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    Real reason behind Singapore’s obsession with tuition

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    • L Offline
      limlim
      last edited by

      janet_lee88:
      limlim:


      Heard from my friend last time that MOE does not disallow it.

      Teachers could be doing a brisk business at tuition and no heart to teach in the school!

      Erm...teachers can give tuition. In fact, they are highly sought after bcos they know what is expected...as such, they charge higher rates.
      But with the busy schedule and long hours in school, they may not able to take many students unless they give tuition on weekends.

      I feel that is the first thing that MOE needs to fix!

      Teachers giving private tuition.. that is direct conflict of interest!

      Would any employer allow their employee to moonlight for competitors? No right!

      Parents, taxpayers are indirectly funding the salaries for teachers at their kids school. I feel that it is unacceptable for teachers to moonlight outside of their school duties.

      How can MOE allow teachers to give tuition? They should set a strict rule to disallow such things from happening, as it could seriously affect the quality of teachings in schools.

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

        Personally, MOE should fix the immediate problem WHY parents/kids need tuition. Hubby die die refused to get Math tutor for son last year....insisting that he could handle, the best part is he cannot even coach son for daily homework :faint: He agreed to get tutor when son flunked SA1, again. After tutor started for a while, son could get his Math hw done and that was amazing. By SA2, he had 50 for Math. This is a genuine case of a NEED, not obsession.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • S Offline
          Strparent
          last edited by

          janet_lee88:
          Personally, MOE should fix the immediate problem WHY parents/kids need tuition. Hubby die die refused to get Math tutor for son last year....insisting that he could handle, the best part is he cannot even coach son for daily homework :faint: He agreed to get tutor when son flunked SA1, again. After tutor started for a while, son could get his Math hw done and that was amazing. By SA2, he had 50 for Math. This is a genuine case of a NEED, not obsession.

          so sorry to hear that, hope yr DS improves now that he has his foundation steadied.

          But I disagree here that this is a genuine case of a NEED - has the teacher spoken to you about yr DS inability to cope during class ?

          The key issue here, imho, is that your DS could not learn in class what he learnt from the tutor ??!!

          It means, its not the problem with work nor the child, more likely its a problem that the teacher was unable to teach effectively, no ?

          btw, I am also a strong opponent of the tuition/enrichment wave, but we cannot stop it... and I dont think MOE will stop it - its a $820mil p.a. turnover industry ( and growing! ), just the GST alone is about $60m :evil:

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

            Hi Strparent,

            I can't remember what teacher said during PTM then...besides, I know nuts about Math. It's not about blaming either. My son had 80+ for Math in P4. When he moved up to P5, he just couldnt get Math prob sums done. Neither could hubby. From 80% in P4 to 30% for CA1 P5, this is no joking matter.
            Is it the syllabus ? Yes, many told me P5 Math is TOUGH, but not what I expected. Why could the tutor help him and not the school teacher ?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • jedamumJ Offline
              jedamum
              last edited by

              limlim:
              janet_lee88:

              [quote=\"limlim\"]
              Heard from my friend last time that MOE does not disallow it.

              Teachers could be doing a brisk business at tuition and no heart to teach in the school!

              Erm...teachers can give tuition. In fact, they are highly sought after bcos they know what is expected...as such, they charge higher rates.
              But with the busy schedule and long hours in school, they may not able to take many students unless they give tuition on weekends.

              I feel that is the first thing that MOE needs to fix!

              Teachers giving private tuition.. that is direct conflict of interest!

              Would any employer allow their employee to moonlight for competitors? No right!

              Parents, taxpayers are indirectly funding the salaries for teachers at their kids school. I feel that it is unacceptable for teachers to moonlight outside of their school duties.

              How can MOE allow teachers to give tuition? They should set a strict rule to disallow such things from happening, as it could seriously affect the quality of teachings in schools.[/quote]MOE allowed school teachers to give tuition, but subject to a cap of i think 6hrs per week. and i also heard that students must not be from the sch the teacher is currently teaching.

              if moe impose a strict rule disallowing such, maybe moe stand to lose even more teachers to the tuition industry.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • V Offline
                verykiasu2010
                last edited by

                Strparent:
                janet_lee88:

                Personally, MOE should fix the immediate problem WHY parents/kids need tuition. Hubby die die refused to get Math tutor for son last year....insisting that he could handle, the best part is he cannot even coach son for daily homework :faint: He agreed to get tutor when son flunked SA1, again. After tutor started for a while, son could get his Math hw done and that was amazing. By SA2, he had 50 for Math. This is a genuine case of a NEED, not obsession.


                so sorry to hear that, hope yr DS improves now that he has his foundation steadied.

