Quantcast
Channel: If Only Singaporeans Stopped to Think
Viewing all 7506 articles
Browse latest View live

MOE reviewing free school parking for teachers

$
0
0
Teachers at over 360 schools and colleges may have to pay charges, in move that could kick in this year
By Pearl Lee, The Straits Times, 8 Jan 2016

Teachers at national schools and junior colleges face the prospect of having to pay car parking fees at their institutions, a move that could take place as early as this year.

The Ministry of Education (MOE) yesterday said it was reviewing carpark charges for schools "in accordance to civil service guidelines", and schools would be told of the changes, if any.

Should it be implemented, teachers at more than 360 schools and colleges will be affected.

Teachers contacted said they had, for several years, heard talk of parking fees being imposed, and the catalyst for the prospective move is the Auditor-General's (AG) disapproval last year of some educational institutions allowing their staff to park for free or charging fees below the market rate.

Such practices "are tantamount to providing hidden subsidies for vehicle parking", the AG had said in an annual report of financial lapses at public sector bodies.

Reactions were mixed among teachers interviewed yesterday, all of whom declined to be identified as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

Most said they would continue to drive to work even when they have to pay for parking.

The reason: Their work day is typically longer than eight hours, many said, and taking public transport would add to their long day.

Said a primary school teacher in his late 30s, who has been driving to school for 10 years: "I am in school by 6.30am and work about 10 to 12 hours each day, and sometimes more if there are school events. So, I will drive to work."

A 26-year-old teacher working in a junior college said: "If there is season parking and it is affordable, I will drive. But I will still be deeply unhappy to be made to pay."

Some are circumspect about the move, noting that schools and colleges are public institutions and should be governed by the same rules as any other.

Chinese daily Lianhe Zaobao reported yesterday that the ministry has been discussing the issue since the start of last year.

Almost all public service organisations, including the ministry, charge for parking at their offices.

Parking remains free at most primary and secondary schools and junior colleges. The carparks are invariably meant for school staff.

But at the School of the Arts in Zubir Said Drive next to The Cathay cinema, the carpark is open to the public as well as school staff, with fees set at market prices.

Teachers may soon have to pay to park in schools.
Posted by The Straits Times on Thursday, January 7, 2016


The three institutions pinpointed by the AG last year were the Institute of Technical Education (ITE), where parking is free, and Singapore Polytechnic and Temasek Polytechnic, which charge parking fees below the market rate.

A check by The Straits Times found that the parking situation at all three institutions remains unchanged. Both polytechnics are still working with the relevant authorities on how much to charge, they told this newspaper.

At the ITE, eateries on the grounds of its colleges, like First Culinary Restaurant at its Ang Mo Kio college, said parking is still free for diners.




Do you think teachers should pay for parking in school? [http://bit.ly/1O8clLl]The Ministry of Education (MOE) said...
Posted by REACHSingapore on Friday, January 8, 2016





Teachers at over 360 schools and colleges may have to pay parking charges, in move that could kick in this year.
Posted by The Straits Times on Thursday, January 7, 2016






Debate over free school parking for teachers
Some argue teachers work long hours, others say it is akin to subsidising their driving cost
By Pearl Lee, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

A government review that could result in school teachers paying carpark fees at their place of work has drawn intense debate, with most commentators criticising the prospective move.

They argued that teachers at national schools and junior colleges work long hours, and many stay after school hours to coach weaker students, doing this on top of their administrative duties.

But proponents of "no free parking" countered that allowing it is as good as subsidising the cost of driving for teachers.

Mr Phang Fook Ghay, 56, who wrote to The Straits Times' Forum Page about the issue, yesterday told The Straits Times: "How do we justify giving teachers this subsidy when other civil servants are not entitled to it?"

A check with 10 public sector organisations found that it is common practice for their employees to pay for carpark spaces at their office building. Six of them, including the Ministry of Education (MOE), Ministry of Manpower and Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau, charge staff a monthly rate of about $90 for season parking, similar to that of carparks in Housing Board estates.

This is typically less than what it costs to park in a private sector building, although this varies by location. It usually costs $200 or more a month for season parking in central Singapore. For instance, Funan DigitaLife Mall in North Bridge Road charges tenants $214. At Fajar Shopping Centre in Bukit Panjang, it costs $90 a month.

Some argue teachers work long hours, others say it is akin to subsidising their driving cost.
Posted by The Straits Times on Friday, January 8, 2016


At some government offices, charges are higher than $90. Parking at the Symbiosis building in Fusionopolis, where the Media Development Authority office is located, costs $120 a month.

The Treasury building, which houses the Ministry of Law, Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Trade and Industry, and is located in the City Hall area, charges $140 a month for season parking.

These payments are in line with the Government's "clean wage" policy, which stipulates that salaries are fully accounted for with no hidden perks and privileges.

As early as 2005, government agencies were told to stop giving carpark benefits regardless of whether the carpark is owned by the ministry or a commercial company.

But teachers at most national schools and junior colleges have always been able to park at their institutions for free.

However, this may soon change with the MOE reviewing carpark charges for schools "in accordance with civil service guidelines".

The review was prompted by the Auditor-General pointing out last year that three educational institutions were charging below- market rates for their carpark spaces. They were the Institute of Technical Education, Singapore Polytechnic and Temasek Polytechnic.

Doing so, the Auditor-General said, was akin to giving "hidden subsidies"to staff.

But many teachers interviewed said they drive to work as a necessity because their work day starts early and they work long hours.

Some use their cars to give at-risk students a ride to ensure that they attend school.

Said a 35-year-old junior college teacher: "Sometimes, teachers use their cars to take students to the doctor or hospital. And they do not make any transport claims."

Another junior college teacher said: "I don't see it as a subsidy, but a perk of the job."

His college has about 50 carpark spaces, which tend to be occupied on school days.

But economist Donald Low said giving free parking is generally inefficient. The associate dean of research and executive education at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy said: "If teachers were given a cash subsidy instead of free parking, some may value the cash more and choose not to drive. This frees up space for other purposes.

"Just because parking is free doesn't mean it has no opportunity cost. What about the basketball court that could have been built if less space is given to a carpark?"

Additional reporting by Sheryl Lee



New scholarship for nursing to cover both diploma and degree courses

$
0
0
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 7 Jan 2016

A new nursing scholarship, which will sponsor students for both their diploma and degree studies, was launched by the Health Ministry on Thursday (Jan 7).

Those under the new Integrated Nursing Scholarship will undergo the three-year nursing diploma programme at either Nanyang or Ngee Ann Polytechnic. They will then go on to pursue either a 19-month degree course at the Singapore Institute of Technology, or a one-year degree programme at a university overseas.

They will then have to serve a three-year bond in the public healthcare sector.


The Ministry of Health has launched the Integrated Nursing Scholarship (INS), which is a new premier public healthcare...
Posted by Ministry of Health on Thursday, January 7, 2016


During the course of their studies, nursing scholars will be able to intern at organisations such as the Ministry of Health and MOH Holdings. They will also be able to attend dialogues and networking sessions with healthcare leaders.

The new scholarship is open to Singaporeans with GCE O level results of L1R2B2 of 10 points and below, with a strong co-curricular activity record. They must have applied for the diploma nursing course at either of the two polytechnics. Existing nursing students are not eligible for the scholarship.

Application opens next Monday and closes on Jan 31. Applications can be submitted through the Brightsparks Scholarship website.

Those interested can go to healthcarescholarships.sg for more information. To find out more about nursing, visit caretogobeyond.sg.



If you are keen to understand more about the newly announced Integrated Nursing Scholarship (which will support your...
Posted by CARE TO GO BEYOND on Thursday, January 7, 2016



Day centre in Clementi for adults with autism

$
0
0
By Kok Xing Hui, The Straits Times, 8 Jan 2016

Adults with moderate to severe disabilities will soon have more day activity centres (DACs) to go to when caregivers are at work.

There are now 23 DACs, one of which was opened officially yesterday. It is the third one meant for adults with autism. Two more DACs will open this year and a further 500 places will be added over the next five years, half of which will be for adults with autism.

This will bring the total capacity in DACs to 1,700 by 2021, said Minister for Social and Family Development Tan Chuan-Jin yesterday at the official opening of Eden Centre for Adults (Clementi).

Opening of Eden Centre for Adults @ Clementi
The Eden Centre for Adults @ Clementi was officially opened by Minister Tan Chuan-Jin this morning. The centre, which is part of the Enabling Masterplan 2012-2016, provides full-day care and skills training to adults with autism. Two more Day Activity Centres for adults with disabilities will be opened later this year.
Posted by MSF Singapore on Thursday, January 7, 2016


The centre, in Block 351, Clementi Avenue 2, is for people with moderate to severe autism. It started operating in June last year and has half of its 40-person capacity filled.

Clients spend their day at the gym, take part in leisure activities such as a leather workshop, or learn living skills such as preparing simple lunches.

Such centres are crucial because many adults with severe disabilities are unable to join the workforce and need higher support throughout their lives, said Ms Denise Phua. She is an MP in Jalan Besar GRC and a board member of Autism Association (Singapore).

Opening of Eden Centre for Adults in Clementi
Plans are underway to equip caregivers to better support adults with moderate to severe autism. This will be done through a Supported DIY pilot, to be launched by the Autism Association of Singapore by the end of 2016.Credits : Channel NewsAsia
Posted by Eden School / Eden Centres for Adults / Eden Children's Centres / AAS on Thursday, January 7, 2016


Each year, just the Eden School for children with autism, located in Bukit Batok - and of which she is the supervisor - has 15 graduates who may need the services of day activity centres, she said.

She added: "Each centre operates at a deficit of about $400,000 per year at full capacity.

"But we do it because we firmly believe that even those who are unable to contribute to the economy deserve a place and some form of support in our country."

At the event, Mr Tan related the story of a client, Isaiah, whom the Eden Centre has helped since it opened its Clementi branch.

He said: "Initially he was so stressed about coming to the centre that he would literally lie down on the floor outside the centre. Today, Isaiah looks forward to coming and is able to have his meals together with everyone in the cafe. With Isaiah in the programme, his mother is afforded some respite and is able to cope with her routine better."

While day activity centres are a necessity, they are costly. Ms Phua said it costs about $1,800 to provide such services to each adult with disabilities every month.

Hence the Autism Association will, by year-end, pilot a programme in which caregivers will be trained by professionals on how to teach their children independent living skills.

The association will partner Autism Resource Centre to develop the training material.

Mr Tan said: "Whenever I talk to caregivers, one of the things that crop up is, 'How do they enable their loved ones with disabilities to achieve a better level of independence?' This is very much related to their concerns about what will happen to their loved ones when they are not around."

Ms Phua said: "We have to, as a people, intentionally design and support the integration of persons with disabilities, especially those with higher needs, into our society.

"I believe that our future is only as strong as our resolve to include those who are at high risk of being put aside, who are at high risk of being left behind."




Attended the opening ceremony of Eden Centre for Adults @ Clementi on 7 Jan. Was really heartened to see the Autism...
Posted by Tan Chuan-Jin on Thursday, January 7, 2016









JurongHealth Mobility Park: Simulated park steps up patient recovery

$
0
0
Hospital recreates real-life environment to prepare patients for activities of daily living
By Tan Weizhen, The Straits Times, 8 Jan 2016

Jurong Community Hospital is going the extra mile to help patients get back on their feet - with a mock-up landscape of walkways, a crossing with real traffic lights and life-size replicas of a bus, taxi and MRT train cabin.


WATCH: See how JurongHealth uses life-size mock-ups of public transportation to help patients get back on the road, after they are discharged from Jurong Community Hospital. Our reporter Lim Jia Qi was there. http://bit.ly/1JYKR6V
Posted by 938LIVE on Wednesday, January 6, 2016


Called the JurongHealth Mobility Park, the 953 sq m area is meant to help those who have difficulties walking get used to walking on pavements and taking public transport. The park, situated within Ng Teng Fong General Hospital and Jurong Community Hospital, was launched yesterday morning by Mayor of South West District Low Yen Ling.

Said JurongHealth chief executive officer Foo Hee Jug: "Patients tell us that despite the care they receive from the hospital, it would be very useful for them to be competent in the activities of daily living, such as using the bus, the MRT.

"Therefore, the natural extension of that is to make things real. Otherwise, when patients go through it, they will say, 'But this doesn't look like real life'. So we approached SMRT."



