预算辩论 · 2026-03-02 · 第 15 届国会
2026教育部供给委员会辩论:AI与教育变革
MOE Committee of Supply 2026 — AI & Education Transformation
教育部供给委员会辩论深入探讨AI对教育体系的结构性冲击。议员Darryl David指出,AI不仅是又一个技术趋势,而是正在重塑行业、组织模式和价值创造所需技能。辩论聚焦:(1)教师分级专业发展——基础AI工具与数字教学法培训、高级课程设计与伦理模块、持续跟踪AI趋势;(2)包容性AI教育——确保不同能力学生都能受益;(3)批判性思维培养——当生成式AI可秒出论文和代码时,差异化竞争力在于独立判断和批判性运用AI的能力;(4)成人教育与专业技术学院(如PACE)扩展AI和数据分析课程。
关键要点
- • AI重塑知识、技能与工作的交汇方式
- • 教师分级AI专业发展计划
- • 包容性AI教育覆盖不同能力学生
- • 批判性思维而非技术获取是核心竞争力
- • 成人教育扩展AI与数据分析课程
系统性推进AI融入教育全流程
AI教育从工具采纳转向思维培养
"The differentiator will not be access to technology. It will be the capacity to engage with these tools critically."
参与人员(2)
完整译文(中文)
Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02
主席:教育部(MOE)K项负责人。达里尔·大卫先生。
下午6时02分
人工智能与教育
达里尔·大卫先生(宏茂桥选区):主席先生,我提议,“将预算中K项的总拨款减少100元”。
先生,我们正经历知识、技能与工作交汇方式的结构性转变。人工智能(AI)不仅仅是另一项技术趋势。它正在重塑产业,改变组织模式和模型,并重新定义创造价值所需的技能。
在新加坡,这种转型在各个行业中都很明显。企业加快采用人工智能,员工也在寻求重新技能培训和适应的机会。然而,《海峡时报》报道的近期行业讨论显示,许多中小企业(SMEs)在人工智能实施方面遇到困难,尤其是在员工培训和明确前进路径方面。这凸显了一个关键点:如果没有结构化的教育和培训策略支持,技术进步可能会扩大能力差距,而非缩小。
政策的紧迫性很明确。为了打造能够利用人工智能的劳动力,必须将人工智能素养贯穿整个学习生命周期,从学龄早期到在职成人的继续教育与培训(CET)。
先生,在这个人工智能驱动的时代,我们必须有意识地界定基础是什么,学校在构建基础中扮演什么角色。人工智能素养并非始于复杂的工具、计算机程序或复杂算法,而是更早开始,学生需要培养理解系统运作、识别自动化输出局限性并行使独立判断的能力。
在一个生成式人工智能能在几秒钟内生成论文、代码和分析的世界里,差异化因素不再是技术的获取,而是批判性地使用这些工具并利用它们提升有意义工作的能力。
随着人工智能工具日益融入日常生活,基础能力必须更有序地安排。人工智能素养是累积的。学生毕业时质询人工智能系统的能力,取决于多年前形成的推理习惯。
在小学阶段,这意味着培养认知纪律——识别模式、遵循逻辑顺序、区分相关性与因果关系以及解读简单数据。这些不仅是技术能力,更是理解自动化系统如何做出决策所需的心理支架。
但先生,随着学生成长,抽象思维和系统思考可以在中学阶段有意识地引入。学习者可以研究算法设计、数据集如何影响输出以及人为选择如何影响技术结果。到大学预科阶段,学生应具备批判性质询能力——评估人工智能生成内容、识别局限并权衡伦理取舍。这一序列不仅反映课程设计,也符合发展准备度。因此,我们谈论的是人工智能学习的支架,是贯穿学校整个学习旅程的人工智能教育支架。
同样重要的是差异化。具备强烈天赋的学生应有机会进入结构化的拓展路径——包含人工智能组件的高级计算模块、与新加坡人工智能合作的学生项目、受监督的行业导师计划以及国家人工智能挑战赛。
先生,我了解到芬兰和韩国等国已实施全国结构化的人工智能课程,从早期就融合技术技能、伦理和公民意识。新加坡应确保其方法同样进步、包容且系统化。
先生,接下来谈谈教学、评估以及人工智能时代教育的核心。有了这份路线图,下一挑战是学校如何在人工智能普及的环境中教学和评估。人工智能时代的教育不应让学生负担过重,而应重新思考教学法,强调推理、判断和创造力。这些是人工智能无法复制的能力。
教师应将人工智能视为深化学习的工具,而非捷径。课程和项目应鼓励学生质疑输出、反复迭代解决方案并批判性评估信息。评估实践必须相应演进。如果作业中使用人工智能工具,评估应衡量概念的有意义应用、解决方案背后的推理和思考过程,而非仅仅最终成果。
实用方法可包括记录人工智能使用的反思日志、口头答辩解释推理和过程文档,如提示日志或迭代草稿。基于项目的评估要求实时协作和解决问题,能进一步揭示学生理解和主动性。评估设计应以透明度、问责制和真实技能展示为指导,而非禁止或限制人工智能使用。
同样重要的是培养人工智能无法复制的技能。领导力、同理心、伦理判断、协作、公众演讲和韧性仍是全面教育的关键。教师在发展这些能力中扮演不可或缺的角色,确保学生在智力、社交和情感上成长为自信且有能力的个体。教育必须继续塑造有思想、适应力强的公民,而非仅仅培养技术熟练的操作者。
