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Reference No : Edun
N09-0l-057 Press Release No
: 017/97
Date : 16 May 1997
LAUNCH OF
NATIONAL EDUCATION
- The Ministry of Education will
launch National Education in schools on Sat 17 May 97. The Deputy Prime
Minister, Brigadier-General (NS) Lee Hsien Loong, will be the
Guest-of-Honour at the Launch which will be held at the TV Theatre of
Television Corporation of Singapore.
- The importance of National
Education was highlighted by Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong at the Teachers'
Day Rally on 8 Sep 96. Prime Minister Goh pointed out that "National
Education must be a vital component of our education process…. It is an
exercise to develop instincts that become part of the psyche of every
child. It must engender a shared sense of nationhood, an understanding of
how our past is relevant to our present and future. It must appeal to both
heart and mind."
- A National Education Committee
was set up subsequently, chaired by Mr Lim Siong Guan, Permanent Secretary
(Prime Minister's Office) and Permanent Secretary (Education), and
comprising representatives from the Ministry of Education, Ministry of
Information and the Arts, Ministry of Defence and Prime Minister's Office.
The Committee has developed the strategic approaches and measures to be
adopted in the implementation of National Education. These measures cover
both the formal and informal curriculum and will extend to all levels of
the education system.
- In preparation for the
implementation of National Education, National Education seminars were
organised to reach out to all principals, key Ministry headquarters staff
and all National Education coordinators in schools. Seminars were also
organised for key polytechnic, National Institute of Education and
university staff.
- The Launch of National
Education on 17 May is aimed at reaching every teacher and raising
awareness of the critical importance of National Education in the mission
of the teacher. The Launch will be telecast live over Prime 12 to all
schools in Singapore. This is the first time that all 22,000 Education
Officers will be addressed together and involved in a joint event. DPM BG
Lee will field questions from Education Officers in schools which will be
sent via electronic mail.
- DPM BG Lee will also launch the
National Education web site for teachers on the Ministry of Education
Intranet. The website, called NEWS (National Education - the World &
Singapore), will provide teachers with a continuously updated source of
information and materials relevant to National Education. The website will
also allow schools to share ideas and experiences on National Education
with each other, and direct any queries they may have to the National
Education Unit of the Ministry.
- National Education is an
integral part of the Government's strategies in Education to prepare for
the future. It is crucial to the continued success and well-being of
Singapore in the 21st century.
Annex
NATIONAL
EDUCATION
-
The National Education Initiative
- At the Teachers' Day Rally on 8
Sept 96, Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong announced a major initiative to
strengthen National Education in our education system, and the setting up
of a National Education Committee (NEC) to chart plans to do so.
- The NEC is chaired by Mr Lim
Siong Guan, PS (PMO)/ PS (Education). It comprises representatives from
MOE, MINDEF, PMO (Civil Service College), MCD (People's Association) and
MITA. These are the agencies with the requisite resources, backgrounds and
responsibilities that would facilitate the national education effort in
schools.
- The Committee set up 13 project
teams comprising officers from schools, tertiary institutions and MOE HQ
and representatives from MITA and PA. These teams were tasked to develop
strategies and measures for the implementation of the National Education
programme in schools and tertiary institutions.
Purpose of National Education
- The purpose of National
Education is :
To develop national cohesion,
the instinct for survival and confidence in the future,
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- By fostering a sense of identity, pride and self-respect as
Singaporeans;
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- By knowing the Singapore story - how Singapore succeeded against
the odds to become a nation;
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- By understanding Singapore's unique challenges, constraints and
vulnerabilities, which make us different from other countries; and
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- By instilling the core values of our way of life, and the will
to prevail, that ensure our continued success and well-being.
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Approach
- The approach to NE in schools will be as follows :
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- For National Education to succeed in schools, Principals and
teachers must first be convinced of its crucial importance and be
committed to the NE effort. NE instincts will be developed and
continually reinforced among teachers through a regular
dissemination to schools of materials and information related to NE.
