Commentary: Singapore goes big on parental leave. Now for fathers and employers to step up

OPTIMISM FOR CHANGE

Still, there is reason for optimism.

How parents deal with their job and caregiving obligations has changed as a result of a similar shared parental leave scheme that was introduced in the UK. Moms who took the left frequently transition from traditional “breadwinner” functions to more engaged caregiving ones, which results in a more evenly distributed load on domestic responsibilities.

It also sparked and lasted long conversations about work and care, highlighting the potential for these plans to change societal objectives where open debate and shared obligations in families are the norm.

In Sweden, “daddy restrictions” marked a pivotal time in parental leave plan. It began by granting parents a 30-day leave of absence that would be lost if left unnecessarily.

The fathers who took any parental leave rose from 44 % to 77 % after the introduction of this policy, which highlights the success of the quota in promoting gender equality. Since then, this limit has been increased to 90 times.

Closer to home, Japan, usually steeped in profoundly rooted gender roles, has even made notable achievements. The share of fathers taking childcare leave has increased significantly from 17 % in 2022 to 30 % in 2023 after extensive public awareness campaigns and system changes.

Societal norms are not eternal, they can be reshaped with dedication, friendly policies, and a shared commitment to alter.

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Pew survey: What migration reveals about religion in India

Getty Images Hindu devotees pray before forming a human pyramid to break a dahi-handi (curd-pot) suspended in the air during celebrations for the 'Janmashtami' festival, which marks the birth of Hindu god lord Krishna, in Mumbai on August 19, 2022. (Getty Images

According to research conducted by the US-based Pew Research Center, Indians who immigrate have drastically different religious compositions from those who remain there.

About 80% of people in India are Hindu, but they form only 41% of emigrants from the country, the survey on the religious composition of the world’s migrants says.

In contrast, about 15 % of people living in India are Muslim, compared with 33 % of those who were born in India and then live abroad.

Christians make up only about 2 % of the Indian population, but 16 % who have left India are Christian.

Getty Images Muslim devotees are offering Eid al-Adha prayers at Jama Masjid, in the old quarters of New Delhi, India, on June 17, 2024. (Photo by Kabir Jhangiani/NurPhoto via Getty Images)Getty Images

” Some more Muslims and Christians have migrated to India than to India. People of another, smaller sects, like Sikhs and Jains, are also disproportionately likely to have left India”, Stephanie Kramer, a direct scholar of the research, told me.

More than 280 million persons, or 3.6 % of the country’s population, are foreign workers.

As of 2020, Christians comprised 47 % of the global migrant population, Muslims 29 %, Hindus 5 %, Buddhists 4 % and Jews 1 %, according to Pew Research Center’s analysis of UN data and 270 censuses and surveys.

The church affiliated, including atheists and agnostics, made up 13 % of global workers who have left their country of delivery.

People who migrated abroad as a child or adult, from newborns to the most senior adults, is included in the analysis ‘ immigrant population. As long as they are still intact, they could have been born at any time.

According to the analysis, India’s spiritual make-up is significantly more similar to that of the country’s total population.

Getty Images Indian Christian nuns are holding candles during a candlelight vigil outside a church to mark the one-year anniversary of the violent clashes that began on May 3, 2023, between the Meiteis and the Kuki-Zo ethnic groups in the northeastern state of Manipur, in New Delhi, India, on May 3, 2024. (Getty Images

Additionally, Hindus are disproportionately underrepresented among international migrants ( 5 % ) compared to their share of the global population ( 15 % ). Around the world, there are roughly one billion Hindus.

This appears to be because there are so many Hindus in India, and those who were born there are very unlikely to depart, according to Ms. Kramer.

More people who were born in India than people from any other country of origin reside somewhere, but only a small percentage of the country’s population is made up of these thousands of migrants.

About 99 % of Hindus lived in Asia back in 2010, almost entirely in India and Nepal, and researchers say they would n’t expect that share to drop much, if at all.

Since partition, India hasn’t experienced a mass migration event, and many of those who migrated then are no longer alive.

” In comparison, other religious organizations are more dispersed worldwide and experience more press factors that drive emigration”, Ms Kramer said.