先生,谈谈教师能力和专业发展。人工智能准备课程的成功依赖于教师。即使课程和评估设计得再好,如果教育者缺乏使用人工智能工具的信心、整合它们进学习或指导负责任且伦理使用的能力,也难以达成目标。因此,加强教师能力至关重要。
在人工智能增强环境中,教师必须充当促进者、导师和引导者。他们不仅需要掌握人工智能技术,还需懂得如何负责任地将其融入课程——设计能衡量批判性思维的评估并支持全面发展。
我敦促教育部实施分层次的教师专业发展计划。基础培训应涵盖人工智能工具和数字教学法,高级模块则聚焦课程设计、伦理和指导。持续专业发展应跟踪新兴人工智能趋势,确保教育者装备齐全。
现在谈谈面向不同学习者特征的包容性人工智能教育。推进人工智能素养时,必须支持神经多样性、学习差异或残疾学生。量身定制的项目和支架对确保所有学习者能充分参与人工智能学习环境至关重要。
自适应学习系统可根据学生的节奏、能力和认知特征个性化内容,提供针对性支持以弥补不足并强化优势。
包容性还依赖学校内的结构化支持。教育者和学习专家应接受培训,学会利用人工智能工具补充个体学习特征。例如,利用分析仪表板识别早期困难迹象,设计定制练习路径或整合人工智能辅助反馈支持自主学习。
目标不是仅因人工智能可用而采用,而是有意识地利用它回应课堂中学习者的多样性。通过在人工智能教育中嵌入包容性设计原则,从平台设计到课堂实践,确保技术惠及所有学习者,而非仅限于已有优势者。包容性人工智能教育强化公平,体现我们不让任何学生掉队的承诺。
先生,我想谈谈从现在的人工智能课堂到未来的人工智能课堂。我认为人工智能可以用来真正创造学习环境,包括硬件和课堂结构,提升课堂功能,辅助教师教学。我之前提到,教育体验的核心是教师,愿他们永远是核心,我们的实体教师。
然而,我们可以探索如何利用人工智能增强教师的工作,比如创建教师化身,或者让一位教师在课堂中同时在不同区域做多件事。听起来像科幻,但我相信这是可能的,比如在课堂上有一位名叫杰弗里的教师,然后创建他的人工智能化身,能同时在不同小组工作,再回来与全班交流。
这也间接解决了班级规模问题。过去五年、十年甚至十五年,我进入议会以来一直讨论班级规模和缩小班级。我们谈论的班级规模问题,不仅是减少人数,更是改善师生比例。例如,班级20人,一位教师比例是1:20。你可以减少班级人数到10,或者增加一位教师,达到1:10的比例。
所以,让我们探索如何用人工智能创造性地解决班级规模问题,最终目标不是单纯减少班级人数,而是提升师生比例。
先生,我想谈谈为继续教育与培训(CET)创建人工智能学习生态系统。除了学校课堂,健全的人工智能教育生态需要基础设施和支持机制,支持各个生命阶段的学习。学校奠定基础,职场人士必须能获得结构化路径以提升技能、保持相关性。
政府可考虑设立专门的继续教育中心,聚焦成人学习者的人工智能和数据素养。专门的人工智能继续教育中心可提供模块化课程,从基础素养到负责任的人工智能治理、高级应用、行业特定问题解决和职场整合。这将补充理工学院和大学现有的专业及成人继续教育学院,后者已提供人工智能和数据分析的专业课程。
主席先生,人工智能正在重塑我们的年轻人将继承的技能、工作和社会。我们今天在学校通过有意识的课程设计、深思熟虑的教学法和包容性学习奠定的基础,将决定新加坡人能否自信、创造性且负责任地驾驭这场转型。我敦促教育部、政府及其他利益相关者继续建设一个有凝聚力的人工智能教育生态系统,培养好奇心,装备学生迎接未来,确保新加坡人在日益数字化、人工智能增强的世界中保持领导者和创新者地位。
[(程序文本) 提出问题。 (程序文本)]
主席:达里尔·大卫先生。
下午6时15分
发挥个别学生优势
达里尔·大卫先生:谢谢主席再次容许我发言。先生,在2024年国庆集会上,黄循财总理宣布现行的资优教育计划(GEP)将被终止并进行更新。这一决定标志着新加坡教育体系演进的关键时刻。
自1984年成立以来,资优教育计划在培养部分学业能力最强的学生方面发挥了重要作用。许多校友在学术界、公共服务和产业界做出了有意义的贡献。该计划在很多方面是时代的产物,是确保学术卓越不留于偶然的有意努力。
然而,几十年来,合理的质疑逐渐出现。集中模式将学生从原校抽出,集中到少数指定中心,必然减少了形成性年龄段的社会交往。无论是否有意为之,该计划也被视为仅富裕阶层可及,尤其是随着社会经济地位与学业成绩的相关性增加。
新模式中,高能力学生留在原校,参加课后拓展模块,反映了我们教育理念的更广泛转变,即卓越与包容不必互斥。如果实施得当,这种方法有潜力既拓展最优秀学习者,也强化而非分裂社会结构。
与集中于“品牌”精英学校、反映旧GEP许多聚集倾向的中学资优教育(SBGE)模式不同,更新后的小学阶段计划让我们能以更包容、社会融合的方式重新构想卓越。
先生,我建议课后拓展模块设在非品牌、非精英学校,而非集中在少数知名小学。此设计将这些位于社区核心的学校转变为本地“卓越中心”,让学生在熟悉且社会多元的环境中拓展能力。
除了学业成长,这种方法让学习者接触不同社会经济背景的同龄人,培养同理心、韧性和社会意识,这些品质对儿童发展与智力成长同样关键。
