Real reason behind Singapore’s obsession with tuition
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alng:
Thanks for the good sharing, alng. It is good to know what some schools are doing to help the children perform better.After reading the posts here, I am extremely thankful to my dd's Chinese Teacher (and school of course). Since P4 (now P6), she is taught by the HOD. The school embarked on a new strategy to teach Chinese in 2010 when my dd was in P4. This explained why my dd is taught by the HOD for P4-P6 because the school is testing out a new teaching strategy. I am not sure if this new teaching strategy an initiative at school level or at MOE level which will be expanded to all the other schools eventually. I did ask the HOD for permission to reveal the compo checklist to my other friends but she said no.
For composition, the teachers grade using a checklist. The 40 marks are allocated to a list of items (items to address in the composition) and the Chinese Compo is graded in accordance to that checklist. For each compo (other than exam), it will be graded and returned with the checklist. The students have to do a second draft (using the graded feedback sheet) if the compo grade is below a certain level. The second draft will be re-graded with marks. The same applies to certain oral practices, which are graded using a checklist. It requires a lot of work on the part of teachers to prepare such feedback on learning. But I believe it can be done if the schools are committed to quality teaching. It will be great if MOE can lead such initiatives.
The school, teachers and parents are looking forward to this year's PSLE results for Chinese.
Say, supposing schools all adopt this approach to give parents more visibility on how their kids can improve on their compos and orals, then will parents be contented if the exam result details of compo and oral are still withheld as part of an overall English and Chinese scores(The Category 3 practice)? Just thinking aloud. :? -
pixiedust:
:hugs: .... I admire parents who give constructive feedback here even if MOE does make some changes, it may be too late to impact their child... and I think Chenonceau is one of them.
I hope Chenonceau and other's effort to bring about systematic changes to our primary school education will bear some fruit in the near future. -
Chenonceau:
You are a GEP Mommy. Ok... I understand now. I am not hitting out at you. I am not jealous of GEP parents. I think GEP benefits a certain population of students. I am glad that at least that part works as evidenced by the many enthousiastically supportive GEP parents.
for ds who was in GEP, EMSL were always taught by different teachers throughout the 3 years leading to PSLE.Intermezzo:
[quote=\"Chenonceau\"]
Hmmmm... yeah good point.... does anyone know if GEP teachers subject specialize? I am thinking that if GEP style has infiltrated mainstream, then if GEP teachers subject specialize, it may be a mechanism that is coherent with the new syllabus.
Anyone knows?
and teacher:students ratio was about 1:25
the interesting thing is, many of his classmates still went for tuition in 1 or more subjects.
Yet, allow me to humbly beg your understanding of our experiences in mainstream. Please.
[/quote]thanks for being understanding.
actually, i have another child who was in mainstream for primary school.
i can't remember the P4 bit, but in P5 they did have a specialized Maths teacher.
in P6, her FT took them in EMS. i have no problem with that. as Funz said, there're pros and cons. Time management among the 3 subjects might also be easier.
but throughout the years, there were still many of her classmates going for tuition after tuition, no matter what the teachers were like. for some it's 1:1 at home, for some it's at MindStretcher, etc. there were even a few who did all 3 - EMS at TTL, and MT somewhere else - i can't remember the reason now. isit becos TTL doesn't teach MT?
that's the main reason i feel that tuition has become an obsession - when many parents send the kids for tuition without considering whether they REALLY need it, or whether they have time to rest / play / do nothing / get creative / develop new hobbies, and most importantly, learn how to learn on their own. -
ksi:
For me too, tuition only if results show a need for it. However increasingly I am seeing parents looking for tutors for their children even before they start P1. Various reasons were cited, for insurance, cos they believe must have tuition eventually so want to 'chope' reputable tutor's time, cos parents themselves don't have time to go through kids daily work, so tutor more to follow through day to day stuff rather than to help with weak grades, etc.Thanks for your sharing pixiedust.
Sharing has various levels and I find that when we share the specifics then the problem definition becomes clearer. Certainly what you have shared is good and constructive.
It seems that the parents with Category 3 practices are more at this point of time.
Actually you have also brought up an interesting point for me. Initially I thought people go for tuition because the results showed that they have to go for tuition to push the grades up, i.e. obviously shown in the components of the results. However, now I see that people go for tuition due to not knowing what are the detail grades and use \"tuition\" to buy the insurance that the grades can be maintained or pushed up since there is no idea what is the actual individual component score. So this point seems to contribute to the tuition-notion nation where parents can see the break-down results from the tuition centre better?