Commitment to the National Education effort will also depend on
schools shaping and taking ownership of their own NE programmes.
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- National Education is part of Total Education. Teachers will
have to identify with their mission of providing their pupils not
only with skills and knowledge for the future, but with the values
and attitudes to be good citizens, conscious of their
responsibilities to family, community and country. Every teacher will
be involved in National Education, whether through formal subject
teaching or ECA and other informal activities.
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- To be effective, National Education must appeal to both heart
and mind. It will have to transcend book knowledge and be
internalised in the psyche of every pupil. From young, every pupil
must learn the facts of how we became a nation, why our constraints
and vulnerabilities make us different from other countries and why
we must continue to work together and outperform others to succeed
in future.
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National Education would be implemented
through both the formal and informal curricula. The emphasis
would be on active participation and experiential learning, not just
formal lessons, so that pupils will come to regard National Education
as an integral and intrinsic part of school life. |
Approach to Reaching Pupils
- The cultivation of national
instincts among pupils will have two prongs - first to develop an
awareness of facts, circumstances and opportunities facing Singapore,
so that they will be able to make decisions for their future with
conviction and realism; and second, to develop a sense of emotional
belonging and commitment to the community and nation so that they will
stay and fight when the odds are against us. We cannot instill feelings of
patriotism directly among pupils, but we can instill pride in the country
and its institutions and belief in our way of life. We can also build
strong school communities, instilling group instincts and loyalty through
the rituals of school life as a starting point for cultivating a sense of
belonging and commitment to society.
How Students Should Think
and Feel about Singapore
- NE would address both knowledge
and feelings about Singapore at every level of the education
system. A spiral approach, that proceeds from the concrete and
elementary to the abstract and more complex, and which consolidates what
is learnt at the lower levels to the upper levels, would be adopted.
Distinct strategies are required at each stage, reflecting the
intellectual and emotional maturity of the student. These distinct
strategies can be encapsulated as: Love Singapore (Primary level);
Know Singapore (Secondary level); Lead Singapore (Pre-U
level). The strategy for ITE and the majority of polytechnic students will
be an extension of that taken at the secondary level, with an emphasis on
values and attitudes of good citizenship and an understanding of how
Singapore's survival and success is necessary for them to make a good
living. The strategy for university students will be an extension of that
at the JC level. It will aim at developing an understanding of the
geopolitics of Singapore's existence and a desire to contribute their
talents to keep Singapore going. It would also aim at developing an
instinctive commitment to serving the community and society.
- The key outcomes that we will seek to achieve among students at each
level are as follows:
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- Children in primary schools will find it
difficult to apprehend abstract concepts and take a wide-angled
perspective of history or national issues. The NE programme will
engage them emotionally, more than intellectually. It should
inculcate correct values and attitudes, develop a sense of bonding
among pupils of different races and abilities and pride in
Singapore.
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- At the secondary level, pupils develop instincts based on
what they know as well as how they feel. The approach is to ensure
that pupils have a broad knowledge base on Singapore - how we have
arrived at where we are, the constraints and vulnerabilities we
face, and challenges for the future.
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- The focus at the ITE would be in enabling students to
understand that they would be helping themselves, their families and
Singapore by working hard, continually upgrading themselves and
helping to ensure a stable social order. They must feel that every
citizen has a valued place in Singapore, and want to play their part
in defending Singapore.
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- The Polytechnic students will be concerned primarily with
immediate career options. As with ITE students, the strategy will be
to convince them that the country's continued survival and
prosperity will depend on the quality of their efforts, and that
they will reap the benefits of Singapore's success if they play
their part. They must believe that there is opportunity for all
based on ability and effort.
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- For JC students, NE must instil in them a sense that they
can shape their own future in Singapore and, even more importantly,
a realisation that upon many of them will lie the responsibility of
playing key roles in shaping the Singapore of the future in the
years to come. They must be able to reason for themselves why
Singapore is, all things considered, the best home. We have to
develop in them an appreciation of the demands and complexities of
leadership. They will have to know Singapore's past and present and
the scenarios for the future before they can make enlightened
comments and proposals about what would be good for Singapore.
