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    * Millennia Institute (MI)

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Tertiary Education - A-Levels, Diplomas, Degrees
    226 Posts 48 Posters 55.0k Views
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    • J Offline
      jetsetter
      last edited by

      Nebbermind:
      in summary, while it's not impossible, it's also not too rosy! πŸ¦†

      Nothing is impossible. One can keep trying and retake a few times until one gets into the desired uni course, but at the end of the day, you've to ask yourself, is that uni course going to help me in securing good employment n income? You've taken the longer pathway, econ cycles have come and gone, new talents have joined the pool and my peers have started bringing dough back home, but I am still mugging...

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • janet88J Offline
        janet88
        last edited by

        Nebbermind:
        in summary, while it's not impossible, it's also not too rosy! πŸ¦†

        i told my son, nothing is rosy whether he takes the poly route or the MI route. like what jetsetter mentioned, will the uni course be able to secure good employment & income to sustain the family?

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        • NebbermindN Offline
          Nebbermind
          last edited by

          janet88:
          Nebbermind:

          in summary, while it's not impossible, it's also not too rosy! πŸ¦†


          i told my son, nothing is rosy whether he takes the poly route or the MI route. like what jetsetter mentioned, will the uni course be able to secure good employment & income to sustain the family?

          well, that would be another 10 years time (MI/NS/Uni = 3/3/4 (post-NS waste > half year waiting for uni). Just focus on what is at hand (MI) lah!!

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          • janet88J Offline
            janet88
            last edited by

            now we wait for 2nd feb for the posting results. before that, we all crow like roosters. ζ­ε–œε‘θ΄’οΌŒεΏƒζƒ³δΊ‹ζˆγ€‚

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            • janet88J Offline
              janet88
              last edited by

              hi parents,

              may i enquire for year 1 students in science stream, do they learn H1 and H2 subjects or just H1??
              thanks.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • M Offline
                mathtuition88
                last edited by

                Just to point out that this article \"1 in 3 local university students admitted last year is a polytechnic student\": http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/1-in-3-local-university-students-admitted-last-year-is-a-polytechnic-student

                can be quite misleading.

                If one reads their definition of local university, one finds that SIM University (UniSIM) and Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) are included. SIM is considered a private university (possible to become 6th Autonomous University but only very recently). SIT is specially catered for poly students, so naturally admits many poly graduates.

                Hence, if one excludes SIM/SIT from the figures, most likely the figure is much lower than one-third.

                In short, it is quite hard for poly graduates to enter the 3 universities NUS/NTU/SMU.
                A poly GPA of 3.7 to 3.8 (around top 10% of cohort) is needed to enter NUS (excluding nursing, which is an exception since it is unpopular). For JC students, a grade of BBC will be sufficient to enter NUS, which is nowhere near the top 10% of the cohort.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • floppyF Offline
                  floppy
                  last edited by

                  mathtuition88:
                  Just to point out that this article \"1 in 3 local university students admitted last year is a polytechnic student\": http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/1-in-3-local-university-students-admitted-last-year-is-a-polytechnic-student

                  can be quite misleading.

                  If one reads their definition of local university, one finds that SIM University (UniSIM) and Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) are included. SIM is considered a private university (possible to become 6th Autonomous University but only very recently). SIT is specially catered for poly students, so naturally admits many poly graduates.

                  Hence, if one excludes SIM/SIT from the figures, most likely the figure is much lower than one-third.

                  In short, it is quite hard for poly graduates to enter the 3 universities NUS/NTU/SMU.
                  A poly GPA of 3.7 to 3.8 (around top 10% of cohort) is needed to enter NUS (excluding nursing, which is an exception since it is unpopular). For JC students, a grade of BBC will be sufficient to enter NUS, which is nowhere near the top 10% of the cohort.
                  1. Statement isn't misleading as their definition of a local university is publicly-funded university, in which both UniSIM and SIT fall under (UniSIM is privately-managed but publicly-funded, and should not be confused with SIM).

                  2. It makes no sense statistically to pretend only NUS/NTU/SMU are local universities while the others are not. How about pretending some JCs are JCs (because a majority of their students make it to the 3 stated universities), and others are schools there to make up numbers (because only a handful of their students make it to the 3 stated universities). It's ok to look at the indicative grade profile of the individual university or a group of universities but that's a story for another day.