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Intermezzo:
Already at P4 level - my DD1's classmate - the top girl in the cohort has tuitions for EMS + MT + English Creative class + MT Compo class! :yikes: :shock: DD1 shares that the girl has learned ahead what teacher has to teach and in fact during class, the girl just either plays with her pencil or do some sketching on the paper ( the girl sits in front of DD1 and they are in the same group for class-work).
but throughout the years, there were still many of her classmates going for tuition after tuition, no matter what the teachers were like. for some it's 1:1 at home, for some it's at MindStretcher, etc. there were even a few who did all 3 - EMS at TTL, and MT somewhere else - i can't remember the reason now. isit becos TTL doesn't teach MT?
that's the main reason i feel that tuition has become an obsession - when many parents send the kids for tuition without considering whether they REALLY need it, or whether they have time to rest / play / do nothing / get creative / develop new hobbies, and most importantly, learn how to learn on their own.
Well, I just tell DD1 she just has to mind her own business
and do the class work together in a group. Well, aside from this top girl's story, for my DD1's case - My expectations are not high. I don't expect my child to ace the subject but by attending tuition at the tuition centre, it does help her to understand better
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Funz:
Yeah, would that be considered enrichment, i.e. good to have since there is no problem to solve? I distinguish between enrichment and tuition. I know many of the bright kids go for enrichment as a good to have. Centres like TLL is enrichment to me, children go there to pick up lifestyle habits like Heelys. Mindstretcher is both an enrichment and a tuition centre. Berries is more of an enrichment centre because if a primary school child is identified to have a problem in Chinese, it would be tough to follow the syllabus in Berries at the same level as syllabus is not MOE driven but extended, Tien Hsia caters more for tuition as they follow MOE syllabus closely but I am not sure if they have started enrichment version as well. So are we an enrichment-centric nation or a tuition-centric nation? :?
For me too, tuition only if results show a need for it. However increasingly I am seeing parents looking for tutors for their children even before they start P1. Various reasons were cited, for insurance, cos they believe must have tuition eventually so want to 'chope' reputable tutor's time, cos parents themselves don't have time to go through kids daily work, so tutor more to follow through day to day stuff rather than to help with weak grades, etc.ksi:
Thanks for your sharing pixiedust.
Sharing has various levels and I find that when we share the specifics then the problem definition becomes clearer. Certainly what you have shared is good and constructive.
It seems that the parents with Category 3 practices are more at this point of time.
Actually you have also brought up an interesting point for me. Initially I thought people go for tuition because the results showed that they have to go for tuition to push the grades up, i.e. obviously shown in the components of the results. However, now I see that people go for tuition due to not knowing what are the detail grades and use \"tuition\" to buy the insurance that the grades can be maintained or pushed up since there is no idea what is the actual individual component score. So this point seems to contribute to the tuition-notion nation where parents can see the break-down results from the tuition centre better?
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Champion:
Champs, the top girl is doing enrichment.
Already at P4 level - my DD1's classmate - the top girl in the cohort has tuitions for EMS + MT + English Creative class + MT Compo class! :yikes: :shock: DD1 shares that the girl has learned ahead what teacher has to teach and in fact during class, the girl just either plays with her pencil or do some sketching on the paper ( the girl sits in front of DD1 and they are in the same group for class-work).Intermezzo:
but throughout the years, there were still many of her classmates going for tuition after tuition, no matter what the teachers were like. for some it's 1:1 at home, for some it's at MindStretcher, etc. there were even a few who did all 3 - EMS at TTL, and MT somewhere else - i can't remember the reason now. isit becos TTL doesn't teach MT?
that's the main reason i feel that tuition has become an obsession - when many parents send the kids for tuition without considering whether they REALLY need it, or whether they have time to rest / play / do nothing / get creative / develop new hobbies, and most importantly, learn how to learn on their own.
Well, I just tell DD1 she just has to mind her own business
and do the class work together in a group. Well, aside from this top girl's story, for my DD1's case - My expectations are not high. I don't expect my child to ace the subject but by attending tuition at the tuition centre, it does help her to understand better 
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This thread has OTed so far with categories and what nots. :offtopic:
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Funz:
For me too, tuition only if results show a need for it. However increasingly I am seeing parents looking for tutors for their children even before they start P1. Various reasons were cited, for insurance, cos they believe must have tuition eventually so want to 'chope' reputable tutor's time, cos parents themselves don't have time to go through kids daily work, so tutor more to follow through day to day stuff rather than to help with weak grades, etc.
Same observation on our end as well. :yikes:
I have parents asking whether i can teach their 1yr old phonics! :faint: -
buds:
This thread has OTed so far with categories and what nots. :offtopic:
Please read the details. :heresmyfish:
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