Getty Images Community of Indian descent celebrates the Hindu holiday of Holi with the annual Phagwah Parade, March26, 2023 in the Richmond Hill neighborhood of Queens, New York.Getty Images

So are Hindus some sort of a global outlier in this respect?

Hindus do, according to experts, stand out in comparison to the various religious groups being studied.

They are less likely than people of other faiths to leave their homes, and their movement designs generally depend on who moves to India and arrives, as opposed to a large number of nations, as does Ms. Kramer.

Hindus travel the most range between India and the US and the UK, with an average movement length of 4, 988 kilometers (3, 100 miles ).

This is attributed to the absence of current crises that have forced Hindus to flee to nearby nations, according to researchers. Rather, most are financial migrants seeking employment opportunities, often in distant places.

India is undoubtedly unique from other countries in that it has an emigrant people with a different theological makeup than those who still reside there.

Hindus are over-represented among migrants from Bangladesh, according to the study.

Less than 10 % of Bangladesh’s population is Hindu, according to the study, but 21 % of those who have left are.

Getty Images 1947: Crowds of refugees gathered in Delhi having fled the Punjab riots (Photo by Keystone/Getty Images)Getty Images

Around 90 % of people living in Bangladesh are Muslim, but 67 % of emigrants from Bangladesh are Muslim.

Hindus make up only about 2 % of Pakistan’s population, and 8 % of people who were born in Pakistan and now live elsewhere are Hindu.

In comparison to its expat people, Myanmar has a lower proportion of Muslims in its inhabitants of inhabitants. Muslims make up about 4 % of Myanmar’s resident population and 36 % of its emigrant population.

Clearly, Muslims also migrate out of majority-Muslim countries. But religious minorities in those countries often migrate more.

What does the Pew review generally reveal about the spiritual makeup of the country’s workers?

According to Ms. Kramer,” we find that people frequently travel to areas where their faith is well-known and that those who belong to minority spiritual sects in their country of birth are more likely to left.”

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Myanmar massacre: ‘My family died in front of my eyes’

BBC/Aamir Peerzada Nasir sits on a log on the bank of a river looking out across the river. His face is turned away and is not visible. He is wearing a grey t-shirt, shorts, and sandals. The day is overcast, and a small boat is also visible on the bank of the river. BBC/Aamir Peerzada

Warning: This article contains facts some readers may find disconcerting.

When the weapons started falling, Fayaz and his family believed they were moments away from health, saying,” We were getting on the boat one after another; that’s when they started bombing us.”

Howls and shouts filled the air around 17: 00 local period on 5 August, Fayaz* says, as hundreds of terrified Rohingyas made their way to the bankers of the Naf valley in the area of Maungdaw.

Attacks on settlements earlier in the area meant this was what hundreds of families, including Fayaz’s, saw as their only choice- that to get to health, they had to leave from northern Myanmar to Bangladesh’s safer shores.

Fayaz carried sacks full of whatever they had gathered. His family was carrying their six-year-old girl, their eldest was running alongside them. His sister’s girl was walking ahead, with the child’s eight-month-old child in her arms.

The primary weapon killed his sister-in-law quickly. The child was terribly injured- but dead.

” I ran and carried him… But he passed away while we waited for the bombing to end.

Nisar* had even made it to the river by about 17: 00, having decided to leave with his family, spouse, son, daughter and girl. ” We heard robots behind and then the loud noise of an explosion”, he recalls. ” We were all thrown to the ground. They dropped bombs on us using robots”.

Only one of his household members survived, Nisar.

Fayaz, his partner, and child escaped and had finally cross the river. Despite his demands, the boatman resisted allowing Fayaz to take the baby’s body with them. He claimed that there was no purpose in bringing the dying, so I dug a tunnel by the river bank and quickly buried him.

They are currently all in Bangladesh’s comparative safety, but they could be sent back if they are apprehended by the government there. In a single moment, Nisar clutches a Quran, unable to comprehend how his entire world was destroyed.

” If I’d known what would happen, I would never have tried to leave that day”, Nisar says.

It is extremely challenging to part along the civil war in Myanmar. However, the BBC has been able to capture the events of August 5 through a number of exclusive interviews with more than a hundred Rohingya escaped to Bangladesh and the video they shared.