Transport operator SMRT, which sponsored the vehicle models, ensured that details such as platform gaps mirror the real train station details, Mr Foo said.

In future, if there are enhancements in the real trains and buses, changes will be made to the models to reflect those, he added.

The park also has walkways with different surfaces such as ramps, steps and kerbs, for patients to practise walking across them. It also has different types of terrain, such as sand, pebbled surfaces and surfaces with raised wooden strips.

Eventually, the park may be open to members of the public who also need to rehabilitate themselves to normal living.

Some patients who used the park as a trial welcomed the simulated street environment as a way to help them get more ready for life back in the community.

Madam Chua Gek Hong, 75, who just underwent knee replacement surgery, said: "My legs are still not strong enough, so I have started using the park.

"They train us to get up the bus, and it is good because then I will know how prepared I am for a real bus. Hopefully it will help."

Ms Low told reporters after the launch: "This first mobility park is really a part of the enabling and inclusive environment that we are creating in Singapore, and (it is) an example of the many ways that we are trying to help our senior residents to continue to live well and independently."


Patients undergoing physical rehabilitation at Jurong Community Hospital will be able to practise taking public transport with bus and train cabin replicas and an old cab. bit.ly/1kOMpK6
Posted by Channel NewsAsia Singapore on Thursday, January 7, 2016


As the ageing population grows, she added, there is a need to better help seniors, especially those with conditions such as stroke, ease back into their communities and homes using simulated environments.




The JurongHealth Mobility Park - Singapore’s first outdoor rehabilitative space at #JCH - was officially launched today!...
Posted by JurongHealth on Thursday, January 7, 2016






Today, the JurongHealth Mobility Park at Jurong Community Hospital was officially launched by Ms Low Yen Ling, Mayor for...
Posted by SMRT on Wednesday, January 6, 2016




Dengue infections will be high this year, warns NEA

$
0
0
NEA expects spike in dengue cases this year
Factors include high base of cases, change in dominant strain and rise in mosquito numbers
By Salma Khalik, Senior Health Correspondent, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

The battle against dengue could turn grim this year.

Not only is the number of infections expected to be large, but the cases are also expected to spike earlier than in previous years, the National Environment Agency (NEA) warned.

This is due to the confluence of three factors: Large numbers of infections in what is usually the low season, increases in the mosquito population and a change in the dominant viral strain.



The agency said on its website: "We are starting off the year with an unusually high base of dengue cases; 459 cases were reported in the final week of 2015."

This was the highest for the year. Between Sunday and 3.30pm on Thursday (latest availabe figures), there were 345 cases, signalling another week of high infections. Since 2013, Den-1 had been the dominant virus spread by the Aedes mosquito, accounting for more than half the infections. But now, more than two-thirds are due to the Den-2 strain, which marks a significant shift.

NEA said that, from historical trends, such changes in dengue strain "signal (a) possible spike in dengue cases".

On top of that, it added: "We have also seen a further increase in the Aedes mosquito population due to the slightly warmer than usual year-end weather."

It concluded: "The number of dengue cases in 2016 is expected to be high, with cases spiking earlier than in previous years."

Yesterday, Mr Masagos Zulkifli, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources, visited Singapore's biggest dengue cluster, where 195 people have been infected. It is in his constituency of Tampines GRC.

He said NEA found 86 breeding sites in the cluster. Of these, 60 were in homes, and only one at a construction site.

Of the 195 cases in the cluster, 81 are foreigners working at the Downtown Line 3 construction site, and the rest are residents. Some of the problem areas include Tampines Avenue 4 with 82 cases, and Tampines Street 91 with 24.

Calling out to dengue fighters in Tampines! Let’s work together to bring down the number of cases in your neighbourhood....
Posted by Stop Dengue Now on Friday, January 8, 2016


In his Facebook post, Mr Masagos said: "We found adult mosquitoes and larvae in some of the Gravitraps, indicating a high level of mosquito activity, despite three rounds of home inspections and destruction of breeding habitats.

"We need to prevent mosquito breeding. But NEA officers and town councils cannot achieve this alone."

More than 11,200 people were diagnosed with dengue last year, with four dying as a result.

NEA officers carried out more than 1.4 million inspections last year and found 15,000 breeding spots.

The agency issued more than 900 notices to construction sites to attend court, with over 100 prosecutions for repeat offenders.

It also issued more than 100 stop-work orders to construction sites.

It advised people living in active dengue clusters - there are 115 now - to use repellents to reduce their risk of getting the virus.







Obama faces tough sell on gun control

$
0
0
CNN forum attended by President underlines deep divisions among Americans on issue
By Jeremy Au Yong, US Bureau Chief, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

US President Barack Obama received a reminder on Thursday of the challenges that lie ahead in trying to form some sort of national consensus on gun control.

Participating in a CNN town hall forum on gun control in Virginia, the President was confronted with an audience who believed that the government had either already overstepped the boundaries on the issue or not done enough - but nothing in-between.



On Tuesday, Mr Obama had announced a set of executive actions that are meant to expand background checks by clarifying laws and to channel more resources to law enforcement and mental health treatment. He also wrote an op-ed saying that he would not back any politician - even one from his own party - who did not support common-sense gun control.

On one side of the debate were people like county sheriff Paul Babeu, who wanted the President to do more to stop terrorism rather than to control guns, and rape victim Kimberly Corban, who argued that her past now made her feel a responsibility to carry a gun to protect her children.

"As a survivor of rape and now a mother to two small children, it seems like being able to purchase a firearm of my choosing, and being able to carry that wherever me and my family are, it seems like my basic responsibility as a parent at this point," she said to the President, asking him why his administration wants to make it harder for her to get a gun.

"I have been unspeakably victimised once already, and I refuse to let that happen again to myself or my kids."

On the other side were those like Mrs Cleo Pendleton, whose 15-year- old daughter Hadiya was killed by a gunman. Hadiya had performed at Mr Obama's second inauguration.

Mrs Pendleton wanted to know if there was more the government could do to stop trafficking of guns from states with loose gun laws to those with stricter ones.

But not all the families of victims of gun violence at the event were in favour of more restrictions.

Mrs Taya Kyle - the widow of Navy Seal Chris Kyle, who was killed by a gunman - implied in her question that the President had portrayed Americans as bad people and had not done enough to celebrate the fact that gun deaths have dropped overall.

"Why not celebrate where we are... Celebrate that we're good people and 99.9 per cent of us are never going to kill anyone," she said.



Mr Obama spent much of the hour-long forum explaining the executive actions he unveiled earlier this week, stressing that he was not trying to make it harder for law-abiding Americans to get guns and that there was no conspiracy to ultimately confiscate guns.

"It is a false notion that I believe is circulated for either political reasons or commercial reasons in order to prevent a coming together among people of goodwill to develop common-sense rules that will make us safer while preserving the Second Amendment," Mr Obama said.

He repeated a plea he made earlier in the week that the pursuit of a perfect solution should not stop the country from taking small steps.

"This is not a proposal to solve every problem. It's a modest way of us getting started on improving the prospects of young men and young women like you, the same way we try to improve every other aspect of our lives. That's all it is," he said.

"But at least let's figure it out, let's try some things. Let's not just assume that every few weeks there's a mass shooting that gets publicity, every few months there's one that gets national publicity, every day there are a whole bunch of folks shot on streets around the country that we don't even hear about. That is not something that we can be satisfied with."









"There are steps we can take now to save lives. And all of us—at every level of government, in the private sector and as...
Posted by Barack Obama on Friday, January 8, 2016



Public invited to vote for colour of new bus fleet

$
0
0
By Adrian Lim, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

Bright red or lush green. Commuters will get to vote for the colour of the new buses used under the Government contracting model.

The chosen colour will make its debut on buses to be used by Anglo-Australian company Tower Transit, which will start operations in the western part of the island from the second quarter of this year.

The two colour choices were unveiled yesterday by Senior Minister of State for Transport Ng Chee Meng during a visit to the Joo Koon Integrated Transport Hub.

Mr Ng said: "The design team thought these were representative colours - red symbolising our country; green, the lush greenery. Let's see how Singapore votes."

Colour Your Buses
What an exciting year for our public bus industry as we transit to a new bus contracting model! As all buses gradually come under Government ownership, we invite all of you to play a part in creating a unified and distinctive identity for our Singapore buses :)What colour would you like the new livery to be? Select between bright red or lush green! Cast your votes at www.colouryourbuses.sg and stand to win prizes.
Posted by Land Transport Authority – We Keep Your World Moving on Friday, January 8, 2016


As the entire industry moves towards a contracting model, all buses will be eventually owned by the Government and the common livery will create a "distinctive identity", the Land Transport Authority (LTA) said.

To date, two packages of bus routes have been tendered out and awarded: One to Tower Transit and the other to British firm Go-Ahead. The tender for a third package is expected to be called later this year.

The plan is to progressively carve up all bus services in Singapore into 12 packages, to be run by three to five operators after 2022.

All public buses will also bear a logo with the words "SG Bus" and the slogan "Moving Ahead Together".

The LTA said it will provide Tower Transit with about 50 new buses that will feature the new colour, and another 300 buses bought earlier under the Bus Service Enhancement Programme.

The 300 buses are currently painted in the colours of incumbents SBS Transit and SMRT, and the LTA said it is reviewing the possibility of repainting them, but only if it is cost-effective to do so.

While public buses will all have the same colour, operators will be able to paint their logos on the vehicles. Bus captains will wear their respective company uniforms.



Civil servant Priya Sree, 22, has already made up her mind on the choice of colour: "Red is representative of the Singapore flag. The green looks a bit odd and is not so natural."

But Madam Julia Lee, 63, a part- time cleaner, said: "The green is more visually striking. For the elderly, it will be easier to spot at night."

The public can cast their votes at http://colouryourbuses.sg, or at selected MRT stations and bus interchanges. Voting for the new bus livery started yesterday and will end on Feb 5.

To help commuters visualise the new colour schemes, 10 red and 10 green buses will be deployed on the roads during the voting phase.

The results will be announced in the first quarter of this year.

Fifty participants who take part in the poll will each win a $50 shopping voucher in a lucky draw.



Hey folks, did you know that Singapore’s public bus industry will be transiting to the Bus Contracting Model (#BCM) in...
Posted by Land Transport Authority – We Keep Your World Moving on Thursday, January 7, 2016



Singapore and China's third G2G project gets underway in Chongqing

$
0
0
The first Joint Implementation Committee Meeting to discuss the project's next step was also held in the Southwestern Chinese city on Friday (Jan 8).
By Jeremy Koh, Channel NewsAsia, 8 Jan 2016

CHONGQING: Singapore and China deepened their cooperation on Friday (Jan 8) with the opening of an Administrative Bureau Office in Chongqing and a project signing to flag off their third government-to-government (G2G) project.

The initiative, called the China-Singapore (Chongqing) Demonstration Initiative on Strategic Connectivity, aims to enhance modern connectivity and services in the southwestern Chinese city.



Chinese officials have said they hope it will have a positive effect on the government's plan to develop its vast and relatively undeveloped western region. Chongqing is one of four municipalities under the direct control of the Chinese central government. It has been one of the fastest growing cities in China since 2014, with its economy expanding 11 per cent in the first three quarters of last year.

Singapore's Minister in the Prime Minister's Office Chan Chun Sing and Chongqing Mayor Huang Qifan co-chaired the first joint implementation committee meeting for the Chongqing Connectivity Initiative (CCI). This is the first high-level meeting between Singapore and Chongqing since the launch of the G2G project announced by Chinese President Xi Jinping when he visited the city-state last November.

Mr Chan and the mayor endorsed the implementation structure of the CCI, which will be led by a Deputy Prime Minister-level Joint Steering Council, overseeing two ministerial committees which involve the Chinese government at both the central and local levels, said Singapore's Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI).

Both sides discussed potential project collaborations and the next steps for the project as well, MTI stated in a news release.

Mr Chan had called on Chongqing Party Secretary Sun Zhengchai before the meeting. Both sides agreed with the "vision, success factors, the way forward for the project, as well as how Singapore can further complement Chongqing’s development through the CCI", said MTI.

One of the items agreed on was to jointly develop a Chongqing Connectivity Masterplan to meet the city's development priorities. MTI said that through the CCI, Singapore hopes to "value-add to the development of Western China, by enhancing connectivity of Chongqing within China and with the world".