同时,社区学校可培养特色项目和声誉,成为培养人才的分布式卓越生态系统,惠及学生、教育者及更广泛社区。
先生,实际操作中,高能力学生可能需在不同日子到不同中心参加不同模块,可能带来交通和时间安排负担。因此,我希望模块地点和时间表能与学生合理协调,确保项目可及且易于管理,不给学生、家长或照顾者带来过大压力。
这些中心的布局和运营不仅是行政问题,更是拓展最优秀学习者视野、强化社会凝聚力的机会,培养学业能力强且社会根基稳固的学生。
先生,重新设计的资优教育计划的真正价值不仅在于学生在哪里学习,更在于他们的体验。这些课后模块不应作为加速补习,快速教授更多相同内容或直接为小学离校考试(PSLE)提供优势。相反,应拓宽和深化对学科的参与,激发好奇心、创造力和应用思维,提供引导性机会让学生在有意义的情境中应用技能。
例如,高级英语模块可探索文学、新闻或创意写作,远超学校或国家考试评估内容。数学模块可引入基础金融素养、逻辑谜题或日常情境中的问题解决。科学模块可提供动手实验、设计思维挑战或适合9至12岁儿童的环境与可持续项目。
为补充这些体验,拓展模块可包括与教育者、研究人员甚至行业专业人士的非正式导师机会,指导学生探索科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)、艺术或人文学科。虽然非正式教学方式,但这些互动让学生早期了解知识的现实应用,培养责任感、韧性和伦理意识,伴随智力成长。
先生,这一新模式的目标不是按能力分隔学生,而是培养每个学习者的多样优势。通过将拓展设在社区学校,拓宽学习范围超越考试,培养高潜力学生路径,我们能将学术卓越与包容和社会凝聚力结合起来。
先生,这一方法符合新加坡教育路径的更广愿景——一个重视个性化学习、培养多样优势并强调包容与社会凝聚力的体系。
拓宽人才发展机会
陈艾丽莎女士(碧山-大巴窑选区):先生,资优教育计划40年来集中在九所学校实施差异化教学。从2027年起,将终止现行形式。
[副议长(克里斯托弗·德索萨先生)主持]
资优教育计划在最佳状态下培养了好奇心和独立思考。我们应保留这一精神,赋能聪明且有动力的学生掌控自己的学习。四十年来积累的专业知识也应在整个系统内传播。更多教师需要差异化教学的专业发展,更多学生应获得超越考试大纲的拓展机会,为未来导向的工作做好准备。
我们必须在培养高能力学习者的同时管理风险,避免学生感到像处于高压锅中,同行之间竞争激烈。新加坡国立教育学院(NIE)2024年对新加坡学校中智力天赋中学生的研究发现,尽管他们在学业上取得了外在的成功,但其学术环境常常导致自尊心下降、压力加剧和付出更多努力的社会情绪状态。
请问教育部将如何在各校配备资源教师以有效实施差异化教学?这种专业知识将如何在整个系统中推广?鉴于高能力学习者能够自我引导,教育部是否会采用更多以儿童为主导的方法?教育部是否会鼓励更多同伴学习,使高能力学习者从竞争心态转向合作心态?学校将如何在高压环境中保障学生的心理社会发展和自我实现?
让我们确保在培养最聪明的头脑时,不仅培养他们的知识,还培养他们的自信、好奇心以及作为完整且有韧性个体茁壮成长的能力。
有效缩小课堂规模
盛港区助理教授林志明:主席先生,新加坡的班级规模仍然较大。截至2024年,小学班级平均有34名学生,中学班级平均有33名学生。这远大于先进工业化国家的平均水平,分别为21和23人,这反映出我们公立学校的孩子们从教师那里获得的关注度与其他国家相比仍存在差距。
明确一点,这并不是说班级规模越小,结果就一定越好。相关证据确实存在分歧,尽管有迹象表明,最大收益出现在低年级阶段,且当极大班级(40人)缩减至接近30人时效果更明显。
然而,更有力的证据表明,较小的班级规模有助于改善课堂管理,加强学生学习并减轻教师压力。这是显而易见的常识,且当你真正与教师交谈时,这一点非常清楚。
值得注意的是,教育部也考虑到在某些特定情况下,较小的班级规模具有明显优势。例如,鉴于低年级学生适应新教育环境的挑战,小学一年级和二年级的班级人数保持在30人。曾经的天才教育计划(GEP)学生可能需要更个性化的学习以充分发挥其智力潜能,他们的班级人数接近20人左右;基础班则专注于为需要额外支持的学生打好基础,班级人数在10至20人之间。
我认为,较小班级的好处不应仅限于这些特殊情况。此外,最新一期的国际教学与学习调查(TALIS)指出了大班级的另一个明显问题:它加重了我们已经超负荷工作的教师的负担。我们的教师每周工作超过47小时,比经济合作与发展组织(OECD)国家的教师多6小时。矛盾的是,这些额外的工作时间是以减少课堂教学时间为代价的。OECD国家的教师每周教学时间接近23小时,而我们这里只有18小时。
令人失望的是,新加坡将教师招聘人数从每年700人增加到1000人的消息刚传出,紧接着却宣布将缩减教学辅助人员。这与我们应走的方向背道而驰。综合来看,争论的焦点不在于是否应减少班级规模,而在于如何减少。最直接的解决方案当然是招聘更多教师。
教育部对此的标准回应是,这将影响我们招聘教师的质量,同时抢夺其他行业的人才。教育部还称,教师人才短缺。我一直认为这些论点不够诚恳。毕竟,我们是否暗示二十年前教师占劳动力比例更高时,教师质量不如今天,或者我们对未来劳动力的投资不如对当前经济驱动力的投资重要?