All of the survivors, who are armed Rohingya civilians, report experiencing numerous bomb explosions over the course of two hours. Some people claimed they were hit by cement and gunfire, while the majority of people described the drones being dropped, a tool that is extremely being used in Myanmar. In the days that followed, the MSF office working in Bangladesh reported that it saw a significant increase in Rohingya wounded in the days that followed; half of the injured were women and children.

The river lender is covered in bruised bodies, many of whom are children and women, according to survivors ‘ videos that BBC Verify analyzed. Numerous witnesses have reported seeing numerous body to the BBC despite there being no official count of how many people have been killed.

Victims reported to us that the Arakan Army, one of the strongest rebel groups in Myanmar, attacked them, which had recently forced the defense out of nearly all of Rakhine State. They claimed that as they ran away from their villages, the creek bank attacked them once more before they were forced to flee.

The AA declined to be interviewed, but Khaing Tukha, its spokeswoman, denied the charge and responded to the BBC’s inquiries with a speech that stated” the affair did not occur in areas controlled by us.” He even falsely accused the AA and accused Rohingya protesters of carrying out the massacre.

Nisar stands by his consideration, yet.

” The Arakan Army are lying”, he says. ” They carried out the attacks. On that day, it was only them in our neighborhood. And they’ve been kicking us in the face for days. They do n’t want to leave any Muslim alive”.

Most of Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims live as a majority in Myanmar – a Buddhist-majority position, where the two areas have long had a fraught relationship. Local Rohingya men also participated in the problems in 2017, when the Myanmar military killed thousands of Rohingyas in what the UN referred to as” a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.” Rohingyas once more find themselves trapped in a spiraling conflict between the coup and the AA, which enjoys solid support from the cultural Rohingya population.

Handout Fayaz's son looks at the camera. The baby is lying on a wooden surface with a pillow behind his head, wearing a baby grow. Handout

Rohingya survivors told the BBC they wished to share details of the violence they experienced so it would n’t go undocumented, especially as it took place in an area that is no longer accessible to rights groups or journalists, despite the risk of being caught and returned to Myanmar by the Bangladeshi authorities.

” My heart is broken. Nowadays, I’ve lost anything. I do n’t know why I survived”, Nisar says.

As the shooting increased close to his Rakhine home, he sold his land and home. But the issue intensified faster than he expected, and on the morning of 5 August, the family decided to leave Myanmar.

He is crying as he points to his mother’s body in one of the movies:” My child died in my hands saying Allah’s title. She looks but calm, like she’s sleeping. She loved me but much”.

He also mentions his wife and sister, both of whom were seriously hurt but still alive when the picture was captured on camera. Because the weapons were also falling, he had to make the agonizing decision to leave them behind. They eventually passed away, he discovered.

BBC/Aamir Peerzada Three people are visible in a hut which appears to be made of bamboo. A child lies on the floor, covered by a colourful blanket, with a man and a woman sitting next to them on a green mat. The woman is wearing a head and face covering, and the ban has a medical face covering on. BBC/Aamir Peerzada

” There was nowhere left that was healthy, so we ran to the valley to cross over to Bangladesh”, Fayaz says. Fayaz gave all of his wealth to a fisherman to transport them across the valley after the gunfire and weapons had spread from village to village.

Devastated and unhappy, he holds up a picture of his father’s wounded brain.

” If the Arakan Army did n’t fire at us, then who did”? he asks. I am aware that the Arakan Army was present where the weapons came from. Or was it” torn falling from the sky”?

These charges raise serious questions about the Arakan Army, which claims to represent every member of Rakhine’s population in a revolutionary action.

The AA, a member of the larger Three Brotherhood Alliance of military militants in Myanmar, has made significant gains since late last year in opposition to the military.

However, the army’s costs have added new problems to Rohingyas, who have previously claimed they were being violently recruited by the junta to combat the AA.

This has strained now subpar relations between the two communities and made Rohingya civilians prone to punishment as a result of the Rohingya militant group ARSA’s decision to unite itself with the coup against the Rakhine insurgents.

One veteran of the 5 August attack claimed that ARSA extremists who had allied themselves with the coup had been among the frightened crowd, which might have led to the attack.

There was a significant usage of power, according to the statement. There were children, girls, the elderly that were killed that morning. It was also indiscriminate”, says John Quinley, a chairman of the human rights team Fortify Rights, which has been investigating the incident.