Mr Chan, along with Mr Sun and Mayor Huang also witnessed the signing of 11 MOUs that serve to strengthen collaboration between Singapore and Chongqing in four priority areas: Financial services, aviation, transport and logistics and Info-Communications Technology.

Said Minister Chan: "There are two things we seek to do well in this project, which is to lower the financing costs and to lower the logistic costs. Because if we can do this, they act as a lubricant to allow the rest of the sectors to flourish, so it's quite different in scope and in nature to Suzhou and Tianjin."

The Suzhou Industrial Park is regarded as a model of modern manufacturing based on industrial estates in Singapore, while the Tianjin Eco-city is a model for sustainable development. Both are China-Singapore government-to-government projects as well.

Mr Chan said because the Chongqing project focuses on connectivity, it is not geographically bound and Singapore will help the Chongqing government with different perspectives and process innovations. Singapore can also serve as a launchpad to raise capital for companies in Chongqing and the Western region, he added, but said no targets have been set yet.

"Our definition of success could be how much does it cost to raise funds in the West vis-a-vis the rest of China or benchmark against the coastal region," said Mr Chan." Our benchmark or KPI or success factor could be: If today, the logistical cost for every dollar of a product is say 20 cents, if we are able to have policy innovations, simplification of the rules, coordination of the processes, how much are we able to bring that 20 cents or 20 per cent down? How much closer can we get to coastal regions in China so that we can bring out the potential of Western China?"

Mr Chan's visit to Chongqing comes just days after President Xi opened the year by visiting the metropolis. The Singapore Minister said he got very positive feedback from the Chongqing government on the support President Xi has given to the project and the broader Singapore-China relationship.

Other members of the delegation to China include Minister of State for Health and Communications and Information Chee Hong Tat and Minister of State for Trade and Industry and National Development, Dr Koh Poh Koon.



今天在重庆跟进了习近平主席于11月访问新加坡期间与我们谈成的新中第三个政府间合作项目,双方对未来的展望,目标与方向等都达到共识。这个新中(重庆)项目的联合实施委员会的成立给我们提供了正式的框架与组织好让我们更有效地展开具体工作,相信这些都有...
Posted by Chan Chun Sing on Friday, January 8, 2016




Related

Poly grads' starting pay rises after flat two years

$
0
0
Survey shows employment rate remains high, with salaries up by about 5%
By Sandra Davie, Senior Education Correspondent, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

After a flat two years, the starting salaries of polytechnic graduates have climbed by around 5 per cent.

The graduating class of 2015 who landed full-time jobs were hired on a median monthly salary of $2,100, compared with $2,000 in 2013 and 2014.

The monthly pay of graduates who had completed national service (NS) after finishing school in 2012 also moved up by $100 to $2,500.

These were the results of the latest employment survey by Singapore's five polytechnics, which were released yesterday. It found that the employment rate for the newest polytechnic graduates remained high at 88.9 per cent, and 91.5 per cent for post-NS ones.

Still, more are either finding it tougher to land full-time employment or prefer to work part-time as they consider their options.

Those with full-time jobs fell from 59.4 per cent for the class of 2014 to 57.9 per cent for those graduating last year.

Meanwhile, those taking up part-time or temporary employment went from 29.8 per cent in 2014 to 31 per cent last year.

But this is no cause for worry, said the polytechnics. The majority of graduates doing part-time or temporary work said they were pursuing further studies or preparing to do so.

With the further expansion of public university places last year, one in five polytechnic graduates won a place in a degree course this year. Four years ago, the figure was 15 per cent - less than one in seven.

Most new university places were created from the expansion of the Singapore Institute of Technology, which was set up to offer degree pathways for polytechnic graduates, and SIM University.

Recruitment experts said freelance or contract work is quite common among those in the information technology and creative industries.

Mr David Leong, managing director of PeopleWorldwide Consulting, said: "This is the age of Uber, so many of them in the IT and creative industries want to work as independent contractors so they can be flexible with their time."

The ride-hailing app Uber does not employ taxi drivers, but uses independent contractors.

Nanyang Polytechnic IT graduate Kalista Chan, who chose to work on the Earn and Learn scheme despite her high grade point average, said she wanted to chalk up some work experience before deciding on her degree education.

Under the Earn and Learn scheme, Institute of Technical Education and polytechnic graduates can further their qualifications while working.

Ms Chan, 20, who works as a functional analyst at Accenture while studying for a specialist diploma, said: "Business analytics is a wide field. I felt that I needed to first understand the industry and the opportunities available in the field. University studies can wait."

The survey, which involved 10,513 graduates from last year and 4,876 post-NS graduates who completed their diploma course in 2012, also compared the pay levels of polytechnic graduates across different courses. Those with diplomas in built environment, engineering and maritime, and health sciences were the best paid.

Fresh graduates from the health sciences courses, which include physiotherapy and occupational therapy, had median monthly salaries of $2,350, while post-NS graduates from the courses got $2,610.


Singapore commits record $19 billion to R&D

$
0
0
Budget over next five years an investment in talent, possibilities of science, says PM
By Chang Ai-Lien and Lester Hio, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

The nation's science and technology research budget will rise to a record $19 billion in the next five years, as the Government reaffirms its commitment to research here.

"It is an investment in our human talent, in the possibilities of science and what it can do to change our lives, and in our understanding of the world and human knowledge which can be applied in many areas over many, many years," Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said yesterday. He was announcing the Research, Innovation and Enterprise Plan for up to 2020.

It aims to smash research silos by getting interdisciplinary groups to work together under broad groupings, increase competition for funding to get the best research, train people in the right areas and get the best out of them.

Resources will be prioritised in four key areas: advanced manufacturing and engineering, health and biomedical sciences, services and digital economy, and urban solutions and sustainability.



Competition will be revved up with researchers having to compete for about 40 per cent of their funding, double that of the previous five years. "You want to have predictability, because once you start a project you cannot just turn off the tap and say we changed our mind," said Mr Lee, who is also chairman of the Research, Innovation and Enterprise Council (RIEC) that is made up of Cabinet ministers and distinguished local and foreign businessmen and scientists.

"At the same time you also have to have accountability... So to make funding contestable forces that discipline, and makes sure that when we spend the money, we get good value out of it."

The near $4 billion given out each year is around 1 per cent of the nation's annual gross domestic product (GDP) and is comparable to what countries such as the United States spend.

Mr Lee was speaking at a press conference following the RIEC's ninth annual meeting.

There were areas that Singapore could do better in, PM Lee said, including how to commercialise discoveries and get value from R&D.

Also falling short was private sector investment, which had been predicted at 2.5 per cent of Singapore's GDP in the last five years, but reached only 1.5 per cent because of the global economic slowdown.

The Government hopes it will rise to 1.8 per cent in the next five years.

But overall, PM Lee noted: "Is it worth spending 1 per cent? Yes."

He added: "Overall, I would say we have got value, we will work harder at it, we will continue to maintain this level of investment."

RIEC members praised the plan, saying it was well thought out. One of them, Professor Richard Friend of the University of Cambridge, said: "In R&D, we have to take risks... And the best environment to take risks is one where there is great predictability about funding two, three, five years in the future."













More public money will go to projects that improve Singaporean lives, says NRF
By Lin Yangchen, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

In the next five years, more public money for research will flow to projects that make a difference to the lives of Singaporeans, on top of those that rev up the economy, said the man charting the nation's research direction.

National Research Foundation chief Low Teck Seng has $19 billion in hand. And of the roughly $10 billion that goes to public research institutions, researchers will have to compete for 40 per cent from now to 2020, an increase from about one-fifth between 2010 and last year.

Professor Low, aware that he is in charge of the biggest amount ever available for Singapore researchers, told The Straits Times: "In managing public funds, we must make sure we fund the right things, to be more focused and sharper.

"There is no place for mediocrity in this world today."

The new emphasis is key to ensuring Singapore attracts and retains the best people, and produces the best results, he added.

"There's no such thing as perpetual funding," he said, noting that a scientist may hitherto have produced excellent work, but someone even better could be out there. "We have a level of maturity that requires us to be cleverer in what we're doing," he added.

This means going beyond economically important areas, like advanced manufacturing, to fields that ensure the country's "societal, national and economic needs" are met - by helping the growing silver population age well or making Singapore more self-sufficient in food, for instance.

Citing water, Prof Low noted it was a national need served by research on desalination and membrane technology for water purification. No matter what, "we would fund it, because we need it to survive".

Also critical is the ability to respond effectively to emerging infectious diseases. When the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) broke out in 2003, Singapore was caught off guard.

"Today, I think we would be able to respond in a much speedier and more knowledgeable fashion", as Singapore now has "a very established knowledge ecosystem" built up through years of research, he said. "With knowledge, there's no fear."

Acknowledging that the past funding regime could be improved in certain areas, he said care would be taken not to mire scientists in too much red tape when they applied for grants.

Still, "when you're big and growing, sometimes appropriate management structures become a necessity although we must ensure it's not too onerous".

But he added: "The more you can deliver, the more latitude you will be given in doing pet projects."

There is also $2.5 billion of "white space" funding set aside for unanticipated needs and opportunities.

One example is cyber security, which arose during the last funding cycle.

Talent is a critical ingredient in the research equation, said Prof Low, noting that top research hubs are characterised by their ability "to cream off the best in the world".

The National Research Foundation has more than 60 fellows, selected in a gruelling year-long process to get the most outstanding young scientists who can be leaders in local research institutions.

The Government has also introduced the Returning Singaporean Scientists Scheme to attract top-notch science brains abroad to return home.

It is the latest move in the public funding of science and technology, which began in earnest in 1991 with the first five-year plan, the National Technology Plan.

Twenty-five years and $40 billion later, Singapore has matured from using research and development to support industry needs, to developing world-class universities and institutes, and carrying out research that ranges from water purification to stomach cancer treatment.

As Prof Low put it: "Science and technology will be central to our strategies for building Singapore for the future."









Big push for science and tech research

In the next five years, $19 billion will be pumped into scientific and technological research under the Research, Innovation and Enterprise 2020 plan. Funding will be prioritised in four key areas where Singapore has a competitive edge or which meet national needs. The Straits Times looks at how these four areas will transform Singapore in the next five years.



Advanced manufacturing and engineering
By Lin Yangchen, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

Few may think that Singapore can match giants like China in manufacturing. But Singapore makes up for the lack of quantity with quality.

It has made big strides in manufacturing since independence, from labour-intensive operations in the 1960s to capital- and technology-intensive doctrines in the 1990s and today's knowledge- and innovation-intensive focus.

This rising trajectory will get a boost in the next five years, when $3.3 billion from the Research, Innovation and Enterprise 2020 funding programme, announced yesterday by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, will be allocated to develop cutting-edge manufacturing technology.

To capitalise on the broadest range of opportunities for future economic growth, eight key industries have been picked. They span a kaleidoscope of sectors, from aerospace and marine to medical technology and precision engineering.

For example, the funding will support the continuing development of Singapore's research and engineering capabilities in space, like satellite design and construction.

The launch of six Singapore-made satellites last month has validated the country's space capabilities, and will open more opportunities for local institutions to be a part of the high-growth global space industry.

The goal is to ensure that Singapore remains a partner of choice for companies developing products and services .

At the same time, there will be a greater drive to support companies - from local start-ups to multinational corporations - to commercialise research outputs while building a highly skilled work-force and generating good jobs for Singaporeans.

There will also be more emphasis on making strategic bets ahead of industry to develop potential game changers.





Health and biomedical sciences
By Lin Yangchen, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

In a medical emergency, every second counts. Having an ambulance near you can make the difference between life and death.

Singaporeans may soon benefit from reduced emergency response times, thanks to state-of-the-art computer modelling.

A collaboration between the Singapore General Hospital and Singapore Civil Defence Force has produced mathematical models that can predict locations where ambulances are more likely to be needed, potentially reducing response times by 10 per cent.

This is one example of the tangible improvements in healthcare that $4 billion of funding over the next five years aims to achieve.

This constitutes the largest slice of 21 per cent from the $19 billion Research, Innovation and Enterprise (RIE) 2020 funding programme for the next five years.

Singaporeans can also look forward to increased chances of survival and recovery from a whole array of "top killers" such as cancer, cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

For example, the Singapore Gastric Cancer Consortium has developed state-of-the-art technology for the early detection and treatment of gastric cancer, which hits one in five Chinese men here.