从某种意义上说,经济学也告诉我们解决方案。我们是否应该担心吸引人才进入教学行业的能力?答案很简单。我们应该提高教师薪酬或减少他们的工作负担。这将解决教师因倦怠而离开职业的“先有鸡还是先有蛋”的问题。任何人力资源专业人士都知道,留住人才比招聘人才更重要。
即使我们认为向较小班级规模的过渡需要时间,也有更直接的解决方案。我们可以通过为每个班级配备教学助理或教学辅助人员来减少有效班级规模。这些助理可以在分组教学时辅导落后的学生,或处理扰乱课堂秩序的学生,使教师能够继续进行课程教学。这些专业人员的另一个好处是,他们还可以承担行政和计划任务,或者至少与主教师协作完成。这种负担显然是教师们难以承受的,因为它占用了他们大部分时间,分散了他们的主要教学职责,并增加了压力。
主席先生,即使我们接受学习之旅和课外活动监督是全面教育的重要组成部分,但它们无疑是次要的。将教师的工作负担从非教学任务中转移出来,只会提升教育质量。因此,我重申工人党呼吁将班级规模控制在接近OECD平均水平,即目前的21人,尤其是在小学阶段;如果做不到,则应为每个班级配备教学辅助人员,确保学生在未来的课堂上取得成功。
教育军备竞赛
茨厂街区议员潘丽萍女士:主席先生,新加坡的教育军备竞赛是真实存在的,目前有三个战线。
第一是小六会考(PSLE)。教育部将T分数改为成就等级的举措是深思熟虑的,减少了细微差别。但当家庭仍然认为12岁(小学六年级)的表现影响进入某些中学和未来发展路径时,他们仍会投入更多时间、精力和金钱以获得优势。
2023年,家庭在私人补习上的支出达到18亿新元。支出最高的20%家庭花费是最低20%的四倍多。当利益集中时,压力和支出也集中。这就是军备竞赛的动态。
第二场竞赛是直接学校录取(DSA)。DSA旨在拓宽成功的定义,其初衷是正确的。但录取人数从2019年的约3500人增加到2023年的约4400人,占该年龄组的约11%。申请人数激增,2023年达到38000人。当DSA成为另一个重要的入学门槛时,家庭会提前进行辅导和准备作品集。我们现在面临两场竞赛:通过PSLE的学术竞赛和通过DSA的作品集竞赛。
第三是人工智能(AI)加速。在AI颠覆的世界中,职业将多次转变,技能升级必须终身进行。AI工具现在可以个性化练习并提供即时反馈。但许多高级工具需要订阅或强大的家庭支持。如果不加管理,AI将成为新的补习,军备竞赛将变成数字化竞赛。
下午6点30分
为什么拆除这场军备竞赛很重要?有人认为只要雇主重视学术资格,竞争就是不可避免的。但劳动力市场的规范不会一夜之间改变。因此,我们的教育政策必须立即响应。在AI驱动的世界中,成功将更多依赖适应能力、深度思考和终身学习习惯,而非早期分流。这些能力无法在12岁前的冲刺中建立。
我们应做什么?首先,完善DSA,使其拓宽机会而非放大准备优势——通过结构化的外展、真实的校本提名和更明确的标准以减少作品集投机。
第二,使AI成为国家平衡器——保证学校的基础访问,教授AI素养,并将评估转向推理和真实应用。
但这可能还不够。教育部应考虑一个经过严格保护的、自愿的10年贯通试点,从小学一年级到中学四年级。在此试点中,标准仍与国家期望保持一致,学生毕业时获得认可资格如GCE,保留流动和转学选项,学科分班可提前开始,并根据学生需求采用“灵活班级规模”模式,而非“普遍小班制”模式。不是所有地方都小班,而是规模合适、灵活且适用。评估应涵盖学业表现、学生福祉、补习依赖和社会经济流动性。如结果至少同样优秀且压力减轻,应考虑推广。
主席先生,我们的系统并不薄弱。但建设一个面向截然不同未来的教育系统,强调终身学习、适应力和坚强品格,刻不容缓。拆除PSLE、DSA和AI驱动的军备竞赛只是重新设计未来长期教育的开始。
小六会考(PSLE)
非选区议员钟佩珊女士:主席先生,最近农历新年期间,我即将11岁的表妹Denise问了我一个我无法回答的问题。她问:“为什么必须有PSLE?”在我回答之前,Denise自己澄清说:“我不是说不要考试,我理解需要评估。但为什么我在某一天的表现要决定我六年小学的结果?如果AI能做这么多事情,为什么我还要为PSLE记这么多东西?为什么不能把我所有加权评估的分数加起来?”我的回应是,确实如此。
令我印象最深刻的不是Denise描述的压力——距离参加PSLE还有一年半时间——而是她已经自己做出的决定。进入小学五年级时,她预先放弃了高级华文课程,不是因为成绩不好,而是担心自己无法应付六年级的课程。她看到了前方的路,考虑了哥哥姐姐的经历,决定在还没参加任何PSLE考试前就限制自己。
虽然我没有给Denise一个好答案,但我答应她会在议会提出这个问题。
Denise直觉上识别出的是我们教育系统核心的矛盾。我们期望孩子成为自信的人、自主学习者、积极贡献者和关心社会的公民。小学毕业时,我们希望学生了解自己的优势和成长空间。然而,我们用一场高风险、限时、涵盖四科的书面考试来评估六年的学习。我们说一套,测量另一套。
这不是新观察,但从未如此紧迫。我们刚通过一项预算,投入数十亿推动AI应用,鼓励新加坡人提升价值链,发挥判断力、创造力和人类洞察力。但到了九月,我们会评估参加PSLE的35000名12岁学生的这些技能吗?我欢迎对教育系统的久违审视。
工人党建议将PSLE设为可选。学业倾向明显的学生可以选择参加考试,竞争有限的学术专长中学。其他学生应有默认的贯通路径进入合作中学。我们应有一个教育系统,默认每个孩子都能通过义务教育,而不是由一场高风险书面考试决定12岁的未来轨迹。
问题不在于是否评估,而在于如何评估。取消PSLE默认身份将释放出数月的课程时间,当前这些时间被PSLE备考占用,给予学生更多时间和空间发展真正的优势、深化对学科的兴趣以及21世纪核心能力。
Denise没有要求我们让学校变得更容易,她只是希望学校更有意义。
减压,更快乐的学习