                But I disagree here that this is a genuine case of a NEED - has the teacher spoken to you about yr DS inability to cope during class ?

                The key issue here, imho, is that your DS could not learn in class what he learnt from the tutor ??!!

                It means, its not the problem with work nor the child, more likely its a problem that the teacher was unable to teach effectively, no ?

                btw, I am also a strong opponent of the tuition/enrichment wave, but we cannot stop it... and I dont think MOE will stop it - its a $820mil p.a. turnover industry ( and growing! ), just the GST alone is about $60m :evil:

                1. tuition centres and agencies are not owned by MOE
                2. not all tuition teachers / agencies / centres charge GST

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S Offline
                  szepinge
                  last edited by

                  Heard from my friend last time that MOE does not disallow it.


                  Teachers could be doing a brisk business at tuition and no heart to teach in the school

                  Erm…teachers can give tuition. In fact, they are highly sought after bcos they know what is expected…as such, they charge higher rates.
                  But with the busy schedule and long hours in school, they may not able to take many students unless they give tuition on weekends.[/quote]

                  MOE pay peanuts. With the high standard of living,
                  many teachers have no choice but to moonlight
                  as private tutors. They can earn more actually.
                  What could be taught in school is very
                  subjective. There are many good teachers around
                  who teach very well but there are also
                  unmotivated teachers.
                  The children these days are difficult to handle.
                  They are unlike our times, where students sit
                  quietly and pay attention.
                  Some are hyperactive, some are talkative.
                  Some have simply no respect for teachers because
                  they know their rights. They know teachers
                  are not allowed to use corporal punishment
                  I can understand why a ‘soft’ teacher couldn’t
                  handle the class, let alone teach.
                  When your child is streamed into the tail end class,
                  what could he learn in school?
                  Even the most motivated and hardworking
                  kid could learn nothing in school even he is willing.
                  Simply because the class is too noisy.

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

                    szepinge:

                    Teachers could be doing a brisk business at tuition and no heart to teach in the school

                    MOE pay peanuts. With the high standard of living,
                    many teachers have no choice but to moonlight
                    as private tutors. They can earn more actually.
                    What could be taught in school is very
                    subjective. There are many good teachers around
                    who teach very well but there are also
                    unmotivated teachers.
                    The children these days are difficult to handle.
                    They are unlike our times, where students sit
                    quietly and pay attention.
                    Classroom management is not easy...cannot punish or parents will go after teacher. Kids today are too smart, not like our time when we will sit down and listen. Our parents will not side us if we are punished.

                    After few years of teaching, the not so passionate ones will give up. With high targets and constant breathing down the neck by HODs, meetings, admin work, marking, CCA, how passionate can a teacher be ? Not to mention the pathetic pay for 12-14 hours of teaching everyday.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • L Offline
                      limlim
                      last edited by

                      jedamum:

                      if moe impose a strict rule disallowing such, maybe moe stand to lose even more teachers to the tuition industry.
                      it should never have been that way in the first place, allowing teacher to give tuition.

                      So, in all industries, the companies should allow their staff to moonlight so that they do not lose workers? what logic is that?

                      There is clear conflict of interest. The teachers may put more effort into the variable private income (And maybe not paying tax for it) and less effort on fixed income from schools. End up MORE students in the class need tuition. I teach your student from your school, you teach my students from my school.. together we make lotsa $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.

                      If the teachers cannot be committed and focused on school classes, it is better that they leave the teaching profession.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • phankaoP Offline
                        phankao
                        last edited by

                        limlim:
                        jedamum:


                        if moe impose a strict rule disallowing such, maybe moe stand to lose even more teachers to the tuition industry.

                        it should never have been that way in the first place, allowing teacher to give tuition.

                        So, in all industries, the companies should allow their staff to moonlight so that they do not lose workers? what logic is that?

                        There is clear conflict of interest. The teachers may put more effort into the variable private income (And maybe not paying tax for it) and less effort on fixed income from schools. End up MORE students in the class need tuition. I teach your student from your school, you teach my students from my school.. together we make lotsa $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.

                        If the teachers cannot be committed and focused on school classes, it is better that they leave the teaching profession.

                        the only rule is that teachers cannot give tuition to students in their own school. If they do - well, that has to be free.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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