Translating biomedical research into healthcare that saves the man on the street is a time-consuming process.

Singapore has come a long way, from the initial establishment of biomedical research capabilities in the early 2000s to more applied clinical research in subsequent years, and most recently towards engagement with industry to bring healthcare to the bedside.

Today, it enjoys an extensive biomedical and healthcare infrastructure, including research-intensive hospitals. RIE2020 will use this as a platform to foster even closer partnerships between research and healthcare institutions.





Services and digital economy
By Lester Hio, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

Automated technologies will become increasingly more pervasive in the next five years, and this will affect almost every aspect of daily living, from travel to work and play.

Self-driving "pods" - small, single- seater vehicles - may bridge the first and last mile from a commuter's home or workplace to the nearest train station and vice versa.

And getting a quick answer to a question from a company or government agency may be done through intelligent live chat and automated question-and-answer systems, where computer software can understand your question and provide an answer.

These are among the innovations that Singapore's services and digital economy sector will explore with the $400 million in funds it will receive from the Research, Innovation and Enterprise 2020 plan.

Research in the sector will focus on urban mobility, healthcare infocommunication technology and services productivity.

These will support the Smart Nation programme and Infocomm Media 2025 masterplan that aims to improve daily living through the integration of technology.

Urban mobility research will supplement the Transport Ministry's efforts to produce a "car-lite" Singapore by improving the public transport system. And sensor-based systems and data analytics can help autonomous vehicles avoid jams and choose the quickest routes.

Further research and development into Internet-connected devices will also aid in healthcare and improve the lives of the elderly through sensors at home that monitor health or remind them to take medicine.

Advances in natural language processing, machine learning and media analytics could lead to real- time subtitling of live television shows in multiple languages.

Cyber-security research will be another key component of the services and digital economy sector.





Urban solutions and sustainability
By Lester Hio, The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

A cooler Singapore, with temperatures below 30 deg C, may seem like an impossible dream.

Yet, it is one of the ambitious research goals in the urban solutions and sustainability sector, which will receive $900 million in funding in the next five years under the Research, Innovation and Enterprise (RIE) 2020 plan.

The 13 lead agencies in the domain, including the Ministry of National Development, Energy Market Authority and national water agency PUB, will look into research on energy, land and water concerns.

The Land and Liveability National Innovation Challenge, launched in 2013, will carry on under the RIE2020.

The goal is for researchers to cut ambient temperature by 4 deg C in residential estates.

This could be through new building materials that absorb and convert excess heat for storage or other uses.

Research will also focus on developing new ways of creating space, such as underground facilities in basements and deep caverns, or through land reclamation and even large floating structures.

The sector is also tasked with maintaining the stability and reliability of the nation's power grid, and keeping energy prices affordable while developing an environmentally sustainable energy system.

To do so, the agencies will look at solar power and how to achieve greater energy efficiency with green building technologies.

For instance, air-conditioners - which account for nearly half the energy used in buildings - may one day be fitted with membranes rather than compressors that can significantly reduce power consumption.

Research will also be done to meet the expected doubling of demand for water by 2060, by lowering the energy consumption of desalination, leading to cost savings.





Singapore 'could be global innovation hub'
SMU don among many in research community excited about five-year $19b budget for R&D
By Carolyn Khew and Lin Yangchen, The Sunday Times, 10 Jan 2016

The country's plan to pump $19 billion into science and technology over the next five years could "make Singapore a 'go to' destination as a global innovation and entrepreneurship hub".

This is the view of Professor Gerard George, dean and professor of innovation and entrepreneurship at the Lee Kong Chian School of Business at Singapore Management University (SMU).

Like him, many in the research community have reacted positively to Research, Innovation and Enterprise (RIE) 2020, which was announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong last Friday.

It will allocate $19 billion over the next five years towards developing Singapore as a knowledge-based, innovation-driven and future-ready economy and society. It is 18 per cent higher than the previous five-year budget of $16.1 million.

The plan will see researchers having to compete more for funding, as well as more being done to take discoveries to market. "I am pleased to see RIE2020 respond emphatically to calls for strengthening our entrepreneurial ecosystem and focus on commercialisation of technology and scaling it up for global markets," Prof George added.

Research institutions here are geared up to tap into the opportunities offered by the new plan.

For example, the National University of Singapore's Faculty of Engineering said its dean, Professor Chua Kee Chaing, has been "promoting greater collaboration between engineers, clinicians and scientists in partnership with the National University Health System since the early 2000s".

The collaboration fosters the development of innovative technological solutions to healthcare challenges, the kind of multidisciplinary applied research that would be very much at home in RIE2020.

The funding will focus on four core technological domains - advanced manufacturing and engineering; health and biomedical sciences; services and digital economy; and urban solutions and sustainability.

Beyond these, Nanyang Technological University's (NTU) chief of staff and vice-president of research, Professor Lam Khin Yong, highlighted the $2.5 billion set aside for the so-called white space - to look into previously unanticipated emerging topics.

Prof Lam said: "In the past few years, NTU has been actively scanning the horizon to identify new areas of growth." He gave examples of recent advances made by the university in areas such as satellite development, new materials for clean technology, and renewable energy.

In addition, Assistant Professor Cheong Siew Ann, deputy director of NTU's Complexity Institute, said that many of the challenges faced by Singapore are likely to be complex, and "the most obvious 'solutions' could lead to unintended consequences".

This, he said, is where the relatively new field of complexity science, which studies how things behave when they are interconnected with one another, could offer novel solutions. "I certainly hope to find opportunities within RIE2020 to grow and establish NTU as the complexity science hub in Asia," Prof Cheong added.

When asked about the impact RIE2020 would have on early- and mid-career researchers carrying the baton into the future, Professor Thomas Magnanti, president of the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD), said that youth has its advantages.

The relatively young faculty and researchers at SUTD, for example, are looking for innovative ways to establish their careers and are less anchored on traditional research domains. "Thus they are in a good position to move swiftly into the RIE-identified fields," he added.

Overseas experts also gave RIE2020 the thumbs up, particularly as the enhanced budget comes at a time when many other countries are cutting back on research spending.

Professor Robert Brown, president of Boston University and a member of the Research, Innovation and Enterprise Council (RIEC), praised the Government's commitment to research and development.

He said: "The United States deals with one-year budgets and, in good years, we actually have a budget... The government (here) does a tremendous job trying to execute that plan and is very self-critical about when they succeed and when they do not."

PM Lee is chairman of the RIEC which is made up of Cabinet ministers and distinguished local and foreign businessmen and scientists.





R&D funds spurring world-class research in Singapore
By Samantha Boh, The Sunday Times, 10 Jan 2016

For decades, gastric cancer has been a silent killer, sneaking up on more than 700,000 unsuspecting victims in Asia every year and surfacing only when patients have little chance of recovery.

But in recent years, Singapore scientists have edged closer to uncovering the sinister cancer early.

One method - a simple blood test that could potentially detect the cancer even before symptoms start to surface, simply by measuring the levels of micro-RNA, which are the chemicals that help regulate genes.

Research into gastric cancer was on Friday highlighted as one of the bright stars in Singapore's research push, as the country's research funding body, the National Research Foundation (NRF), unveiled a record $19 billion budget for the next five years.

Over the past 25 years, $40 billion has been pumped into R&D here, and it has borne fruit, creating thousands of jobs and propelling Singapore to world-leader status in areas ranging from water treatment to eye and stomach cancer research, said the NRF in a review last month.

Researchers at the Nanyang Technological University and National University Singapore, for one, have created membranes that mimic a protein found in all living things called aquaporin. It can purify water at lower pressures than is required for conventional polymeric membranes, making water treatment cheaper. At the Singapore Eye Research Institute (Seri), researchers discovered a method to put the brakes on myopia, which afflicts eight in 10 people here by the time they are adults, just through an eyedrop.

Professor Wong Tien Yin, former executive director of Seri and medical director of the Singapore National Eye Research Institute, said government funding has been critical in the success of eye research here in two ways: It helped set up Seri and build a pipeline of senior and junior clinician scientists.

"We hope there will continue to be sustained funding to the hospitals where the patients are and to where needs are identified," he said.

Associate Professor Yeoh Khay Guan from the National University Health System and a gastric cancer expert, said government grants enabled the Singapore Gastric Cancer Consortium (SGCC) to accelerate the pace of gastric cancer research as it allowed for studies of larger scope and scale that have potentially greater impact.

The SGCC was granted two five-year tranches of the NRF Translational and Clinical Research Flagship grant in 2007 and 2013.

"The long period of sustained grant funding has also allowed the SGCC to attract, train and, most importantly, retain research talent in the gastric cancer field," added Prof Yeoh, who is also lead principal investigator of the SGCC.

But the country's research funding body has acknowledged that there are some weak spots, including lacklustre private sector funding. Between 2011 and last year, the Government committed $16.1 billion to research, but private sector research spending fell short of its goal of hitting 2.5 per cent of the country's gross domestic product last year.

NRF chief Low Teck Seng had said it was partly because firms were more cautious about spending due to the slowdown in the global economy.

More also needs to be done to commercialise good research. Professor Low noted that Singapore faces the challenge of turning patents and knowledge from the universities and institutes into economic impact and solutions for national issues.

According to the NRF, this will be addressed through collaborative laboratories between major industry players and universities and institutes, and the transfer of talent from research to industry and vice versa.





Three top Singaporean scientists coming home
They will take up leadership positions under a scheme that gives generous grants
By Carolyn Khew, The Straits Times, 8 Jan 2016

Three prominent Singaporean scientists who built illustrious careers overseas are returning to continue their research here, joining the first recipient of a scheme which gives generous grants to those willing to take on leadership positions locally.

Giants in their fields of computer science, advanced electronics and plant molecular biology, they have been wooed home under the prestigious Returning Singaporean Scientists Scheme announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in 2013.

Professor Andrew Lim, Dr Aaron Thean and Professor Chua Nam Hai join Professor Ho Teck Hua, deputy president (research and technology) at the National University of Singapore (NUS). Before the trio, Prof Ho was the only recipient under the scheme.

From today, Prof Lim, a computer scientist behind five successful companies, will head the department of industrial and systems engineering at the NUS engineering faculty, while Dr Thean, an engineer and prolific inventor with 50 patents, joins NUS as a professor of electrical engineering in May.

Prof Chua, a world-renowned biotechnology expert who has been based in New York since 1971, will continue in his roles at Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory (TLL) in Singapore - as deputy chairman of its management board and chairman of its research strategy committee.

"The three returning scientists developed their research careers over a long period of time, starting at a time when the research and development landscape in Singapore was less developed," said National Research Foundation (NRF) chief Low Teck Seng.

"By uprooting themselves from their established careers to return to Singapore, it shows their recognition that Singapore has become a major R&D (research and development) hub."

The target is to attract a total of 10 scientists to come back by 2019, said Professor Low. So far, the NRF has engaged over 20 scientists based overseas working in areas such as computer science, health and biomedical sciences. Only Singaporean scientists of the highest calibre qualify, Prof Low stressed.

To sweeten the deal, the NRF offers up to $7.5 million in research start-up grants for each scientist to continue his R&D work here, an enticement that comes at a time when private firms in Singapore are spending less on research, and research overseas is feeling the crunch.

But the recipients said the grant money, while generous, was not the main pull factor.

Prof Lim, 49, who left Singapore for Hong Kong and Jiangsu, China, 12 years ago because the computer science industry here was still in its infancy, said: "The money makes it easier, but even if another country were to offer the same amount, I wouldn't consider it. Singapore is home... My family, relatives and friends are here, and it is one of the best countries to live in."

Dr Thean was also thinking about coming home to look after his parents, who are in their 70s. "My dad and my mum have missed me and my family quite a bit, so I would like to spend more time with them," said the 44-year-old, who is currently with Imec, a nanoelectronic research institute based in Belgium.

Both are also looking forward to contributing to Singapore's smart nation efforts. Prof Lim, for instance, will be part of the NUS smart nation research cluster, an inter-disciplinary group that will look into areas such as data science and cyber security.

Prof Chua, 71, is also looking forward to coming back.

"Going forward, I will have more time to interact with younger principal investigators in TLL and provide mentorship if needed," he said.

Prof Ho, a behavioural sciences expert who took up his NUS position last June and is also Tan Chin Tuan Centennial Professor at the university, said one of his most meaningful tasks so far has been to create the new smart nation research cluster, which will involve more than 50 researchers from multiple disciplines.

