Had a good chat with my history prof on fri.
(Or rather had a good time listening to him voice his opinions)
He commented that if he had been brought up in Singapore, he would probably be selling chicken rice right now; instead of being a history professor at the university. The reason he stated was the rigid and highly stratified education system in Singapore. It is a system that has little tolerance for failure and severely skewed towards academic results.
Since primary school, the people are classified into different types based solely on academic ability. There are the pri 4 streaming, the PSLE, the O level, the A level etc. By the time one reaches university, he would have gone through no less than 4 stages of streaming and classification. Even then, these so-called 'talents' are also differentiated.
The true cream of the crop gets picked up by the government and sent abroad to prestigious universities such as Princeton, Harvard, Yale and Imperial College to name a few. Then, the second best are in USP and the likes in NUS and other local universities. Next, there are those could make it to local universities. Finally, the rest would have either self-finance and go to SIM or less well-known universities abroad.
According to what he said, his attention wasn't focused on his studies until he reached high school, equivalent to JC over here. As such, he didn't exactly score too well when he was in Middle School, ie Secondary school. Now, if we translate that to the Singapore education system, it probably meant that he would have to go to an ITE at the end of sec sch and his path in life pretty much decided there and then. Becoming a professor is almost impossible. But luckily, he was born in the US and he was thankful that the US education system was much more tolerant and allowed him the time and space to pursue his dream when he regained his interest in studies in high school.
Now selling chicken rice and teaching history at a world renowned university are worlds apart, what does this tell us about our education system? What about the many could-have-beens that have been buried by the education system?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
If you love her, set her free
If you love her, set her free... so that she may find the love she desires. These words from R ring in my head. Everyone has his/her own ima...
-
Was reading about the divorce procedures in Singapore. I think I can empathise much better with what C is going through if my guess is corre...
-
Had a good chat with my history prof on fri. (Or rather had a good time listening to him voice his opinions) He commented that if he had bee...
-
An unexpected thought popped into my head. As time passes, aren't your feelings for someone supposed to fade & dilute? Strangely, as...
1 comment:
i wonder how the U.S system is like to be so accommodating!
Post a Comment