义顺区议员李慧莹女士:主席先生,教育应当是快乐的。然而在新加坡,每隔六年,家长们都会面临两个重要节点的巨大压力:小学一年级注册和PSLE。学校分配的不确定性,加上学业结果的高风险,造成了巨大的压力——这是任何家长都不应独自承受的。
小学一年级注册过程关注的是家长做了什么。是否住得近,是否校友,是否志愿者。我们应聚焦孩子本身。我们为获得优先权付出了巨大努力。我非常尊重他们为孩子做最好的努力。但我们必须反思系统是否无意中加剧了焦虑,破坏了公平,影响了学校体验。
随着教育部着手审视小学一年级注册流程,我有两点建议。第一,现行系统如何制造压力?在我们的精英社会,每个努力的孩子都应有机会成功。一个实际步骤是取消中学附属优势,让所有学生公平竞争。
第二,流程能否更好支持多元背景和才能的学生?系统应像哈利波特的分院帽,帮助家长选择最能发挥孩子独特潜力的学校。让我们以孩子为中心,将每个孩子匹配或分配到能让其潜力绽放的学校。
睡眠健康与晚开学
后港区议员陈立丰先生:主席先生,Grow Well SG计划正确指出睡眠是种子习惯框架的基本支柱之一,该框架涵盖睡眠、饮食、运动和设备使用。我呼吁教育部制定全国标准,将小学、中学和初级学院的开学时间统一调整为上午8点30分,并为小学阶段设计一体化的学校日程。这呼应了我尊敬的盛港区议员林志明教授关于晚开学对青少年健康益处的呼吁。
当前数据令人警醒。2024年新加坡青少年流行病学与韧性研究显示,近85%的中学生感到睡眠不足,杜克-国大研究表明他们平均仅睡6.5小时,远低于推荐的8至10小时。
小学学生的情况同样严峻。7至12岁儿童的大脑和身体处于快速发展的关键阶段。科学告诉我们,深度睡眠阶段(非快速眼动睡眠)是脑垂体释放大部分生长激素的时间,这对身体发育至关重要。对这些年幼儿童来说,获得推荐的10小时睡眠不是奢侈,而是生理需求。长期睡眠不足首先影响的是执行功能,即管理情绪、遵守指令和集中注意力的能力。这在课堂上表现为易怒和缺乏韧性。未能保护他们的睡眠,实际上是在削弱他们的成长,牺牲长期神经健康换取短期学业压力。
对青少年来说,这是生物学问题。青春期大脑经历相位延迟,身体直到更晚才释放褪黑激素。据说早上6点叫醒青少年,相当于叫醒成年人凌晨3点。我们无法违背生理节律。
虽然教育部已将个人学习设备的默认睡眠模式调整至晚上10点30分,但我们也必须关注起床时间。目前,许多小学学生因早班车,早上6点甚至更早被接走。调整至8点30分开学,确保学生不会疲惫开始新的一天。
我建议小学实行上午8点30分至下午3点30分的一体化校日。通过将课外活动(CCA)、结构化作业(代替家庭作业)和补习纳入校时,确保孩子回家时大部分学校任务已完成,更易实现“熄灯时间”目标。我们需要明确的全国标准,而非依赖学校自主。让我们定下8点30分的铃声,给予孩子们充分休息,发挥最大潜能。
在校推广创业教育
提名议员阿扎尔·奥斯曼:贸易是新加坡的命脉,因此我们必须促进尽可能多的贸易。这需要重点建立众多公司,培养具有重大影响力的创业思维。
培养这种创业思维和技能应从小开始,学校是理想的环境。通过将创业融入课外活动(CCA),学生可以学习如何创办企业,体验创业者的意义。已有部分学校在实施此举,但我们应推广至所有学校,让学生都有机会参与。
这项课外活动可以成为小学和中学推出的众多项目之一。行业协会和商会可以在制定课程和培养年轻企业家方面发挥重要作用。例如,新加坡马来商工总会发起了一项计划,学生们参观商会,了解企业如何成立和运营。
通过实施这样的课程,学生将获得多样化的技能,包括市场营销、分销、运营、财务、机智和谈判。将创业精神引入学校将激发他们的创新和创造力,使我们成为一个能够创办公司和商业解决方案的创造者和创新者的国家。随着时间推移,这一举措不仅会增加公司的数量,还将提升我们在全球贸易中的影响力,连接新加坡与世界其他地区。
每个教室都装空调
张文杰先生(阿裕尼) :先生,去年我曾向部长询问学校教室的热不平等问题。研究显示,每升高一度温度,学习效率下降1%至2%,对低收入学生影响最大。部长对此表示认可。他列举了措施,如冷漆、更快的风扇、体育课服装、礼堂混合模式空调。对于教室,继续探索。如果形成不公平的学习差距,我们还能等吗?
每所教育部学校的计算机实验室、科学实验室、图书馆、讲堂、教职工室、行政办公室都装有空调。教育部正在为学校礼堂安装混合模式空调,因此电力基础设施已经具备。冷凝器也已安装,维护合同也已签订。唯一没有空调的房间是教室,42万名学生大部分时间都在这里度过。
我们应该将空调扩展到最重要的教室。一位小学教师告诉我,上午11点时,教室热得难以忍受。风扇只是循环热空气,产生噪音,掩盖了教学声音。孩子们坐不住,甚至请求去厕所以逃避炎热。教师在这种高温下也无法有效教学。
新加坡国立大学《建筑与环境》杂志的一项研究发现,新加坡风扇通风教室的认知表现,在稍热环境下降低9%,在热环境下降低18%。目前教室没有温度标准。为避免热不平等,我们应制定温度标准。
2023年,政府的水银工作组指定社区中心和体育馆为公众的空调降温空间。但对学校来说,则是减少户外活动、放宽着装规定、让孩子们回家。因此,我们会为空调社区中心服务成人,却关闭学校让孩子们离开。
国际学校和独立学校的教室装有空调。邻里学校则只有吊扇。最无法承受学习惩罚的孩子正在承担这种惩罚。资本成本不到1亿新元,覆盖所有教室,不到教育部预算的1%,一次性支付。运行成本方面,已有130所学校在Solar Nova项目下安装了屋顶太阳能。可将其扩展至所有学校,部分抵消额外电费。
我并不是要求全天开空调。设定目标温度,当温度超过时启动。教育部总部已有类似系统,集中空调带自动开关时间。只需将其扩展到教室即可。
先生,有两个问题。教育部是否会为教室制定室内温度标准?教育部是否会承诺分阶段计划的时间表——从小学开始——为所有教室安装混合模式空调?