And while top foreign scientists attracted here have been called "whales", their Singaporean counterparts could be seen as "lions", said Prof Ho. "They personify the courage of scientists to blaze new trails in science and technology in the Lion City."


If a new player disrupts the rules, maybe it's the rules that need to change

$
0
0
The regulator's job is to look at the potential for good in a new player
By Chua Mui Hoong, Opinion Editor, The Sunday Times, 9 Jan 2016

Pity the regulator today.

He inherited a system at the peak of its success, with rules carefully thought out. He thought his role was to implement and enforce rules.

Then things change. Disruptive technologies change the industry and new players enter the market. Unhappy incumbents want to deny the new players access to funding or infrastructure they had paid to build, and hold the regulator to the rule-book.

Meanwhile, consumers clamour for choice and diversity at ever declining prices. Citizens who once trusted the state to preserve a stable status quo now question its impartiality and ask whose side it is on.

Across different sectors, the chaps in government whose job is to come up with rules for industry are facing a hard time.

In transport, the entry of Uber and other car-sharing apps turns owners of private cars into chauffeurs for a fee. Taxi companies are unhappy, but consumers are delighted - they get a chauffeured private car service for a fee about equivalent to or less than for taxis.

The Land Transport Authority is now looking at these issues.

Next, consider the infocomms sector. The three telcos - Singtel, StarHub and M1 - have settled into a cosy equilibrium, and some say they act like a cartel.

The entry of new broadband players had shaken up that industry. Why not open the mobile market to new players too? This was the thinking behind the call for a fourth mobile operator.

Last July, the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) came up with a novel proposal: It would set aside mobile spectrum at a heavily discounted rate to attract a fourth telco operator. It called for public feedback on its proposal.

At least two companies - MyRepublic and OMGTel - expressed interest. But the three incumbents objected. They said a fourth player would lead to congested airwaves which would be bad for consumers.They questioned IDA's rationale for subsidising the newcomer.

IDA hasn't firmed up its decision.

The cases illustrate the conflicting demands that today's regulator must take into account. Regulation has never been easy, but is especially complicated when technology is changing so fast, and disrupting markets in such unexpected ways.

Regulators should be guided as always by a clear-headed assessment that balances different objectives: protect investors; protect consumers; promote competition; and promote efficiency. It's clear from even a cursory look that the objectives are conflicting - protecting investors for example can be very bad for consumers.

To do their jobs well, regulators have to shift from thinking of regulation as setting rules, to thinking of managing risks.

Rules will still be needed of course - but should be construed not as something that prevents bad things from happening but as something that allows good things to happen.

Transport regulators, for example, shouldn't be thinking of rules to box Uber in or how to make sure it doesn't harm consumers or the market. They should be thinking of rules that can help unlock the tremendous potential of car-sharing apps to improve our transport system, in a way that is good for consumers and fair to incumbents.

I am fairly sanguine that when it comes to industry and economic issues, Singapore's regulators will be able to shift from rules to risk, and will tend towards decisions that promote competition and efficiency. The pro-enterprise, open-minded DNA runs deep in the public sector's economic agencies.

It will be a greater challenge for our social regulators, brought up in decades of parsimony, to rethink their role. They shouldn't see themselves only as guardians of the public purse. Instead, those who control social funding should develop the instinct of venture capitalists looking to support deserving social innovation.

Take the Ministry of Health's (MOH's) refusal to give subsidy funding for a nursing home for dementia patients. The Jade Circle project by Peacehaven, the Lien Foundation and Khoo Chwee Neo Foundation wanted to offer dementia patients a different kind of setting. Instead of living in dormitory-style wards with six to eight beds each, patients would live in single or twin-bed rooms with attached bathrooms, clustered around a living room. Medical research shows that dementia patients are less disoriented and happier in settings that resemble a family home, than in an institutionalised, regimented setting.

MOH, however, declined to provide subsidies for such beds, saying: "As a matter of policy, it will be difficult for MOH to provide ongoing subsidies for patients staying in wards that are designed to proxy private or A-class ward configurations such as single or double-bedded rooms only.

Such parameters will be hard to scale or to be financially sustainable, if applied to the rest of the aged care sector."

The decision seems to spring from a reflex that subsidies should be used for the indigent or the very poor. This very stringent view of what merits subsidies is outdated, even by Singapore's own tight-fisted standards. Public housing subsidies extend even to high-income young couples who can fork out $1 million for a unit in executive condominiums that come with swimming pools . Healthcare subsidies for intermediate and home care cover households that earn more than the median income.

I find it perverse in the extreme that the ministry would deny an operator subsidies for offering a higher level of healthcare. Imagine the Ministry of Education telling independent schools that since they offer "premium" education, it will withdraw the subsidy it gives to every student's education.

Rather than say No Subsidy to the new entrant, MOH should take the opportunity to relook its entire financing model of allocating subsidy levels by the class of hospital ward.

Does such a system encourage over-usage of subsidies by those who can afford to pay non-subsidised rates? My colleague Salma Khalik reported last July that more patients are choosing subsidised wards.

In 2000, 26 per cent of all public hospital patients opted for C class wards, which enjoy subsidies of 65 to 80 per cent. In 2014, 46 per cent did so. It might be time to tweak a system that results in such skewed behaviour.

Then there is MOH's argument that subsidising single or twin-bed rooms isn't scaleable and is hard to justify financially.

Contrast this with the Ministry of Social and Family Development's (MSF's) position on group homes for seniors. MSF set up senior group homes in 2012 to let the frail elderly age in place - in Housing Board rental blocks.

Each HDB flat is shared by two to three frail seniors - which means each room has one or two beds. Five to eight such flats form a cluster. For these clusters, voluntary welfare organisations funded by MSF will coordinate and monitor services for the seniors such as home care, rehabilitation services and social activities.

Unlike MOH, MSF chooses to allocate subsidies to the needy person who needs it, not the place or room where he is receiving care. It is also not afraid to experiment with new care models. And what can be more scaleable and sustainable than letting people age in their own homes, with some support? Surely not the building of massive institutionalised nursing homes with large dormitory rooms.

As for financial justification, if IDA is prepared to subsidise a telco's entry into a market worth hundreds of millions a year, it is hard to understand MOH's reluctance to give subsidies to a new entrant in the nursing home market trying out a new model of care.

Bear in mind that the new home isn't asking for additional subsidies. It is merely requesting the same level of subsidies for its needy patients as the nursing home that packs the elderly 20 into a room.

Bear in mind too that global research suggests this new care model would be good for patients - and hence good for the healthcare system, if patients remain well and avoid the need for acute care.

Whether it's LTA, IDA or MOH, the regulator's job isn't to protect the current model or the big incumbents. Nor is it to impose rules to limit the harm that a new entrant may bring. Instead, the regulator should look at the potential for good in the new player. And if existing rules don't fit, maybe the problem is with the rules, not the new player.


New edition of Hitler's Mein Kampf goes on sale

$
0
0
Sale of anti-Semitic manifesto in Germany unsettles Jewish community leaders
The Straits Times, 9 Jan 2016

MUNICH • New copies of Hitler's Mein Kampf hit bookstores in Germany yesterday, for the first time since the end of World War II, unsettling Jewish community leaders as the copyright of the anti-Semitic manifesto expires.

The southern German state of Bavaria was handed the copyright of the book in 1945, when the Allies gave it control of the main Nazi publishing house following Adolf Hitler's defeat. For 70 years, it refused to allow the inflammatory tract to be republished out of respect for victims of the Nazis and to prevent incitement of hatred.

A Brief History Of Mein Kampf
Earlier in the week Mein Kampf went on sale again in Germany. As the controversial text gets republished, why are people keen to see the new edition and why are others desperate to ban it?
Posted by Sky News on Sunday, January 10, 2016


But Mein Kampf - which means My Struggle - fell into the public domain on Jan 1. Copies of an annotated version running to 2,000 pages prepared by German researchers went on sale yesterday, with the authors arguing that their version would serve to demystify the notorious rant, which in any case can be found just a few clicks away on the Internet.

The version by the Institute of Contemporary History of Munich (IFZ) has been in the works since 2009 and aims to "deconstruct and put into context Hitler's writing".

Retailing at €59 (S$92), the book looks at key historical questions, the IFZ said, including: "How were his theses conceived? What objectives did he have? And most important: which counter-arguments do we have, given our knowledge today of the countless claims, lies and assertions of Hitler?"

Education Minister Johanna Wanka has argued that such a version should be introduced to all German classrooms, saying it would serve to ensure that "Hitler's comments do not remain unchallenged". But the Jewish community questioned whether it was necessary to propagate the incendiary text again.

Partly autobiographical, Mein Kampf outlines Hitler's ideology that formed the basis for Nazism. He wrote it in 1924 while he was imprisoned in Bavaria for treason after his failed Beer Hall Putsch.

The book set out two ideas that he put into practice as Germany's leader going into World War II: annexing neighbouring countries to gain "Lebensraum", or "living space", for Germans; and his hatred of Jews, which led to the Holocaust. Some 12.4 million copies were published in Germany until 1945, some of which can be found in academic libraries.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE


























Edusave awards for poly students too

$
0
0
MOE extends Edusave to polytechnics, introduces award for non-academic excellence at polys and ITE
By Samantha Boh, The Sunday Times, 10 Jan 2016

Polytechnic students will be eligible for Edusave awards from next year.

Two categories - the Edusave Merit Bursary and Edusave Good Progress Award - will be extended to polytechnics.

Also, a new Edusave Skills Award will be introduced next year for polytechnics and the Institute of Technical Education (ITE) to recognise non-academic excellence, including achievements at conferences and competitions.


Acting Minister of Education (Higher Education and Skills) Ong Ye Kung, who made the announcement at an Edusave award ceremony at North View Primary School in Yishun yesterday, said poly students should be recognised with Edusave awards.


"They have also worked hard, achieved good results and made progress," he said.




Before this, the Edusave awards covered only primary and secondary schools, junior colleges and ITE.


The new Edusave Skills Award for polys and ITE will be given to 3,500 students every year.

The extension of the two awards and the new award will cost the Ministry of Education (MOE) up to $9 million yearly.

Since the Edusave award scheme was introduced in 1993, about 2.2 million awards have been given out.

This year, the MOE will hand out about 120,000 awards.

Mr Ong said the new Edusave Skills Award is timely as Singapore has embarked on a SkillsFuture movement to encourage students and working adults to deepen their skills. He said the new Edusave Skills Award will further encourage students to master skills.

Mr Dickson Ng, 20, who is doing an accountancy diploma at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, said the Edusave Awards are a further incentive to do well: "It is nice to know we are being included, that we are part of the conversation as Singapore changes its education landscape."

Yesterday, about 600 students in Ang Mo Kio GRC's Teck Ghee ward received Citizens' Consultative Committee bursary awards during a ceremony at Townsville Primary School. Secondary 1 student Nur Qysteena Dylalia Osman, 13, of Deyi Secondary, said the award will help her family with her school fees, stationery and phone bills.

Their MP, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, urged them to give back to society when they graduate.

"This bursary is a little bit of a help we can give you, to buy your school uniforms or textbooks or the necessary stationery for the year," he said. "Treat it also as an encouragement to work hard, do well, and do even better."

Additional reporting by Walter Sim








Edusave award recipient overcomes setbacks
By Rachel Au-Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

Ryan Sen Rajagopal failed his PSLE on his first try, but the Secondary 4 Normal (Technical) student has since topped his cohort twice, including last year.

For his hard work, the 17-year-old Chong Boon Secondary student was among 825 students in Ang Mo Kio GRC's Teck Ghee Ward to receive Edusave awards from their MP, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, yesterday.

Ranging from $100 to $500, the awards recognise students' achievements in academic work, co-curricular activities (CCAs) or character.

PM Lee noted that Ryan was a consistent performer who showed himself to be a capable leader, as monitor and also class chairman. He also represented his school in multimedia competitions.

Asked for the secret to his success, Ryan said: "Work hard, focus, and don't overthink things."

His academic improvement did not come overnight. Diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder at age four, he did not do well in his Secondary 1 exams as he did not feel motivated.

"But the next year, I really wanted to prove to my parents and teachers that anything was possible," he said.

