Anxious parents fuel Singapore tutor boom

Five-year-old Singaporean Timothy has yet to enter primary school, but he is already attending classes 6 days a week.


Afp August 09, 2010

SINGAPORE: Five-year-old Singaporean Timothy Lee has yet to enter primary school, but even before his formal schooling begins he is already attending classes six days a week.

From Monday to Friday he goes to a normal kindergarten, but on Saturdays he takes special classes on phonics and abacus with four other children at an “enrichment centre” to gain a foundation in reading and mathematics.

Timothy doesn’t mind because everyone else does it.

“I don’t feel tired. I get to meet my friends and we sometimes play games in class,” he said.

In a high-pressure education system where raw test results matter more than anything else, parents are sparing no costs to arm their children for future competition and ensure they qualify for the top two local universities.

While schooling is virtually free at government schools where all Singaporean children go -- international schools are restricted to foreigners, with few exceptions -- private tutors can cost parents hundreds of dollars per month.

They, in turn, put pressure on their children to do well in primary and secondary school exams, creating a spiral of expectations and pressure.

“It becomes more and more difficult every year because children are getting better prepared for primary school by their parents, and the teachers and schools upgrade their teachings with the greater expectations,” said William Toh, one of three founders of an education web portal.

Called KiasuParents.com -- the word “kiasu” means overly competitive -- it allows parents to compare notes on private learning centres, with 21,000 members registered since September 2007.

It claims to get nearly two million page views every month from parents seeking the best tutors.

The number of such centres reached 679 in 2008, when combined revenues hit close to 250 million Singapore dollars (180 million US), according to the most recent data from the Singapore Department of Statistics.

The figure excludes cash paid to part-time home tutors, another thriving industry in itself.

Singapore students are required to sit for two exams -- during primary school and after secondary school.

High scores in the Primary School Leaving Examinations (PSLE) -- arguably the most dreaded acronym among Singaporean parents -- can clear the path all the way to university.

Those who don’t get into university settle for polytechnics and vocational schools, which will likely lead to lower-paying jobs, or cost their families a small fortune in overseas education.

“We do get a hard time from parents sometimes,” said Tony Tan, director of tuition centre SmartLab, which has nine branches and prepares students with a battery of mock exams.

But things could be changing for stressed-out Singaporean kids.

Following a review, the education ministry decided in July that children who enter the first year of primary school from 2013 will not have to sit for regular exams during the school year.

But the dreaded PSLE stays in place.

Published in The Express Tribune, August 9th, 2010.

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