” So that would lead us to conclude that there are valid grounds to believe that the 5 August incident occurred. The Arakan Army may be subject to criminal justice, and top Arakan Army commanders may be held responsible.

A map showing an aerial image of where the attack happened, and the proximity of Myanmar to Bangladesh - the two countries share a border in the west of Myanmar and the south east of Bangladesh.

The Rohingya group is at a perilous time right now. More than a million of them fled to Bangladesh in 2017, where they continue to be restricted to densely-packed, dirty camps.

More people have been arriving in recent months as a result of the Rakhine combat, but it’s no longer 2017, when Bangladesh’s borders were opened. The government has stated that it is against the law to accept any more Rohingyas.

So survivors who can find the money to pay boatmen and traffickers must pass through Bangladeshi border guards and chance their luck with locals, or hide in Rohingya camps. The BBC was told it would cost$ 600,000 ($ 411 ) per person.

The frontier guards gave Fayaz and his family a meal when they arrived in Bangladesh on August 6 before loading them onto a vessel and returning them.

” We spent two days upright with no food or water”, he says. I pleaded with some of the others on the boat to provide my daughters a few cakes from the boxes they had and gave them water from the river to drink.

On their next test, they entered Bangladesh. But at least two canoes have capsized because of congestion. One person, a lady with 10 kids, said she had managed to hide her home during the attack, but five of her children drowned when their boat overturned.

” My spirit was surrounded by my kids,” I said. When I think of them, I want to die”, she says, weeping.

Her granddaughter, a wide-eyed eight-year-old child, sits beside her. Both his younger brother and parents passed away.

Handout The faces of the family who drowned as a split image, showing close ups of two women and a girl and a boy. Handout

What about those who were forgotten, though? Although the Maungdaw telephone and internet connections have been down for weeks, the BBC finally got in touch with one man who wanted to remain unnamed for safety.

He claimed that the Arakan Army has forced us to leave our homes and that they are keeping us in universities and temples. In a small apartment, I am being cared for by six different people.

In response to fighting between the military and the Arakan Army, the organization reported to the BBC that it had rescued 20, 000 residents from the area. It said it was providing them with foods and health care, and include that” these activities are conducted for the safety and security of these people, not as forced evictions”.

The caller rejected their assertions. The Arakan Army has promised to take us if we attempt to leave. We are running out of food and drugs. I am ill, my family is unwell. A lot of people have vomiting and are vomiting”.

He broke down, pleading for help:” Tens of thousands of Rohingya are under risk around. If you can, please preserve us”.

Across the river in Bangladesh, Nisar looks up at Myanmar. He can see the beach where the murderer’s community was killed.

” I never want to go back”.

Aamir Peerzada and Sanjay Ganguly provided extra monitoring.

* Brands have been changed on demand

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Giving birth before 37 weeks of pregnancy: How a premature birth affects a mum’s physical and mental health

The long-term effects of stress from a pre-term baby may also be felt in a parent’s mental health. A 2014 study of 183 children born very pre-term ( Week 30 or earlier ) showed that when these pre-term babies turned seven, their parents were more likely to exhibit moderate to severe anxiety symptoms compared with parents of full-term babies.

They even reported higher levels of depression, poorer home working, and ultimately higher rates of family stress.

Nevertheless, not every pre-term delivery results in such problems. ” Long-term medical implications vary based on the circumstances surrounding their delivery,” said Dr. Sharon Foo, consultant obstetrician and gynecologist and maternal-foetal medicine specialist from Thomson Specialists ( Paragon ).

Research indicates that there are n’t major problems in the long run for parents who had spontaneous preterm delivery. It is crucial to take into account each case’s particular environment.

HELP FOR Mother OF PRE-TERM Children

For mothers, and their immediate family and friends, strong assessment and recommendation to healthcare professionals — be it their doctor, a counselor, or other specialists— are essential for long-term wellbeing and intellectual well-being.

Dr. Foo emphasized the value of family support and a nurturing care setting. Subjective research has identified emotional effects, including what mothers describe as ‘ shattered expectations’,’ helplessness and horror’, and fear about’ the infant’s vulnerable health’ and ‘ the need to adjust to the birth and care of a pre-term infant’ as vital anxieties these mothers face,” she said.