With his parents' encouragement, Ryan went on to top his batch in the Secondary 2 and Secondary 3 exams. His next challenge is the N levels this year. He hopes to do well and pursue business-related courses at the Institute of Technical Education next year.

Congratulations to all those who received Teck Ghee CCC Bursary and Edusave Awards this weekend! Was happy to meet the...
Posted by Lee Hsien Loong on Sunday, January 10, 2016


Yesterday, PM Lee urged students to work hard, but also to look out for their classmates and pursue their passions, too.

"Study and do well, but also go beyond your studies to play your part. Care for your schoolmates so that you learn, share and prepare for your future, and lead others to do well, for all of us," he said.

PM Lee also met several award recipients. Upon discovering that Cassidy Tan, 12, who received three awards for her academic achievements and leadership skills, was enrolled in his alma mater National Junior College, PM Lee quipped: "That's a good school."

He also encouraged Raffles Institution student Jordan Tan, 12, to participate in more mathematics competitions. Jordan said he was grateful for the advice, but added: "I would have to think about it, as I would like to try new CCAs too."


JC or Poly? Make an informed choice

$
0
0
Key considerations include students' preferred learning styles and whether they have specific career inclinations
Published The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

Dear students,

Some of you will be collecting your O-level results today and an important decision awaits you about which progression pathway you should choose.

There are many options, including the junior colleges (JCs), polytechnics (polys), the Institute of Technical Education and the arts institutions.

You may wonder about the key differences between the JC and poly routes and I hope to provide you with some information to help you make an informed choice.

One key difference is the mode of learning. In JCs, there is more emphasis on understanding theoretical concepts while in polys, the emphasis is on building industry-relevant skills through applied learning.

As such, poly courses are oriented towards specific careers while JC ones tend to be more broad-based and academic.

JC students take a few core subjects and go deep into the subjects over two years; poly students take more "bite-sized" modules that build on one another over three years.

On average, a poly student takes about five to seven modules per semester, and there are two semesters in an academic year.

The assessment approach is also different. I think most of you are aware that JC students take the A-level exams at one sitting at the end of two years. In the polys, students' results for every module that they take over the three years count towards the cumulative grade point average.

So what does this all mean?

A key consideration would be your preferred learning style: Do you prefer a more academic mode of learning or a more applied, hands-on type of learning?

When you were in secondary school, did you enjoy hands-on learning activities like laboratory sessions and project work?

Another key consideration would be whether you currently have a clear passion and inclination for specific careers.

For example, you might be drawn to the caring profession and you have the disposition and passion to pursue a career in nursing. In such a case, the poly route would be a good choice.

If you have no specific career inclinations now and would like to keep your options open, you may want to consider the JC route.

If you should choose to join a poly, you need to decide on a course. The five polys offer close to 250 diploma courses in total, so you do need a strategy to pick the right one.

My advice is to start by picking the clusters of courses that you might be interested in.

There are nine main clusters: engineering, built environment, maritime studies, health sciences, applied sciences, information and digital technologies, media and design, business management, and humanities.

Try to get a sense of the broad clusters you are interested in based on your passion and strengths. Think about which subjects you are passionate about and tend to do well in. For example, if you are very strong in mathematics and physics and you like making or fixing things, you may want to look at the engineering and built environment clusters. If you have a strong flair for creative work, you may want to look at the media and design cluster.

After identifying the relevant clusters, shortlist the courses of interest within the cluster.

At this point, it is important to read up on the course curriculum and career prospects of the different courses. You can typically get this information from the polys' prospectus or from their websites.

You can also visit the polys during the Joint Admissions Exercise to speak to the course counsellors.

Another point to note is that unlike the JCs, which follow a broad curriculum framework set by the Ministry of Education, the polys have the autonomy to design their own course curricula.

Hence, even diplomas in the same broad areas may have different emphasis and coverage when offered by different polys. The key is to find a course that fits your interest and strengths.

Your choice of courses should precede your choice of polys.

Let me explain this a little more. Say you are extremely interested in aerospace engineering and decide to choose aerospace engineering at Poly A as your first choice.

The logical second and third choices would be aerospace engineering in Poly B and Poly C, respectively, so that you maximise your chances of getting into your preferred course.

For some students, their priority is to get into a particular poly and they would rather choose courses that they are less interested in, to get into their poly of choice.

This may result in sub-optimal outcomes. Go for what you are interested in and good at. In any case, I do honestly believe that all five polys offer excellent learning experiences, so getting into the course of your choice should be a priority.

I hope I have offered you some help in making this very important decision. Do take some time to ponder over it and discuss it with your parents, teachers, and education and career guidance counsellors.

It leaves me to wish you all the very best, whichever route you may choose to take.

Remember that the future is what you make of it!

With best regards,

Ms Jeanne Liew
Principal & CEO
Nanyang Polytechnic




O-Level graduates, here’s a list of our Junior Colleges (JCs) Open House dates!12 Jan• Anderson JC:...
Posted by Ministry of Education, Singapore on Monday, January 11, 2016





JC v Poly: The pros and cons
This is a choice that will determine the rest of your life, or so some say. To help you decide your path, IN runs down the pros and cons of life in a junior college and polytechnic
By Nur Syahiidah Zainal, The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

UNI DREAMS

More JC students get places in local universities, with about 70 per cent of each cohort managing to secure places.

Last year, the number of polytechnic students accepted to local universities increased to 20 per cent of the polytechnic cohort, compared to 15 per cent a few years before, due to the six universities increasing the number of places on offer.

This raised the total rate of entry by polytechnic graduates and A-level school-leavers into university – called the cohort participation rate (CPR) – to 32 per cent. The Ministry of Education aims to reach the target CPR of 40 per cent by 2020.

So, no JC means no uni place? Not exactly true.

OH STRESS!

JC life is dictated by timetables: students go to school Mondays to Fridays and take CCAs – much like in secondary school.

Polytechnic life may appear less stressful, thanks to a less intensive timetable which may show more free periods or even days where there are no classes.

However, all that free time does not equal more fun. Just like in JC, free time usually goes towards completing assignments or studying for tests or exams.

Some courses, such as those specialising in communications or design, can also be assignment-intensive – which means that students are required to complete several projects at regular intervals throughout a semester for their various modules.

“Hell week” – or that dreaded week when projects for several different modules are all due at the same time – is when students pull all-nighters, sometimes even sleeping in school to work on their assignments to ensure they meet the deadlines.

Also, polytechnic students need focus and discipline to maintain their grades, as their results are calculated cumulatively over the three years. Lecturers will not chase them for missing assignments.

Students are also required to have 75 per cent attendance before they can pass a module.

So all that talk about how much easier it is for them to cut class? Forget it.

SCHOOL TIES

Many people have the impression that a JC student does not have a good social life – how is it possible to have any fun when an insane amount of time is spent not just on studying, but also on their CCAs?

Furthermore, the major school events on a JC students’ calendar, such as Sports Day and cross-country runs, sound completely uninspiring next to posters proclaiming the cool events happening in various polys such as jam-and-hops (dance parties) or Halloween parties.

However, the way students are allotted into classes and faculties means that it is easier for a JC student to build school ties and maintain a wide social circle.

Polytechnic students tend to gather in small groups and some courses may be so small that it provides a social circle the size of an onion ring.

LECTURE RUNWAY

One often-touted perk of being a polytechnic student is that “you can wear whatever you want”.

However, there is also a little thing called a dress code. Each polytechnic has its own, but some general rules include no provocative or revealing attire, or no attire with offensive messages.

True, most polytechnic students are raring to flaunt their individuality right at the beginning, but most will eventually end up being affected by some combination of boredom, laziness and the inevitable “but I have nothing to wear” syndrome.

Except for the die-hard clotheshorses, most will just revert to comfortable basics by the time they hit the halfway mark in their courses.

Plus, some JC uniforms can really be quite chic.

Figure-flattering A-line skirts or fun hoodies and varsity jackets? Yes, please!

A uniform may not be the most exciting thing in the world, but hey, no outfit-induced headaches in the morning and a sense of belonging to a particular school? Enjoy it while it lasts.

TIME TO SPARE?

In general, the JC route to university is accelerated, and takes two years. The polytechnic path will take you about three years or so.

However, the longer polytechnic option ends with a diploma and better prepares you for the workforce. So if you are in a hurry to enter the job market, this may be better option. After all, with lifelong learning now a big focus, you can study part time to get more credentials later.

WHAT TO STUDY

The JC route covers a broad range of academic subjects, allowing students to have a “taste” of different disciplines before having to make up their mind on a specialisation when they enter university.

This is a huge boon to students who are not sure about what they want to do as a career.

However, some students have their eyes firmly on an end goal and polytechnic allows them to focus only on what they need for their chosen specialisation.

Also, the sheer number of courses on offer across the five polytechnics here has always been a point of pride for both the institutions and students.

Want to learn how to concoct perfume or train elite athletes? Or learn to care for animals or stop major online security breaches?

Well, the polytechnics offer courses specialising in all these interests and more.

But that does not mean that the A-Levels subjects JC students take are inferior. By focusing on scholastic skills, students may end up better prepared for the academic rigours of university.

Besides stalwarts such as computing, and theatre studies and drama, interesting new additions, such as English language and linguistics, and China studies in English, are now available.





School posting after O-level results
By Sandra Davie, Senior Education Correspondent, The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

Q My son will be receiving his O-level results today. Can I know how posting is done for those applying to the junior colleges and polytechnics? How many choices are students allowed? What happens if a student does not get any of his choices?

A To enter a junior college (JC), a student's L1R5 score - based on O-level results for English and five relevant subjects - must not exceed 20 points. To enter a polytechnic, a student needs a total score - based on the O-level results for English, two relevant and two best subjects - which does not exceed 26 points.

But if more high-performing students apply for a certain course, with a certain planned intake, the cut-off point is likely to be lower.

Applicants are posted to a course according to their net aggregate scores, which take into account the various bonus points for which the applicants are eligible.

Applicants with better net aggregate scores (except those applying for nursing courses at Nanyang and Ngee Ann Polytechnic) will be considered for admission first, subject to the availability of vacancies. If there are no vacancies, then the applicant will be considered for his next choice of course.

Where there are two or more applicants with the same net aggregate score vying for the last place in a course, then Singapore citizens will be given priority, followed by Singapore permanent residents, then international students.

If there is still a tie, say between two Singapore citizens, the one with the better gross aggregate score will be posted to the course first. If there is still a tie between two citizens with the same gross aggregate scores, posting to the course will be determined by a computerised ballot.

Those who apply for the nursing courses as their first choice will be given priority consideration as long as they meet the minimum entry requirement for the course, which includes a minimum D7 for English and C6 for Mathematics and another science subject.

If your son is unsuccessful in getting a place in any of his registered choices, he will be posted to an institution as follows:
- To a JC course with vacancies, if he has indicated a JC course as his first choice. This is subject to his meeting the net L1R5 aggregate of the lowest ranked students who were admitted to the JC course.
- To a Millennia Institute (MI) course with vacancies, if he had chosen an MI course as his first choice.
- To a polytechnic course with vacancies, if he had indicated a poly course as his first choice. This is subject to his meeting the minimum entry requirements for the course.
- Those who had indicated a Higher Nitec course as their first choice will be given a place in a higher Nitec course with vacancies. Again, he or she must meet the course's minimum entry requirement.

If an applicant changes his mind, he may apply for a transfer to another course or institution only after the release of the posting results.

They will be evaluated on a case- by-case basis by the institution they have approached, and a place may be granted only when compelling reasons are presented and vacancies are available.






Polys step up effort to guide O-level grads in next chapter
All five polys have set up dedicated career guidance units and are organising more activities for students, parents
By Sandra Davie, Senior Education Correspondent, The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

The five polytechnics are pulling out all the stops to help O-level school leavers make the right decision in furthering their education.

Republic, Nanyang, Ngee Ann, Temasek and Singapore polytechnics have all set up dedicated education and career guidance units within their campuses last year and staffed them with specialists trained in career counselling.

The polytechnics have for years held talks, camps and open houses to familiarise secondary school students with what they offer. But recently, they have stepped up their activities to reach out to more students and give them in-depth guidance. In recent months, they have held talks and workshops for parents as well.

Ms Irene Chin, a career counsellor at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, said students are often unsure of the post-secondary courses they want to pursue.

The Find Your Dream Course workshop that the polytechnic conducts regularly aims to help school leavers understand what motivates them and the values that are important to them.