                  3. There are some biases in the grades selected. While a grade of BBC is probably sufficient to enter some NUS courses (actually, I only counted one - Nursing -based on the 10th percentile IGP, rest are BBB and above :scared: ), a poly GPA of 3.6 will get you into many courses (and for Nursing, GPA for the 10th percentile is only 3.39).

                  4. JC students are already the top 20% of the cohort (birth year). I guesstimate that finishing in the top half of JC results already place you in the top 10% of the cohort :skeptical: I doubt the top 10% of the JC students (probably top 1% of a cohort) compares very well to the top 10% of poly graduates (probably top 20% of a cohort).

                  5. There lies, damned lies and statistics.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • sharonkhooS Offline
                    sharonkhoo
                    last edited by

                    janet88:
                    hi parents,

                    may i enquire for year 1 students in science stream, do they learn H1 and H2 subjects or just H1??
                    thanks.
                    All students learn (and are tested on) all 4 content subjects in Y1 as well as the H1 subjects. In Y2, the H2 subjects will take a back seat towards the end of the year so the students can concentrate on their H1, MT (if they are taking) and PW. The H2 material is spread over 3 yrs.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • janet88J Offline
                      janet88
                      last edited by

                      slmkhoo:
                      janet88:

                      hi parents,

                      may i enquire for year 1 students in science stream, do they learn H1 and H2 subjects or just H1??
                      thanks.

                      All students learn (and are tested on) all 4 content subjects in Y1 as well as the H1 subjects. In Y2, the H2 subjects will take a back seat towards the end of the year so the students can concentrate on their H1, MT (if they are taking) and PW. The H2 material is spread over 3 yrs.

                      thanks for the reply slmkhoo:)

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • NebbermindN Offline
                        Nebbermind
                        last edited by

                        floppy:
                        mathtuition88:

                        Just to point out that this article \"1 in 3 local university students admitted last year is a polytechnic student\": http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/1-in-3-local-university-students-admitted-last-year-is-a-polytechnic-student

                        can be quite misleading.

                        If one reads their definition of local university, one finds that SIM University (UniSIM) and Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) are included. SIM is considered a private university (possible to become 6th Autonomous University but only very recently). SIT is specially catered for poly students, so naturally admits many poly graduates.

                        Hence, if one excludes SIM/SIT from the figures, most likely the figure is much lower than one-third.

                        In short, it is quite hard for poly graduates to enter the 3 universities NUS/NTU/SMU.
                        A poly GPA of 3.7 to 3.8 (around top 10% of cohort) is needed to enter NUS (excluding nursing, which is an exception since it is unpopular). For JC students, a grade of BBC will be sufficient to enter NUS, which is nowhere near the top 10% of the cohort.

                        1. Statement isn't misleading as their definition of a local university is publicly-funded university, in which both UniSIM and SIT fall under (UniSIM is privately-managed but publicly-funded, and should not be confused with SIM).

                        2. It makes no sense statistically to pretend only NUS/NTU/SMU are local universities while the others are not. How about pretending some JCs are JCs (because a majority of their students make it to the 3 stated universities), and others are schools there to make up numbers (because only a handful of their students make it to the 3 stated universities). It's ok to look at the indicative grade profile of the individual university or a group of universities but that's a story for another day.

                        3. There are some biases in the grades selected. While a grade of BBC is probably sufficient to enter some NUS courses (actually, I only counted one - Nursing -based on the 10th percentile IGP, rest are BBB and above :scared: ), a poly GPA of 3.6 will get you into many courses (and for Nursing, GPA for the 10th percentile is only 3.39).

                        4. JC students are already the top 20% of the cohort (birth year). I guesstimate that finishing in the top half of JC results already place you in the top 10% of the cohort :skeptical: I doubt the top 10% of the JC students (probably top 1% of a cohort) compares very well to the top 10% of poly graduates (probably top 20% of a cohort).

                        5. There lies, damned lies and statistics.

                        Both of you read it wrongly.
                        'Local university students' should be read together and refers to the students and not the university. πŸ˜‰

                        Anyway, it has to be referring to the students coz 50% in unis are foreign students...if 1/3, then less then 20% from JC.

                        P.s. of course I'm joking abt 50%. But it's really many many!

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