of the A-levels in 2002,
the Ministry of Education (MOE) together with the
Singapore Examinations and
Assessment Board (SEAB) will assume greater control over the GCE
O-level examination from 2006. We will take greater responsibility
for developing examination syllabuses and formats, setting
standards, and awarding grades. The
move will enable us over
time to customise
the curriculum and
examinations to our educational needs, while maintaining the high
standards that Singapore is known for.
16 As with the new A-levels, MOE and SEAB will continue to
work closely with the University of Cambridge Local Examinations
Syndicate (UCLES) in the new GCE O-level examination. We will tap
UCLES’ expertise in designing syllabuses, although we will take full
ownership of the syllabuses. We will continue to outsource to UCLES
the setting of question papers and marking of examination scripts.
17 Unlike the new A-level curriculum that we will introduce
in 2006, however, we do not expect to make major changes to the
structure of our O-levels for the foreseeable future. The O-level
curriculum will be refined in an evolutionary fashion.
Refining Project Work Assessment
18 Another area that we intend to refine is the assessment of
Project Work (PW) in the Junior College curriculum. PW is a sound
innovation in our curriculum. It gives students the opportunity to
work in teams, see interconnections between different disciplines,
undertake research using multiple sources and make credible
presentations of their findings. It develops useful skills, that
students will find useful when they go on to university, and in
working life.
19 Since its implementation as part of the JC curriculum two
years ago, teachers and students have gained an understanding of the
processes and learning outcomes of PW. However we have identified
some areas in the assessment of PW that need to be modified, so as
to ensure that students find PW engaging and meaningful, and do not
just go through the hoops for the sake of meeting the requirements.
For example, students have found the assessment criteria too
detailed, and the documentation requirements too extensive.
20 We will make refinements to PW from next year, which takes
into account the feedback we have received. The number of
assessment criteria will be reduced significantly. Each student
will be required to submit no more than three documents for
assessment. The scope of the PW tasks will also be broadened, to
give students greater flexibility and choice in shaping their
projects.
21 These modifications are part of the process of continuous
review and of learning from the experience of schools as they
implement PW. This feedback loop, from experience on the ground to
the design of curriculum and assessment, is essential for any
successful innovation in education.
Educators as Leaders
22 Ultimately, the quality of education is decided on the
ground. It is shaped by thoughtful school leaders, whom teachers
trust to lead them in the midst of change. Teachers must have
leaders – principals – who inspire teams, and give them ownership
over their teaching.
23 APS aids in the professional development of principals
through both formal and informal training platforms. APS also
exposes its members to differing views and new perspectives on
education. For instance, I am told that APS makes a deliberate
effort to hear from industry leaders, most of whom can be
disconcertingly frank on the areas that they think we can do better
in.
24 I am pleased to see that APS in collaboration with EDB
Ventures Management has established the Principals’ Academy Inc (PAI).
PAI, with the help of the Singapore Tourism Board, has successfully
launched a series of training programmes for educational leaders
from the region. More than 150 Principals and other senior
educators from Asia have undergone training in school leadership and
management skills under its training arm. About 500 local educators
have also attended training programs. One of the areas which has
been identified for further growth is in brain-based theories of
learning, to help educators customize the learning environment to
meet the needs of students.
25 Another initiative by PAI is the organisation of a
centralised certification testing to facilitate the entry of foreign
students who wish to have a truly Singaporean education. Instead of
taking tests in individual schools, this system will allow
candidates to take a centralised test. To date more than 1,100
candidates have taken the certification test.
26 Working together with SEAB, PAI will explore other
opportunities to help serve the needs of education in Singapore. PAI’s
efforts to carve out a local and a regional presence had a certain
spirit of enterprise. To have principals modeling this spirit is
commendable.
27 Finally, let me congratulate APS and ILC for having
organised this international conference. I wish all participants an
enjoyable conference, and our foreign visitors a pleasant stay in
Singapore. I now have the pleasure of declaring the conference
open.
__________________