"We have come up with an exercise, which helps students better understand themselves - if they are more people-oriented, interested in business or more into science and technology or media and design," said Ms Chin.

"We also help them think about what would motivate them at work - recognition, financial freedom, community service or personal freedom - people who like to do their own thing, their own way.

"Then, we help them match their interests and values to the right courses in polytechnic."

Ms Jeanne Liew, principal of Nanyang Polytechnic, said students often aim to get into the more competitive junior colleges or polytechnic courses because they see them as being prestigious.

"They should instead be looking for the JC or poly course that best suits their interests and aptitude."

Figures released by the Ministry of Education (MOE) last year show that 400 to 500 students switch from a junior college to a polytechnic each year. On the flip side, the numbers going the other way are small. MOE figures show only 50 to 60 polytechnic students move to a junior college each year.

To enter a junior college, a student's L1R5 score - based on O-level results for English and five relevant subjects - must not exceed 20 points. Polytechnics require the total score for English and four other subjects not to exceed 26 points.

Republic Polytechnic principal Yeo Li Pheow said it is important for students to find a polytechnic course with the right fit.

"It may take a bit of time and effort, but once they find a course they are really interested in, they excel at it," he said, adding that parents should take an active role in helping their children decide on their post-secondary path.

"Sometimes parents get upset when their children apply for a course that they think has poor job prospects.

"But if they attend the talks and workshops, they may find out that it is a hot new area with good prospects. Besides, their child may really have the aptitude for the field."

Students Samantha Yeo and Nuovo Tan, both 16, attended the career counselling workshop at Ngee Ann Polytechnic last Thursday, and said they found it useful.

Nuovo, a student at Jurong Secondary, said: "I am interested in both the JC and polytechnic route so I am exploring all options.

"But as far as poly courses go, I am leaning towards the sustainable urban design and engineering course. After attending the workshop, I realised that the course suits my interest, which is in science and technology. I hope to go on to study architecture in university."

Samantha, who attends Kuo Chuan Presbyterian Secondary, said she was deciding between the mass communications and biomedical science courses.

After attending the workshop and talking to lecturers at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, she realised that mass communications suits her better.

"I am a people-oriented person and love interacting with people from all walks of life, so a course that would allow me to go into journalism or public relations would suit me," she said.

Ngee Ann Polytechnic principal Clarence Ti said students should follow their dreams, but it is also important to "ground their dreams in reality". "It is great if they land a place in the course they want, but at the end of the day, they have to work hard at honing their skills and knowledge in the field, understand the industry and know where to seek the right opportunities."

He said the polys offer schemes including mentorship programmes and multiple internships for students to get more work experience.

"All these programmes offered by the polytechnics allow students to hone their skills, and gain a better understanding of the industry and the jobs that may suit them. Students should seize the opportunities available to them at the polytechnics."





Best O-level results since 1978
83.8% got at least five passes last year, bettering 83.3% mark of 2014 cohort
By Calvin Yang, The Straits Times, 12 Jan 2016

Students who sat the O levels last year have outperformed their seniors at the national exam, putting in the best showing in nearly four decades going back to 1978.

Of the students who took the exam, 83.8 per cent attained at least five passes, surpassing the 83.3 per cent mark set by the 2014 cohort, which was the first to breach the 83 per cent mark. In addition, 96.1 per cent attained at least three passes. Normal (Academic) students and private candidates also did better than in the previous year.

Associate Professor Jason Tan, an education policy expert at the National Institute of Education, said the solid showing was due to schools here doing a better job of preparing their students for the crucial national exam, which determines their eligibility for post-secondary education.

Dr Timothy Chan, director of SIM Global Education's academic division, said better teaching and learning resources played a role.

"Many schools have adopted differentiated learning that caters to the different needs of students. Students these days are encouraged to think and communicate their ideas," he added. "This helps teachers understand their students better."

Dr Chan also pointed out there have been fewer students taking the O levels in recent years, with more skipping them and moving on to a higher level in the Integrated Programme. A total of 29,723 students took the O-level exam last year, compared with 30,964 students in the class of 2014. In the few years before that, over 34,000 took it.

View photos of our students receiving their O-Level examination results today at Yishun Secondary School and Chung Cheng...
Posted by Ministry of Education, Singapore on Monday, January 11, 2016


As with recent years, the Education Ministry did not name the top scorers when it released the results yesterday. This did not stop schools from celebrating their top achievers. At Bowen Secondary, the top three and the three most improved students from each class got applause from their classmates.

The school also recognised those who showed resilience under difficult circumstances, such as student Nicole Wee. The 17-year-old, who had a blood viral infection weeks before the exam period in October, had to prepare for and sit the O levels from a room inside her ward at the Singapore General Hospital.

But she never felt alone as her teachers and classmates would visit with notes and practice papers. Her teachers also coached her when she needed help. Bowen Secondary principal Bernard Chew said: "We are celebrating more than the results. We want to celebrate the values and lessons they've learnt along the way."

At Chung Cheng High School (Main), the students who had received at least five distinctions were named when principal Chan Ying Yin presented the results. Among them was Jessica Glazov, 16, who received six A1s and three A2s. She said: "The teachers... would go the extra mile to help us in our studies."

In a Facebook post yesterday, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong congratulated the students. "For many of you, this marks the end of one chapter and the beginning of another," he said. "Whichever path you choose, I wish you all the best as you start on your next adventure."


Could your child be experimenting with drugs?

$
0
0
CNB says the number of young abusers and first-time abusers arrested is on the rise
By Jenny Yeo, Published The Straits Times, 11 Jan 2016

"Not my child! Not possible!" Stanley's parents insisted.

Stanley is from a middle-class family and doing well in school. When his parents received a call from the police about his arrest for drug abuse, they simply could not believe it. It had never crossed their mind that their child could be exposed to drugs, let alone using them.

Stanley later revealed that he was bored and looking for a new experience. His friends had urged him to try cannabis as they had read on the Internet that it had been legalised in some countries and was less harmful and less addictive than tobacco or alcohol. Stanley and his friends also trusted pro-cannabis websites and bloggers who claimed that they could take and drop the drug at will. So, he thought he could "just try it".

The fact is, cannabis is harmful and addictive. Trying it once can be enough to get the abuser hooked. These drugs alter the chemicals in the brain and control the abuser. There is no such thing as a "soft" drug; all drugs are harmful and addictive, and lead to legal consequences in Singapore when abused.

According to the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB), the number of young abusers and first-time abusers arrested is on the rise. Youth are experimenting with drugs like cannabis, also known as marijuana, pot, grass, joint or ganja, which they mistakenly think of as being safe. The profile of these young and new abusers is changing. Often, they are students who are doing well academically and socially. As a result, they tend to go undetected until they are addicted.

"The only choice is to stay away from drugs," said movie star Jackie Chan, Singapore's first celebrity anti-drug ambassador, who added that younger people "increasingly see drugs as a personal choice" when the reality is that one cannot experiment with drugs and not expect to be addicted.

Chan speaks from his own painful experience as his 32-year-old son Jaycee served six months in prison last year for drug offences. Chan said he was "shocked" and "ashamed" when he first found out.

He said: "I asked myself: 'How is this possible?' In the past, I used to just let him do whatever he wanted, but now I know he is still a boy. Youth nowadays think drugs are fun - (but) it will hurt you. Not just that, it will harm your family as well. "

Like sexuality education, preventive drug education cannot be treated as a taboo topic. If we do not talk to our children about it, they will find out elsewhere, which might lead them astray. Parents and teachers are strong influencers in dissuading young people from experimenting with drugs. As parents, it is our responsibility to educate ourselves and our children. Our children need to know that drug abuse is very harmful to our bodies and it is illegal in Singapore, even if the drugs are consumed overseas. Sometimes, parents may not intervene early enough due to denial and it can end in tragedy.

Monitor your child's activities and be alert to any sudden change in his or her circle of friends or behaviour. Look out for warning signs such as:
- Sudden weight lost
- Chronic fatigue, loss of appetite and excessive thirst
- Sudden and extreme mood swings
- Anxiety
- Fear
- Short-term memory loss and runny nose (not due to allergies) and
- Problems with eyes (for example, bloodshot eyes, dilated pupils and imprecise eye movements).
Most importantly, always keep the communication lines open so that your children can turn to you for help.

Chan, who was here in August last year, said: "Right now, Jaycee just holes up in his room, writing songs... He doesn't dare to face the world and the media. But I told him, you need to face them. Everyone makes mistakes - we just need to recover from them."

In Singapore, first-time young abusers below 21 years old receive help in different ways according to their risk profile. Those at low risk go through the Youth Enhanced Supervision pathway where they report daily. Young abusers at moderate risk go to the Community Rehabilitation Centre while those at high risk go to the Drug Rehabilitation Centre.

Various agencies and authorities in Singapore are set up to help young people stop their use of drugs; legal punishment is the last resort. Reaching out to these agencies proactively gives them and young people a much better chance of success.

The CNB emphasises that early intervention is critical in helping youths kick the bad habit and prevent them from the typical vicious circle of stealing money and selling drugs to sustain their drug habit.

If your child is at risk, keep calm, be objective, supportive, patient and understanding as you point out the dangers. Encourage them to avoid the group that introduced them to drugs. Seek professional help such as contacting the National Addictions Management Service (NAMS) on 6732-6837 immediately if you detect that your child is experimenting or in trouble.

Jenny Yeo was a principal for 18 years in Kheng Cheng School, Radin Mas Primary School and South View Primary School. She is a lead associate, focusing on partnerships and engagement, in the engagement and research division of the Ministry of Education.



Softer robotic glove for stroke patients

$
0
0
NUS invention more comfortable, lighter to use during rehabilitation
By Linette Lai, The Straits Times, 12 Jan 2016

A team from the National University of Singapore (NUS) has invented a robotic glove with rubbery "fingers" designed to help stroke patients with rehabilitation.

It detects a patient's intention to perform a hand action, such as picking up a pen, and helps the patient move his or her fingers to accomplish the task.



Unlike traditional metal gloves used for rehabilitation, the new glove is made of stretchy cloth and silicone rubber. It weighs around 200g - significantly lighter than the alternatives, which are usually between 400g and 500g.

The new glove also better mimics a patient's natural hand movements, say doctors, and is more comfortable to wear.

"The usual hard robotic gloves have rigid linkages and joints, and they can cause quite a lot of discomfort for patients," said Assistant Professor Raye Yeow, who is from the university's department of biomedical engineering.

"They don't provide the natural range of movement," said Prof Yeow, who specialises in soft robotics and is a key member of the research team.

There was an average of 5,868 stroke incidences each year from 2005 to 2013, according to the National Registry of Diseases Office.

A stroke can leave a person partially paralysed on one side of his body, including the hand.

"The purpose of (such gloves) is to prevent stiffness and wasting of the muscle by mobilising the joints," Prof Yeow said.

The team's invention is equipped with radio frequency identification technology, which tells the glove which hand posture to adopt.

Faced with an object tagged as an egg, for example, the glove flexes into a pinching position, rather than the grip one uses to hold a water bottle.

The next step, said Prof Yeow, is to conduct a six-month trial on 30 stroke patients to look at how effective the glove is in helping them recover hand function.

Using magnetic resonance imaging, the team will also see how the patient's brain is stimulated during such therapy sessions.


Some $150m of unclaimed money held by government ministries and courts

$
0
0
Funds held by govt ministries and courts for beneficiaries, creditors of the deceased
By Priscilla Goy, The Straits Times, 13 Jan 2016

At least 34,000 people and businesses have yet to claim money from a pool of almost $150 million which is being held by government ministries and the courts, The Straits Times has discovered.

Much of it has been forgotten by its owners, with more than 95 per cent held by the Ministry of Law (MinLaw) on behalf of beneficiaries of deceased estates, pawnbrokers and creditors of insolvent estates.

The amount rose to $148.4 million as of the end of last year - 10 per cent more than in 2014, and more than double the figure in 2012.

The sum - revealed to ST by the Ministry of Finance (MOF) - excludes unclaimed money held by statutory boards as they are not required to report individual amounts to the MOF.

In 2013, unclaimed money held by ministries and courts jumped 75 per cent to $118.5 million.

The MOF previously put this down to a reclassification of money as being unclaimed after repeated unsuccessful attempts to trace the whereabouts of the beneficiaries.