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- University students must recognise that society will look
to them for leadership in many spheres, both nationally and at local
community level. They cannot meet such expectations responsibly if
they are ignorant or naïve about the way countries, societies and
humankind behave. They must understand that Singapore exists as an
act of human will, and that we will continue to succeed only through
the quality of our leadership, the guts and gumption of our people,
and our ingenuity in finding solutions to overcome fresh challenges.
As the chief beneficiaries of the system, they must also be
instilled with a desire to serve the community and those that have
done less well in society.
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Reaching Out to Teachers
- For the NE effort in schools to
be a self-sustaining process, the Principal must be the key driver
and motivator of the NE programme. The Principal will be aided by an NE
Committee in shaping the NE Programme of the school. An NE Coordinator has
been appointed in every school to coordinate its efforts and help in
disseminating information to teachers.
- The Civil Service College (CSC)
and MOE have conducted intensive seminars for the core education
personnel who will develop and lead the implementation of NE
programmes and spread the awareness of NE issues to their peers. The
seminars have sought to sensitise the participants to the challenges,
constraints and vulnerabilities Singapore faces, bringing them into
confidence on some of the more sensitive challenges in internal and
external security. The first five seminars covering MOE HQ officers,
Principals, NE Coordinators from each school and key academic staff from
the tertiary institutions have been received positively. The next step
would be to train groups of teachers of core subjects for transmitting NE
content, beginning with teachers of General Paper and Civics & Moral
Education in mid 97.
- In tandem with forming a core
group of NE advocates, an ongoing communication of information and
perspectives has been developed to keep all teachers engaged and alert
to NE issues. Schools will receive an initial corpus of NE videos produced
by CSC comprising a Historical Series and Life in Singapore
series; and monthly videos produced by the National Education Unit, MOE to
help teachers interpret events in the context of the NE lessons they
offer.
- The National Education web
site called NEWS (National Education - The World & Singapore) has been
set up on the MOE Intranet. It will provide teachers with a base of
resource materials. Importantly, it will also provide a channel for
schools and teachers to exchange ideas with one another. They can also
send their queries on NE issues to the Ministry through the site.
- The National Education Unit which
has been set up in MOE will assist schools by disseminating information
and responding to feedback from teachers and Principals.
- NE will be an integral
component of NIE's programmes for trainee teachers, Heads of
Department and future Principals. All trainee teachers will undergo a
2-day on-campus seminar which will incorporate certain elements of the PNA
(Programme for National Awareness) course. In addition to infusing NE
elements in certain content subjects, a 20-hour module will also be
introduced for Dip.Ed and BA/BSc students at NIE.
Review of Formal Curriculum
- NE will not be carried through
any single subject or topic of study but will be infused across the
formal curriculum in schools. However certain subjects are more
especially suited to the imparting of NE messages. The changes that are
being worked out in the formal curriculum are centred on these core
subjects, as identified below. These subjects are currently compulsory for
all students, except for History and Geography at the upper secondary
level.
Primary Level
- Social Studies at Primary 1
to 6 (P1-6) - including the introduction of Social Studies from P1;
- Civics and Moral Education (CME)
at P1 - 6;
Secondary Level
- History at Secondary 1 to 4/5
(S1-4/5);
- Geography at S1-4/5; Civics
and Moral Education (CME) at S1-4/5;
- Civics and Moral Education (CME)
at S1-4/5;
- Social Studies at S3-4 - a
new subject being proposed;
Junior College/Centralised
Institutes
- General Paper at Junior
College 1-2;
- Civics at Junior College 1-2.
- National Education will not
"add on" to the existing formal curriculum. It would instead mean an
increased focus and emphasis on issues pertaining to NE, and the treatment
of such issues in a way that makes students understand their relevance to
the future. The revised syllabuses will indeed entail a reduction in
curriculum content in the subjects specified. This will allow the
teachers to engage in more creative teaching methods
overall, and help make National Education more meaningful and effective.