跨信仰学习促进社会凝聚力
彭丽燕女士(海洋坊-布拉德尔高地) :主席,我发言主题是跨信仰学习促进社会凝聚力。
下午6点45分
新加坡的和谐不是偶然发生的。这是我们开国元勋多年来通过有意识的政策和辛勤工作,在社区间建立信任的结果。我称之为新加坡的实用和谐模式——不仅是容忍,而是日常合作、共享公民空间以及在社会中理性处理差异的本能。
在多种族、多宗教社会中,这种和谐必须代代更新。主席,学校是实现这种更新的地方。
跨信仰学习不应被视为小众话题,也不应只留给某些社区、某些邻里或已经接触过的人。如果我们希望相互理解成为全国共享的规范,每个学生都应获得平衡、适龄的主要宗教和信仰的接触,以建立信任、减少刻板印象,并使他们有信心处理差异。
主席,因此我希望教育部能考虑通过三种务实方式深化跨信仰教育。
首先,教育部可以加强明确的跨信仰素养基础,内容适龄,重点是理解、共同价值观以及新加坡如何管理多样性。目标不是神学深度,而是公民理解和对新加坡各种宗教的相互尊重。
第二,教育部可以使跨信仰学习更具体验性。不是课堂式,而是生活化,更有趣。学校可以获得支持,开展结构化对话、访问和跨信仰学习之旅。教育部可以与非政府组织合作,例如跨宗教组织,该组织在建设性和务实地与不同信仰社区互动方面有丰富经验。
第三,教育部可以为教师和学校教师提供现成资源和引导手册。跨信仰讨论需要谨慎处理。我相信许多教育者欢迎更清晰的框架、案例研究和培训,以便他们能自信地引导,尤其是在敏感问题出现时。
主席,我的观点是,最终跨信仰理解不仅是防止冲突,更是建立社会资本。确保我们的年轻人养成提问、倾听和尊重的本能。当学生早期学习不同信仰可以共存并共享空间时,我们加强了维系新加坡团结的凝聚根基。
如果我们希望新加坡在日益分化的世界中保持团结,我们必须不仅投资学术成果,也投资社会结构。跨信仰学习是一个低调但高效的投资,将在未来几十年带来回报。
学校体育时间
严彦松先生(阿裕尼) :先生,我们的孩子花更多时间静坐于数字设备前,这对他们的身体健康和认知发展构成风险。小学每周提供2至2.5小时体育课,但后勤问题可能侵蚀这短暂时间。这不足以为孩子们建立坚实的身体基础,而他们每天至少需要60分钟中等至剧烈的体育活动。
早期提升基本运动技能能增强运动自信,培养终身习惯,拓宽国家运动员和体能强健士兵的人才库。更好的体能也能提升学业表现和认知专注力。
作为一个小国,我们的竞争优势在于人力资本的质量和韧性。因此,体育不是学习的间歇,而是对集体实力的关键投资。我建议将小学体育课最低时长提高到每周五小时。为解决人手不足,教育部可聘请国家教练注册处和国家运动专业人员注册处的合格教练补充体育教师。
并非所有体育时间都需由专业体育教师授课。其他科目教师可开展运动相关课程,例如通过户外实验教授速度等科学概念,使知识生动。为克服空间限制,可为食堂铺设防滑地板和可移动家具,打造多功能运动区。学校地面可铺设塑料运动地砖,扩大体育活动空间。
通过提升孩子们的体能底线,我们能提升新加坡的整体潜力上限。
人工智能教育
李慧莹女士 :主席,人工智能正在改变教育。但我们的目标必须明确。学生不仅是人工智能的学习者或使用者,更应成为创新者和创造者。人工智能教育——利用人工智能个性化学习、识别差距和指导教学——能帮助学生按自己的节奏进步,同时解放教师免于重复性任务,专注于指导和有意义的学习。
为了适应人工智能环境,学生和教师将如何获得所需资源和技能?
我们下一阶段的员工发展必须坚定聚焦人工智能能力。
首先,人工智能可作为倍增器,解决人员不足问题。我们需提升所有员工的人工智能能力,以释放“人力带宽”,专注于高价值的学生互动。其次,教师必须先成为人工智能的实践者,才能成为人工智能的教师。除了标准的专业发展,是否有结构化的人工智能能力路线图,使每位教师都能自信地将人工智能作为日常助手?如何确保人工智能工具用于减少行政负担,而非增加技术管理任务?是否有框架定期评估教师的人工智能能力?