To lessen their fear of the unknown, Dr. Lee at SGH suggests that mothers who are at risk of a preterm delivery visit the NICU.

” At SGH, we refer these women to Neonatology colleagues for counselling. They will be given details about the likelihood of neonatal survival and hear about the timing and duration of the births.

Couples will also be informed about what to expect after the birth of the baby and how to care for them while the baby is still young.

Dr. Lee also advised speaking with other preemie parents to learn more about their journey and find inspiration, focusing on bringing their healthy baby home.

Dr Foo added that there are support groups, parenting websites, and mental wellness therapy available. Ultimately, it is important to recognise that self-care comes in many forms — getting sufficient sleep, eating well, and engaging in movement to kick-start recovery. &nbsp,Continue Reading

Commentary: Headline GDP may mask more important drivers of economic progress

CHINA: DARK CLOUDS AND SILVER LININGS

China offers another circumstance study. The country’s second-largest economy grew by 5.2 per cent in real term next month. Contrary to the upbeat feelings in the United States, which increased by only 2.5 %, the economic sentiment in China has been gloomy.

Part of this is due to aspirations, against the landscape of past financial growth. China’s GDP growth has decreased from an average of nearly 10 % between 1979 and 2017, to an average of over 5 % from 2018 to 2023. Although China is expected to overtake the developed economies in terms of money, its levels are still only a fraction of what the United States’.

Beyond the title figures, it is clear that there are major challenges to the Chinese market. Given that the industry accounts for about 30 % of GDP, the home business crisis is looming large. Foreign direct investment has decreased while a sizable portion of the Chinese youngsters are pessimistic. &nbsp,

To fully comprehend the situation, one needs to take a closer look at the factors contributing to China’s subsequent GDP growth.

While private enterprises have gained ground over the past decade, the share of state-owned enterprises ( SOEs ) have recently experienced a decline.

According to a report from the Peterson Institute for International Economics, the share of the state market in China’s 100 largest listed firms increased from 2020 to 2023, with State market capitalization increasing to 61 % in the first half of that year. Given that SOEs are perceived as less effective and innovative than their counterparts in the private sector, this does not have much to say about economic vitality.

However, the SOEs are frequently called upon to shore up the main government’s financial agenda. Lately, they were mobilized to buy empty homes with low-cost funding from the state. These techniques may promote title growth while concealing underlying market weakness.

On a positive note, China’s growth is increasingly driven by new technologies including renewable energy, electric vehicles ( EVs ) and artificial intelligence. In 2023, China’s clean energy industry accounted for about 40 per cent of the country’s economic growth, according to a recent World Economic Forum statement.

This coincides with President Xi Jinping’s stated goal of China transiting from high-speed rise to high-quality development. China must remain connected to global supply chains and business networks in order for it to succeed while obtaining the necessary technologies and inputs to maintain its position as a competitive force.

However, the US and EU have increased tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles due to the Chinese government’s support for the EV business. China increasingly relies on local use to support growth because trade barriers restrict export growth possible. To prevent households from accumulating higher levels of cautious savings, social security may require basic reforms.

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Loan-to-value limit for HDB loans lowered in new property cooling measure; eligible first-time buyers to get higher housing grant

SINGAPORE: The Ministry of National Development ( MND ) and Housing and Development Board ( HDB) on Monday ( Aug 19 ) announced a set of measures to cool the resale market and to provide more support for lower-to-middle income first-time home buyers. Here is the whole statement: With effectContinue Reading

First supermoon of the year rises over Singapore

As long as the skies are clear, the trend may be immediately obvious somewhere in Singapore, according to SCOB.

The Marina Barrage, East Coast Park, and the Southwestern Hills are recommended viewing places for the would, which are open to the public.

The fish is named in conjunction with the idea that this tuna is more readily caught during this time, according to the theory.

Additionally, there is a blue sky every year.

