Jan
23Political education in North Korean errr…Singapore schools
Posted By: Amran on January 23, 2010 at 11:58 am
Recently there was a suggestion from the political leaders to introduce political education to Singapore schools. Law Minister K. Shanmugam proposed that schools teach comparative political systems in the hope improving the Government’s effectiveness in reaching out to younger Singaporeans. The goal is that Singaporeans be better informed about their political choices.
I will not discuss what others have already pointed out or alluded to by others like the issue of “objectiveness” in such an undertaking (see for example here and here). Nor will I discuss whether it is a new thing to introduce political education in schools in Singapore. It has been done for years. I will instead suggest an alternative to political education in schools.
What is most needed for citizens of Singapore to be “better informed about their political choices” is to teach them to think. Yes, I know we have the grand “Thinking Schools, Learning Nation” (TSLN) slogan dished out by the Ministry of Education (MOE) of Singapore which runs most of the schools in Singapore. Yes, I know the MOE has also rolled out thinking skills programs in the past and invited thinking skills gurus from all over. But ask any parent or student or teacher in Singapore, and they will tell you teaching thinking skills is not at the forefront of education in Singapore despite all all the hype and international conferences on thinking organized by MOE. It is still Trivial Pursuit-style written examinations that is central to the education system currently.
I am calling for a renewed effort to teach thinking seriously in schools. I am calling for the thinking agenda to be at the forefront of all educational endeavor in Singapore schools. I am calling for the teaching of thinking to be done not just because there are “thinking skills questions” in the high-stakes examination papers. I am calling for a change in the assessment of learning in Singapore schools to reflect this emphasis on thinking.
You can only get people who can make informed choices only when you have produced students who can think and reason. It is only when students are seriously taught to be inculcated with good habits of mind that they will become good decision makers. It is when they can display curiosity, and an investigative mind. It is when they can do systems analysis. It is when students can check assumptions, do deductive and inductive reasoning, classify, compare, analyze for errors and analyze for multiple perspectives that they can be making good decisions about their lives, including decisions about politics.
This are the skills that Singapore students need to be able to do well. These are the skills that will help them not only make better informed political decisions but also in other spheres of their lives. Teaching political education is a only a half-baked solution and invites cynicism about its very existence.
| Filed Under: Directions in education , Thinking skills Tagged with Assessment, high stakes examinations, MOE, political education, schools, sekolah, Shanmugam, Singapore, thinking, Thinking skills, Trivial Pursuit, TSLN |
“The biggest challenge I see is in time constraint – we need time to build rapport and we also need time to ensure that the students do well.” ~ Daniel Tan, primary school teacher, Singapore quoted in the Straits Times, January 20, 2010.
The above quotation is the response of a teacher in Singapore in response to a lecture by two American psychologists at the National Institute of Education (NIE) in Singapore. The two psychologists, Professors Edward Deci and Richard Ryan from the University of Rochester had delivered a lecture at the NIE on their findings in a 20-year period study on nurturing motivated learners and the effects of testing which had covered covering 15 countries.
No surprise that they recommended that students be given autonomy to decide how and what to learn. They also recommended that teachers spend less time on preparing students for tests. They also recommended that teachers build strong rapport with students. So this is what the research says. I will also add that this is not new.
I find the reaction to the findings by the teacher that I have quoted above interesting. He identified time constraint as “the biggest challenge.” My question is why is there a time constraint? Why is studying tied to time? He said that time is needed “to ensure that the students do well.”
Do well in what? The learning and deep understanding of concepts? Surely not as that should not be limited by a time cap. So where did that time constraint come from. Singaporeans will know he was probably referring to the high stakes examinations that Singapore students need to sit for in the course of their student life in Singapore schools.
What has been said at the lecture is nothing new to the Ministry of Education (MOE) in Singapore. I am certain they know that. But why bother with learning from research (and the MOE has been pushing for research-based teaching) when it is continually ignored in favor of administrative convenience? High stakes examinations are an administrative convenience rather than a tool to assist teaching and learning.
The remark also points to the MOE’s continuing love affair with high stakes examinations despite all the evidence to the contrary about the effects of such an approach in schools. When will “doing well” in school refer to a deep understanding of concepts instead of being well-drilled to examinations like the PSLE, GCE O and A levels?
At the end of the day, the remark suggests that all teachers in Singapore know that all that really matters in Singapore schools are the results of these high stakes assessments. All else for the MOE is just a PR exercise for the gullible, both local and foreign.
| Filed Under: Assessment , learning Tagged with Assessment, GCE, high stakes, high stakes examinations, High-stakes testing, MOE, NIE, PSLE, schools, sekolah, Singapore, Straits Times |
Recently, I wrote about eReaders being used for school. I wrote that eReaders may not be the panacea for to improve reading in school. Today, I came a cross an article in the New York Times (NYT) where it is pointed out that eReaders are generally not suitable for school textbooks. Anne Eisenberg wrote in her article, “Devices to Take Textbooks Beyond Text” in NYT:
“Even dedicated e-readers with their crisp printlike displays can’t handle textbook staples like color illustrations or the videos and Web-linked supplements publishers increasingly supply.”
This is a valid observation. But she goes on to highlight a better alternative which are “two-screen e-book readers with a traditional e-paper display on one screen and a liquid-crystal display on the other to render graphics like science animations in color.” Until these type of eReaders become the norm, school textbooks will remain un-digitised.
In addition, another article, this time from by Annie Gowen of the Washington Post, describes how the digital divide has developed and has led a greater advantage to those who are well-off. This reinforces what I had written about the cost issue of eReaders, and this issue can be applied to all the ICT equipment that is used for education. Of course, this has implications for equitable educational opportunities for all. Will those without be severely disadvantaged in the learning process in terms of speed and efficiency?
This digital divide can lead to issues in assessment of learning. A teacher must be very mindful that ICT does not give undue advantage to those who can afford, for example, laptops or PCs. These tools give students greater efficiency and also makes it easy for them to produce a nice report compared to those who probably have to resort to photocopies and a cut-and-paste work. Those without will be severely disadvantaged if teachers do not take note of this digital divide.
| Filed Under: ICT Tagged with Assessment, digital divide, education, eReaders, ICT, learning, New York Times, pendidikan, schools, sekolah, textbooks, US, Washington Post |