Primary Schools
- Currently, pupils are taught
Social Studies, a subject that introduces them to Singapore's history
and its development at Primary 4-6. MOE will introduce Social Studies in
the curriculum from Primary 1, either by introducing it as a separate
subject, or by weaving Social Studies concepts into existing subjects. The
aim of the subject will be to help pupils at P1-3 understand the world
around them, beginning with the school and extending to the neighbourhood
and society. Both the US and Japan introduce Social Studies from P1, as
part of a continuum in their education curriculum that seeks to provide
the knowledge and attitudes that they deem essential to good citizenship.
While Civics and Moral Education (CME) teaches moral values
and correct behaviour, Social Studies will cultivate an understanding of
the basic facts of Singapore society and the interdependence of people of
different races and occupations. The Social Studies syllabus for P1 - 3
will be implemented in a few years' time.
Secondary Schools
- In secondary schools, the
History syllabi will be reviewed so that Singapore history ends in
1971, from the current ending at just after 1965 in the lower secondary
syllabus and 1963 in the upper secondary syllabus. At the lower secondary
syllabus where history is compulsory, the recent history of Singapore will
be studied in Secondary 2 instead of Secondary 1 to enable students to
better appreciate the issues at stake in the developments leading to
Separation. This will be undertaken when a new History syllabus is
introduced in three years' time. Interim measures are being put in place
in the mean time to ensure that within the existing syllabus,
adequate emphasis is given to topics in recent Singapore history including
the events leading to Singapore's Independence.
- The basic framework of the new
Geography syllabus will be retained, but it would include more
local case studies to allow NE lessons to be learnt at the same time. The
CME syllabus for Secondary School students will be revised to give
greater emphasis to the values and attitudes required for good
citizenship, while ensuring pupils have a good grounding in moral values.
- A new Social Studies subject
would be introduced at Secondary 3-4, aimed at giving students a clear
grasp of issues central to Singapore's survival and success - our
principles of governance, the strategies we have employed to get to where
we are, the role of key national institutions like the SAF, HDB and CPF,
and challenges for the future. Knowledge of these issues should be
integral to the school curriculum. The approach will be thematic rather
than chronological, and would draw on case studies of other countries to
help students understand what works and what fails. MOE will devise a way
for the new Social Studies subject to be part of a flexible programme of
Humanities subjects, so that a compulsory module in Social Studies does
not lead to students dropping away from the study of History, Geography or
Literature.
Junior Colleges/ Centralised
Institutes
- General Paper at the
Junior Colleges and Centralised Institutes will be an important means of
transmitting NE messages by getting students to think independently and
rationally about issues and arrive at informed conclusions. MOE will
introduce curriculum guidelines for JCs/CIs in GP, so as to ensure that
topics relevant to NE are given enough emphasis. While the GP curriculum
will aim to foster an ability to think responsibly about issues, the
Civics curriculum will seek to develop leadership and
commitment among students. All JC students will undergo a "Challenge
of Leadership" module in Civics, where they will discuss what is required
to do a good job of leading Singapore - an understanding of our past and
of what makes Singapore tick, and an appreciation that ideas about the
behaviour of countries and peoples must be infused with realism and be
free of naivete.
National Education Test
- A National Education Test will
be devised to be taken by students at the milestone levels of Primary 6
and Sec 4. It will be equivalent to a "highway code" in NE which all
students will have to pass to progress to Sec 1 and JC/CI/Poly
respectively. The test will take the form of a 'fun' computer quiz where
students will be tested on the basic facts about Singapore, which can be
taken as many times as is necessary to pass, so that no student will be
held back unless he is unwilling to put in the effort.
Schedule for the
Implementation of NE in the Formal Curriculum
- The revised syllabi at primary
and secondary levels will be phased in from the year 2000. The new Social
Studies subject at Sec 3 and 4 will be implementable from 2001. The
proposed Civics syllabus for Junior Colleges will be implemented from
1999, and the guidelines for GP by 1998.