我们的学生和教育者不仅要使用人工智能,更要创新、创造并引领其未来。
通过数据释放潜力
阿都拉·穆海敏·阿都马利克先生(盛港) :先生,用马来语发言。
(马来语) :[请参阅方言发言。] 马来社区面临的教育差距已广为人知,但我们的理解仍不完整。我们知道结果不平等,但缺乏设计真正有效干预所需的细致数据。让我明确说明我提出的三个数据点将实现什么。
第一,按族群划分的年度大学毕业率将提供持续监测,而非零星快照。我们每月跟踪经济指标,却只在政治方便时评估教育公平。这种不一致削弱了问责。年度跟踪将揭示我们的干预是否有效,还是仅仅善意。
第二,收入与族群关联的大学入学数据将回答关键问题:是经济障碍还是其他因素导致差距?MENDAKI补贴数据将显示低收入马来学生的高等教育入学率是否改善。没有这些数据,我们无法区分可解决的经济限制和更深层的系统性问题。
第三,按收入和族群划分的辍学率将识别学生流失的具体情况。辍学是否集中在低收入家庭?特定教育阶段?特定人口群体?每种模式需不同解决方案。马来社区应获得基于证据而非假设的政策。新加坡具备进行此类分析的技术能力。
为人工智能时代重新平衡教育
许建国副教授(提名议员) :谢谢主席。先生,人工智能不仅将改变工作,也将改变学习。教育部已采取重要措施,利用人工智能减轻教师行政负担,值得欢迎。但如果止步于此,我们可能仅用变革性技术提升效率。
我有四点意见。
第一,人工智能应作为教学工具,而非仅是效率工具。除了自动化,我们如何利用人工智能重新设计教学法?人工智能能提供实时反馈,及早识别误解,支持大规模差异化教学。它允许学生按不同节奏进步,获得针对性支持而无污名。合理使用,人工智能可将评估从学生间排名转向跟踪个体成长。
教育部也正确提出减少教育军备竞赛。人工智能可助我们进一步平衡体系,保持必要标准,同时更重视校准和支持。人工智能支持的形成性评估提供实时反馈,及早发现误解,随着学生进步调整学习,减少对单一高风险考试的依赖。如果此类形成性系统能推广,我们或有机会重新思考高风险考试的时间和角色。
研究表明,过早的高风险选拔不一定改善长期结果。有时它缩小学习范围,加剧焦虑,却未提升标准。因此,如果持续诊断评估能更清晰反映学生进步和学习差距,早期高风险考试或许无需承担过重权重。
对此,教育部是否会大规模试点人工智能支持的形成性评估?此类试点是否能促使重新校准高风险考试的时间和权重?相关地,教育部如何评估早期高风险选拔是否显著改善学生长期成果,相较于推迟考试至学生年长?
第二,随着人工智能替代更多常规认知工作,我们必须强化独有人类能力。结构化认知任务自动化后,我们的优势将更多体现在想象力、协作、韧性、体力和主动性等人类能力。
教育部长期强调21世纪能力。在人工智能时代,这些能力将更为核心。它们如何融入课堂实践和评估,而非仅体现在政策文件?
确保艺术、体育、娱乐、项目学习和创业探索的空间至关重要。在人工智能驱动的经济中,教育部如何确保这些领域在课程中得到保护和强化?
减少军备竞赛不是降低标准,而是使标准与未来最重要能力对齐。
第三,我们应解决部分小学需求集中问题。小学一年级注册持续压力表明需求仍集中于少数热门学校。如果真心减少竞争强度,结构性供给应与宣传并重。
因此,教育部是否考虑通过设立分校或在更多地点增加招生,扩大热门学校的规模和容量?在此过程中,哪些关键因素决定成功学校模式能否复制?
第四,人才路径应反映长期发展,而非早期加速。如果我们寻求减少过度学业压力,也必须确保竞争强度不转移至其他领域。
定向招生计划(DSA)最初旨在认可体育、艺术及其他优势领域的多元才能。此意图仍重要。然而,在竞争环境中,DSA可能无意中激励更早更密集的专业化,增加倦怠、受伤或失去内在动力的风险。
缺乏关于这些学生通过DSA路径进展的纵向数据,是否持续参与、成功转型或早期退出,使评估DSA路径的预期和非预期结果变得困难。因此,教育部是否考虑开展纵向研究,评估DSA是否支持:(a)相关领域的可持续国家人才管道;(b)减少学生短期和长期负面结果?
主席 :亚历克斯·严先生。请一并发表您的两段发言。
加强学生人工智能素养
严亚历克斯先生(马西岭-裕廊西) :谢谢主席。人工智能正在塑造我们的学习和工作方式,但也带来关于判断力、公平和保护人类创造力的深层问题。
我们的学生已在日常生活中接触人工智能工具。人工智能素养不仅是技术熟悉度,还应包括质疑输出、识别偏见、理解局限和行使伦理判断的能力。学生应不仅知道如何通过人工智能生成答案,更应知道如何审视答案。
在实际课堂中,这可能意味着要求学生先写初稿,再咨询人工智能,并评估他们如何评价和改进人工智能建议。也可能意味着给学生一篇人工智能生成的文章,要求他们批判其缺点。
晚上7点
在数学和科学中,我们可能更重视解释推理,而非简化和呈现解答。在艺术领域,人工智能当然能生成多种变体,但创意方向必须牢牢掌握在学生手中。
原则很简单。人工智能应是思考伙伴,而非答案机器。它应扩展想象力,而非标准化。它应加速迭代能力,而非消除智力挣扎。
我们必须小心,不能让便利扼杀创造力。人脑是迄今为止最复杂的处理工具。如果在打造越来越强大的机器时,我们反而让自己深度思考和解决问题的能力减弱,那将是极具讽刺意味的。某种程度的认知努力,甚至摩擦,是成长所必需的。如果人工智能完全消除了这种努力,学习就会变得空洞。
同时,我们必须确保公平的获取机会。因此,人工智能素养必须系统性地、适龄地贯穿整个教育过程,教师也应通过明确的指导方针和专业发展得到支持。但对话不应止于毕业。
劳动力的人工智能技能提升获取
人工智能正在重塑各行各业。持续学习不仅对工程师、程序员、会计师、设计师、物流顾问和一线主管变得必不可少。中年及成熟工人可能因成本、时间限制或对数字工具不熟悉而难以获得人工智能培训。
在这里,可及性和相关性是关键。技能提升路径必须模块化且实用,融入主流继续教育,而非局限于专业轨道。培训应直接关联真实的工作任务。缺乏内部能力的小型企业需要更多支持。随着自动化推进,低薪工人不能被落下。
如果数字素养在过去二十年已成为基本技能,人工智能素养现在必须成为全民共享的国家能力。它不应是少数群体享有的利基优势,而应是增强我们集体韧性的共同能力。
归根结底,人工智能是一种工具。它是赋能还是削弱我们,取决于我们围绕它建立的规范和结构。如果我们有意识地去做,就能培养出一代掌握人工智能而不被其掌控的人才,以及一支利用人工智能增强判断力而非外包判断力的劳动力。这样,我们确保技术放大了使我们独特的人性。
为人工智能就业市场准备毕业生
黄志明先生(加冷) :主席,我们的年轻毕业生正处于一个动荡时代进入职场。人工智能变得越来越先进,甚至能完成入门级任务。在整个职业生涯中,他们需要多次适应和转变,因为变化速度和技能淘汰加快。
如果我们的教育体系不进化,毕业生的技能、工作期望和经验将与不断变化的市场需求日益不匹配。
我们的教育体系,尤其是高等教育机构,必须更加灵活和主动,预测未来技能需求,特别是在这个人工智能冲击的时代。这必须在各个层面发生,不仅仅是大学,还包括理工学院和工艺教育学院。
鉴于此,教育部将如何确保高等教育机构更新课程和教学法,确保学生为人工智能冲击的就业市场做好准备,并有更好的机会获得好工作?