An MOF spokesman said: "All government agencies, including statutory boards, are required to make all reasonable efforts to return monies to the rightful owners promptly."

This includes contacting their next-of-kin, sending reminder letters and trying to obtain the latest addresses of the beneficiaries to contact them and make refunds.

The MOF also has an online register of claimants at www.unclaimedmonies.gov.sg.

Anyone wanting to check an outstanding claim can type their name or that of their business into a search bar. Individual amounts left unclaimed are not listed.

If money is left unclaimed by its rightful owner, it is usually transferred into general government funds after six years.

The MOF spokesman said: "All valid claims will be repaid, regardless of where the monies are held or when these claims date back to."

For MinLaw records, visitors to the unclaimed money register will be redirected to the MinLaw website, which has three lists and over 30,000 entries.

The Ministry of Manpower has 2,244 entries listed on the unclaimed monies register, mostly factory registration fees and levy bonds.

Among the companies owed factory registration fees is Ching Motor Repair Shop, which is co-owned by Mr Chin Kok Ming, 50.

"We have not received any notification letters. I am not aware of the website either, and old people like us are not as familiar with the Internet," he said in Mandarin, after ST found his company name on the register and contacted him. He said he will check the register for more details, but may not claim the money if it is too inconvenient.

Last Monday, a new online register for unclaimed insurance pay-outs was set up, but it crashed at 11am after people rushed to access it.

The site, www.lia.org.sg/consumers/unclaimed-proceeds/list, has since gone back online.

The funds are from small-value policies that policyholders or their beneficiaries failed to collect.

It is believed that insurance companies are sitting on millions in unclaimed proceeds from life policies. The Life Insurance Association (LIA), which set up the register, could not reveal the exact figure.


Have a question? Ask ST

$
0
0
Tap the paper's pool of seasoned writers for information on health, finance, cars and more
By Chew Hui Min, The Straits Times, 13 Jan 2016

Have a question, and tried Googling it, but still can't tell fact from fiction? From today, you can try asking ST.

The Straits Times is launching askST, a new reader engagement programme where readers will be able to tap ST's experienced pool of correspondents and their contacts for information on topics ranging from personal finance and education to entertainment and health matters.

Wondering when is the best time to buy a new car? Ask ST senior transport correspondent Christopher Tan, who has been covering developments in motoring and public transport for more than a decade.


Still unclear about how MediShield Life affects you and your family? ST's senior health correspondent Salma Khalik may have answers for you.

Worried about which school to choose for your child now that the O-level results have been announced? Ask our veteran education correspondent Sandra Davie.

Want to know which tablet will best suit your needs? ST's digital correspondents have road-tested the latest models and can present the pros and cons of various models in different price ranges.

ST's food, travel and entertainment correspondents will also share their views on the best places to check out.

Said Straits Times editor Warren Fernandez: "We live in a fast-moving and complex world, and naturally we all have many questions we would like answers to. Time and again, ST readers turn to our experienced correspondents for help.

"We decided to formalise this and make it easier for readers to engage with our writers and tap their knowledge and expertise that comes with covering their beats."

Readers will be able to get answers to their burning questions in a variety of ways: through explainers on the ST website, by e-mailing their questions, via regular webchats, and during events and forums the newspaper organises.

A new website will be launched later this month which will serve as a repository of answers to readers' questions, as well as an easy way for them to get in touch with the newsroom's pool of seasoned writers.

Each week, selected questions will be answered and featured on the website.

You can e-mail your questions from today to askst@sph.com.sg and they may be chosen to be featured with the launch of the site on Jan 31.

The site will also feature regular columns from ST, including Why It Matters - a snappy analysis of an issue of the day; The ST Guide To... - beginners' guides written by ST experts; and explainers - articles that help readers make sense of current affairs and issues.

It is a quick one-stop shop readers can use.


SAF refutes claims that parachutes are packed by Chinese contractors

$
0
0
Riggers undergo training conducted by the SAF master rigger and this is "benchmarked against the United States Federal Aviation Administration (US FAA) standards", says Chief Commando Officer, Colonel Simon Lim.
Channel NewsAsia, 12 Jan 2016

The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) fully employs parachute riggers, particularly for key operations and training, while the parachute packing function has been outsourced to Singapore Technologies, the SAF said on Tuesday (Jan 12).

Some of you may have seen online speculation about the packing of the SAF parachute. Here’s what Chief Commando Officer,...
Posted by The Singapore Army on Tuesday, January 12, 2016


Chief Commando Officer, Colonel (Col) Simon Lim said this in a Facebook post responding to an original post written by one Leslie Ang made on Jan 10, purporting that the parachutes are being packed by China contractors. The post had gained traction online, and had been shared more than 900 times. 

Channel NewsAsia understands the confusion could be due to the acronym PRC in the post. Mr Ang concluded that it meant the People's Republic of China, but instead, it stands for Pasir Ris Camp, where some riggers are based. 

"In order to optimise our resources, we have outsourced the parachute-packing function to Singapore Technologies (ST) – a reputable local company," added Col Lim. 

Many of the members of staff packing the parachutes are former riggers from the Commando Formation and all are "trained and competent in their roles", he added.


SALUTE to the personnel who ensure that all our Commandos make their airborne jumps safe and sound!!! Read here http://on.fb.me/1ShFSGf to see what The Singapore Army said!
Posted by SGAG on Wednesday, January 13, 2016


Col Lim said that the training undergone by the riggers is conducted by the SAF master rigger and "benchmarked against the United States Federal Aviation Administration (US FAA) standards".

Col Lim added that the master rigger certifies ST's staff to pack the parachutes and "closely supervises" the packing process. 

"ST has been packing parachutes for us since 2010, and there have been zero parachute reliability issues," said Col Lim.

"THERE IS NO ROOM FOR ERROR"

In a Facebook post on Tuesday night, the SAF shared what the parachute packing process is like.

"Each parachute is packed by one packer and one checker in which there are no changes in personnel throughout the packing process. The Singapore Technologies (ST) staff only assume the packer role while the checker will always be an SAF Rigger," the SAF said.

Ever wonder why the elite Commandos have full confidence in our SAF Riggers?"There's no room for error...Their lives...
Posted by The Singapore Army on Tuesday, January 12, 2016


It added that at the end of each stage of the packing process, the packer would call for a check by a SAF Rigger, who ensures that the parachute is packed correctly. The Riggers also conduct safety inspections at each stage before allowing the packer to proceed to the next stage of the packing process.

Certified Master Rigger 3WO Shirley Ng also related the importance of her task in the Facebook post.

“There is no room for error. Their (the soldiers) lives depend on us. Every check is critical, and every parachute is inspected at each stage of the packing process before proceeding to the next," she said.

"I have 100 per cent confidence in the parachutes that we (the soldiers) jumped with," she added.






I'd painfully struggled for 2 days, weighing the pros and cons before I made a decision to pen this post. Learnt from...
Posted by Leslie Ang on Sunday, January 10, 2016






I am curious as to why that 'fellow brother-in-arm' did not tell you that the riggers have to jump with the parachutes...
Posted by Fabrications About The PAP on Tuesday, January 12, 2016







These are some of our Pasir Ris Camp or PRC riggers. Their motto is "I WILL ALWAYS BE SURE". Do you know that to...
Posted by Singapore Matters on Tuesday, January 12, 2016












This was my last jump with my buddies while in The Singapore Army. We just landed in Sembawang Airbase after jumping...
Posted by Tan Chuan-Jin on Tuesday, January 12, 2016







SALUTE to the personnel who ensure that all our Commandos make their airborne jumps safe and sound!!! Read here http://on.fb.me/1ShFSGf to see what The Singapore Army said!
Posted by SGAG on Wednesday, January 13, 2016




China to ease green card rules to draw foreign talent

$
0
0
By Kor Kian Beng, China Bureau Chief In Beijing, The Straits Times, 13 Jan 2016

In its search for more foreign talent to help create a more enterprising and innovative economy, China will roll out new initiatives from March 1 to make it easier for foreigners, especially ethnic Chinese, to obtain the elusive Chinese green card.

Ethnic Chinese - such as former Chinese nationals now holding foreign citizenship and possibly foreign-born Chinese such as Singaporeans - who have a doctorate or have worked for four years in the Zhongguancun high-tech park can apply for the green card.

This is among the 10 initiatives unveiled yesterday to attract skilled foreigners, overseas- based Chinese citizens, foreign students, entrepreneurs and creative talent to the high-tech park located in Beijing's western Haidian district and dubbed China's "Silicon Valley".

Beijing city itself will adopt another package of 10 initiatives introduced in Shanghai last July to ease visa and immigration rules for foreign talent and increase their chances of securing permanent residency.

One of the Shanghai initiatives allows a foreigner who has earned 600,000 yuan (S$131,000) and paid 120,000 yuan in taxes for each of the past four consecutive years to apply for the green card, which will do away with the need for work visas and give the cardholder access to public services.

The Public Security Ministry, which announced the 20 initiatives on its website, did not give details on the salary and tax requirements for Beijing's scheme.

It said the aim is to attract foreign talent to Zhongguancun and Beijing, following calls by President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang since 2013 for the park to lead China's efforts to boost innovation, which is deemed crucial in its economic transformation.

"The crux of competition between countries is the battle for global talent, who are crucial in seizing new opportunities and upgrading industries," said a Public Security Ministry spokesman.

Chinese permanent residency is one of the hardest to get, with only an average of 248 green cards issued a year since 2004.

A senior official in charge of Zhongguancun had proposed last November an "overseas Chinese card" allowing holders to enjoy permanent residency status. But the card is not among the new initiatives.

Singaporean James Tan, 40, who qualifies under the Zhongguancun initiative as he has worked in a venture capital firm at the park since 2011, is keen to apply for the green card - for patriotic reasons.

He has not been able to celebrate the Aug 9 National Day in Singapore with his family since 2010 as his work permit expires every August and his passport is held by the immigration authorities for three weeks for renewal.

"I'm definitely going to apply as it means I will be able to finally celebrate National Day back home," Mr Tan told The Straits Times.

IT director Chen Yang, 55, a former Chinese national who took up Japanese citizenship in 1997 and possesses a PhD, is keen to get a green card as it could allow him to visit his clients from the Chinese military units.

"I'm getting on in age and my family members are all in China. A green card will help me in settling back here," he told The Straits Times.

Singaporean Nick Song, 44, a partner at a law firm and based in Beijing for 11 years, said he would not be keen if becoming a Chinese permanent resident meant his global income would be subject to Chinese tax rates.

Immigration law expert Liu Guofu of the Beijing Institute of Technology said the new initiatives will make Beijing the most open Chinese city to foreigners, who now make up less than 1 per cent of the capital's workforce.

On why one of Zhongguancun's initiatives targets the ethnic Chinese, he said: "This is because they, due to a common language and culture, feel the strongest affinity for China and have the strongest incentive to get a green card."

Additional reporting by Carol Feng





Drawing ethnic Chinese and other talent
By Kor Kian Beng, The Straits Times, 13 Jan 2016

• Foreign talent and family can enjoy "express service" in applying for China's green card, with a recommendation from Zhongguancun's administrative committee.

• A special office will be set up in Zhongguancun to handle green card applications and inquiries.

• Processing time for applications will be shortened from 180 days to within 50 days.

• Ethnic Chinese who set up companies in Zhongguancun can apply for work permits with a validity of five years.

• Ethnic Chinese who hold a doctorate or have worked for four years in Zhongguancun can apply for a green card, provided they accumulate more than six months of residence in China within a calendar year.

• A points-based system will be set up in Zhongguancun for foreign talent, with those who meet the requirements eligible for a green card.

• Foreign students will be allowed to take up short-term internships and to run their own start-ups in Zhongguancun.

• Beyond Zhongguancun, Beijing will allow foreigners who meet salary and tax requirements to apply for a green card, adopting a similar scheme from Shanghai that stipulates 600,000 yuan (S$131,000) in annual income and 120,000 yuan in taxes for each of the past four consecutive years.

• Foreigners who have successfully obtained two work permits with a validity of two to five years are eligible to get a five-year permit subsequently.

• Foreigners from a select group of nationalities will be allowed to stay in Beijing for no more than 144 hours without requiring an entry visa.

• Foreign talent who have a green card or long-term work permit will be allowed to employ foreigners as domestic helpers. Currently, they cannot do so.


Viewing all 7506 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>