- Interim measures will be
implemented to improve the teaching of NE in the existing curriculum while
new syllabuses and textbooks are being developed. MOE will provide
teachers with supplementary resources and brief them on how existing
schemes of work could be modified to give greater emphasis to topics
relevant to NE.
Inculcating NE through
Informal School Activities
- The informal curriculum is
integral to NE across all levels and streams, and will be used to foster
camaraderie and bonding among pupils of different races and academic
abilities and develop a sense of belonging to the community. Values and
attitudes acquired through experiential learning are likely to sink deeper
than those learnt in the classroom.
- Implementation of the informal
curriculum in schools will begin immediately. Principals will
decide how they should shape their informal NE curriculum. Schools have
been provided a compendium of ideas to help them shape their own
programmes. Certain activities have been designated as 'core
activities' for all schools to practise, although they will still
decide how they wish to go about it. The aim of these core activities is
for all pupils to go through certain common experiences.
- While the en masse activities
would be more appropriate for primary and lower secondary school pupils,
upper secondary and junior college students are likely to appreciate more
demanding, smaller scale activities like talks, projects, seminars and
debates. As the focus is on developing leadership qualities in JC
students, they can also be roped in for organising activities like
excursions for primary and secondary students. As the singing of national
songs is a natural means of conveying feelings, this mass activity will be
practised in all schools.
- Team ECAs are an
important means of building up group awareness and camaraderie. From upper
primary to secondary four, students will be made to participate in at
least one team activity / uniformed group. We will also encourage all
schools to implement the "house" system as a means of strengthening
team spirit among students of different ability groups and races. It would
also offer leadership positions to older students, including the less
academically able. The "house" system will not be confined to sports and
games, but be extended to other ECA activities like civics quizzes, "
school cleaning", art competitions, song competitions, etc.
Commemoration of Key
Historical Events
- The commemoration of certain
defining events in our history is essential to the informal NE curriculum.
Certain events and the images they evoke must be entrenched in the
consciousness of each successive generation. The key events which every
school will be required to observe, although with an intensity and form
that can vary from year to year, are as follows:
(a) Total Defence Day (15 Feb)
--- marking the day in 1942 when Singapore fell to the Japanese. The
commemoration will serve to remind that everyone has a part to play in the
Total Defence of Singapore.
(b) Racial Harmony Day (21 Jul)
--- marking the day in 1964 when racial riots broke out in Singapore. The
commemoration would signify that efforts at racial understanding and
tolerance must not slacken.
( c) National Day (9 Aug) --- a
national theme will be given to schools each year to give focus to their
celebration of Singapore's independence.
- A calendar of other events in
Singapore's social, economic and political development - eg the Bukit Ho
Swee Fire, Hijacking of SQ 117, the last time we had water rationing -
will also be provided to schools to observe in ways they deem appropriate.
Visits to Key Installations
- We will mount a programme to
enable students to visit key public installations and economic facilities.
Such visits will help engender a sense of pride in Singapore and
confidence about the future. Students will learn through such visits how
Singapore has overcome its constraints by human will and ingenuity.
Schools will have to recognise these visits as an integral part of
education during term time, so that visits are spread out throughout the
year.
Community Service
- Community service will be a
mainstay of the informal curriculum across all levels, with the objective
of building social cohesion and civic responsibility. At the lower primary
level, the service could be rendered within the school community. From the
upper primary level upward it will be extended to the wider community.
Community service will not be confined to helping welfare institutions. We
will allow schools to "adopt" community projects and facilities, eg parks
or even a section of a park, and have their involvement visually
recognised.
Support from Parents and
the Community in Cultivating National Instincts
- Support is necessary from
parents and the community at large so that values and precepts imbibed in
school are reinforced outside, or at very least not undermined. The media
and grassroots organisations will have to play major roles in achieving
this.
MINISTRY OF EDUCATION
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