The observatory said the term “is used to describe the next full moon in the astronomical season,” which has four full moons in addition to the usual three. &nbsp,

The last seasonal Blue Moon occurred in August of this year, and it wo n’t last until May of that year. &nbsp,

The community also took to social media and&nbsp, Twitter groups like as&nbsp, CloudSpotting &amp, SkySpotting Singapore to reveal their evening views. &nbsp,

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Payout of S,000 for the involuntarily unemployed meant to keep ‘handout dependency’ at bay, say experts

SINGAPORE: The amount of monetary assistance for the unconscious unemployed&nbsp, is meant to support applicants while ensuring that happiness dominance does not kick in, said&nbsp, academics and sociologists. &nbsp,

Under the new&nbsp, SkillsFuture Jobseeker Support Scheme, lower- and middle-income workers who have lost their jobs would get up to S$ 6, 000 ( US$ 4, 600 ) over a period of up to six months. &nbsp,

This was announced by&nbsp, Prime Minister&nbsp, Lawrence Wong during his&nbsp, National Day Rally speech on Sunday ( Aug 18 ), in a major shift in Singapore’s approach towards helping the unemployed.

Eligible jobseekers&nbsp, may furthermore do their part by going for education, job training and job matching solutions.

According to experts, financial aid may be provided for an excessive amount of time or for an excessive amount of time, which could lead to unwanted outcomes.

According to Mr. Christopher Gee, deputy director at the Institute of Policy Studies ( IPS), if the amount is too high, behaviors may change and a worker’s motivation to pursue a job search may decline.

” Moreover, the higher the amount of financial help, the more expensive the project will be”, said Mr Gee, who is also a senior research fellow heading the Governance and Economy office.

According to sociologists, retrenched employees are likely to need to use their savings or rely on family members for assistance with the highest monthly budget of up to S$ 1, 000. &nbsp,

” If it is just at most S$ 1, 000 a month, then it is best seen as a key amounts, particularly with the prices that is still with us, and so unlikely to result to a perspective of happiness dependency”, he said.

Dr. Tan, who serves as an alternative principal research fellow and educational director at Social Lab at IPS, said,” The calculate seems more like a symbolic gesture, sticking close to the basics of self-help as the first line of defense.” &nbsp, &nbsp,

Manpower Minister Tan See Leng&nbsp, will provide more information about the new system.

The program would assist retrenched Singaporeans who were formerly earning an average monthly income of less than S$ 5, 000 while they seek out a new career, according to the Workforce Singapore website on Monday morning.

Nevertheless, as of 3pm on Monday, the S$ 5, 000 number was removed, and the site stated that the program is for “lower- to middle-income retrenched Singapore people”. &nbsp,

Responding to CNA’s queries, a spokesperson from WSG said:” More details of the scheme will be made known at ( the Ministry of Manpower’s ) upcoming announcement and details of the event will be made known very soon” .&nbsp,

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FAQ: What you need to know about Singapore’s revamped Gifted Education Programme

HOW WILL CERTAIN Kids BE ABLE TO APPLY FOR THE NEW PROGRAMMES?

Students are currently chosen for the GEP through a two-stage selection process in Key 3, and those chosen are invited to continue their education at one of the nine major schools that offer the program. &nbsp,

Under the new program, the first step of the standardized GEP collection evaluation, which examines their English and Mathematics abilities, at Major 3 will be retained. &nbsp,

The next step, which involves English and Mathematics tests as well as a basic skill paper, may become scrapped. &nbsp,

After that, individuals can also be selected for the high-ability initiatives at “multiple times” between Major 4 and Primary 6, said the Education Ministry. &nbsp,

Schools can even identify individuals suitable for the programs based on day-to-day studies, teacher recommendations and their work, MOE said, adding that there is” no set weighting” for these testing procedures. &nbsp,

This novel approach will provide more in-depth and detailed information about potential and capabilities of students over time.

More students enrolling in private lessons as a result of MOE’s findings that in recent years the GEP selection process causes anxiety, according to the government. &nbsp,

According to MOE, this novel approach will lessen the emphasis on the selection process. &nbsp,

Like the GEP, parents and students are completely to choose out of the new initiatives. &nbsp,

WHEN WILL THE NEW Project Get IMPLEMENTED? &nbsp,

The 2024 Primary 1 cohort will no longer receive the GEP in its present type. This means that students who are in the second batch of students under the new program format, which is called the “new shape of the program,” will be in the classes of 2026 and 2027. &nbsp,

When they are in Key 3 in 2025 and Major 4 in 2026, the last group of students in the current GEP program will take the two choice tests. &nbsp,

Nine primary schools currently offer the GEP: Anglo-Chinese School ( Primary ), Catholic High School ( Primary ), Henry Park Primary School, Nan Hua Primary School, Nanyang Primary School, Raffles Girls ‘ Primary School, Rosyth School, St Hilda’s Primary School and Tao Nan School. &nbsp,

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Revamped GEP to start with 2024 Primary 1 cohort, 10% of students to be selected for high-ability programmes

IDENTIFYING Kids FOR THE Schemes

Students are currently invited to enroll in one of nine GEP key institutions starting in Key 3, and those chosen are chosen for the GEP through a two-stage training in Primary 3.

According to the Education Ministry, the next day this is conducted is for individuals who will be in Key 3 in 2025, and the last diet of kids in Primary 4 will be in 2026. &nbsp,

Under the new program, the first step of the standardized GEP collection evaluation, which examines their English and Mathematics abilities, at Major 3 will be retained. The next step, which includes a basic ability test and tests for English and mathematics, will be eliminated. &nbsp,

Not only will this be the first time that students can get screened for enrollment in school-based programs. According to the Education Ministry, they can be chosen for school-based programs and after-school modules at various points between Main 4 and Major 6. &nbsp,

Schools can even identify individuals suitable for the programs based on day-to-day studies, teacher recommendations and their work, MOE said, adding that there is” no set weighting” for these testing procedures. &nbsp,

This novel approach will provide more in-depth and detailed information about potential and capabilities of students over time.

Some individuals may be early stockings, while others may rose afterwards, said MOE in a lecture on Monday. &nbsp,

The Education Ministry stated that” we do n’t want to just be focusing on the P3 selection test for GEP as a single time window to actually identify students with particular intellectual boosts.” &nbsp,

High-ability students may stay in their own schools at higher primary without having to transfer to one of the nine GEP schools at Major 4, according to MOE, adding that with programs in all schools.

More students enrolling in private groups to plan for the GEP choice process, according to the government, with more individuals experiencing anxiety at the GEP collection process in recent years. &nbsp,

Although choosing individuals for the GEP may depend on whether they are selected, MOE added, it may not be in their children’s best interests to take these preliminary courses. &nbsp,

They might be able to find in through the selection process, but they might never succeed. That’s certainly a problem for us as well”, said the Education Ministry. &nbsp,

Education Minister Chan Chun Sing said on Monday that kids should be aware of the drawbacks of teaching their children at a high level at an earlier period than usual. &nbsp,

There is no need for us to environment our children if we now understand that there are actually several points of entry and exit. And in reality, if anything, it will do the baby more hurt than good”, he said, adding that parents may allow their children develop at their normal level.

Delivering TEACHER Solutions

Because MOE has been expanding its power over the years, the state would not have been able to make these changes in the GE P’s early years, according to Mr. Chan. &nbsp,

Under the new program, 10 per share of the kids, or about 3, 000 pupils across 180 primary schools will be able to meet school-based programmes for high-ability learners, he noted.

Every school will have about 15 students on average, according to Mr. Chan, some of whom may have slightly more than others. &nbsp,

” But in general, we’ll be able to have sufficient resources to distribute across all the different schools in order to conduct these programmes”, he added. &nbsp,

Over the years, teachers have received training to support high-ability learners, according to MOE, adding that teachers will also be trained to provide differentiated instruction in class. &nbsp,

In accordance with the new approach, MOE will use the expertise of the nine GEP primary schools to develop higher-ability learners.

” One direct implication is that we will deploy some of these teachers to support the after-school modules, so they may be posted to the schools hosting the after-school modules from 2027 onwards”, said the Education Ministry. &nbsp,

According to MOE, there will likely be more schools that will offer the after-school modules than the current nine GEP primary schools. They will be chosen based on factors like geographic diversity to accommodate students from across Singapore. &nbsp,

Since students may also have commitments to co-curricular activities or other programs, MOE said, adding that both parents and students are also free to opt out of the programs. For the time being, students are only required to attend these after-school modules about once a week. &nbsp,

Some students who are chosen to enroll in after-school modules in more than one subject may enroll in more than one module per week or enroll in multiple modules in different subjects throughout the academic year, according to the Education Ministry. &nbsp,

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