技能未来质量——微证书
刘武扬先生(非选区议员) :主席,在我首次发言时,我提到技能未来面临成为选择超市的风险,选择多但缺乏清晰的职业阶梯。今天,我想回到这个问题,要求教育部采取三项具体措施。
紧迫性真实存在。根据2026年兰德斯塔德工作监测报告,2025年全球要求人工智能代理技能的职位发布激增超过1500%。三四年的学士学位无法跟上这种速度,我们当前的继续教育生态系统也难以让雇主认可终身学习证书。
首先,正如我首次发言所建议,职业与技能护照应发展为动态的活证书。目前它主要是数字档案柜。前教育部长陈文辉在2024年7月提出了一个活生态系统的愿景,微证书可在高等教育机构间叠加形成正式资格证书。该愿景仍属理想。我请求教育部设定具体时间表,实现大学、理工学院和工艺教育学院间的全面认可,让成人学习者能逐步积累可信的认可资格,并在职业与技能护照中适当记录每一步。
其次,跨机构认可只有在有足够值得认可的内容时才有效。我欢迎高等教育机构推出的新人工智能课程。但市场需求速度超过供给。我请求教育部为高等教育机构在快速发展的行业中微证书课程设定明确目标,并每年报告进展,以便我们自我监督。
第三,我们必须放眼海外。新加坡以开放著称,我们的技能提升框架也应如此。全球有大量世界级大学通过各种平台提供硕士级别的微证书。麻省理工学院(MIT)在edX上的微硕士项目和佐治亚理工学院的分析硕士项目,直接叠加到其完全认证且备受认可的在线理学硕士学位,正是具有全球雇主认可的高信号可叠加证书。
我请求部长将技能未来学分资格和职业与技能护照认可扩展至这些来自知名海外大学的证书,不是替代本地高等教育机构,而是在本地能力发展期间填补空白。
总理已将人工智能作为今年预算的核心。世界不等人,我们的工人也不等。我们的继续教育生态系统必须跟上步伐。
人工智能对高等教育教学与评估的影响
何德仁副教授(提名议员) :主席,我作为大学教育者和管理者,声明利益关系。
我关注新加坡及全球关于人工智能与教育的讨论,观察到两种看似对立的观点:一种认为变化不大,另一种认为在人工智能时代一切都必须改变。
我认为两者都有一定道理。一方面,人工智能将影响教学内容——教什么——和教学方法——如何传授和学习知识。学生需要知道如何使用人工智能工具并有辨别地解读人工智能输出,正如多位议员所提,同时新技术可实现更个性化的学习体验。
另一方面,过度依赖人工智能可能导致认知卸载。麻省理工学院去年发表的一项研究发现,频繁依赖人工智能写作的学生在脑部扫描中显示神经连接减弱、记忆力下降,且对自己写作的归属感降低。这强调了培养思考和写作基础技能不可替代的重要性。
因此,关于人工智能时代教育应改变什么、保留什么,需要明确。
显然,高等教育尤其需要更快地改革。当学生能借助全天候的人工智能导师自主获取知识时,高等教育机构需思考如何为学生创造价值,如何更好地利用课程时间。
教学不应再是讲师向学生灌输信息。课堂时间应更有效地用于案例讨论、解决问题和与导师及同伴的苏格拉底式对话,最大化相互学习、评估和反思的机会。高等教育机构也独具优势,帮助学生发展人际交往技能,结交朋友,建立网络。
值得肯定的是,我们的高等教育机构已意识到这一变化的需求,正在探索前进路径。各类试点项目正在进行,旨在改革课程和更新教学方法。
我想了解教育部有何计划支持高等教育机构推进这些改革,特别是在评估成果、促进经验分享和良好实践推广方面能做些什么。
人工智能也将显著影响学生学习的评估方式。如果教师布置带回家的论文,要求或期望学生不使用人工智能工具是不现实的。试图监管未经授权的人工智能使用,除非极为明确,否则可能引发师生间争议。
幸运的是,有替代方案。若目标是评估学生独立思考能力,教师可采用受监督的考试,限制互联网访问。带回家作业的评分可更多依赖口试或答辩,评估学生的思考过程,即使使用了人工智能工具。
不同的评估形式也需更好地反映学生所掌握的知识和技能范围。单一课程成绩可能无法全面体现学生的能力,尤其当既有技术概念和技能,也有评估或解决问题的维度。
以商科课程为例,学生需掌握经济学、会计和商业概念,通过案例讨论应用于商业决策,并有效团队协作。
单一课程成绩或绩点对这些不同维度的洞察有限。因此,学业成绩单反映多个组成部分——知识与技术技能、评估与应用能力、人际交往能力——可能更有用。前者较客观,后两者则更为重要。
国际上已有示例。密歇根大学为工程学生试点技能成绩单,突出团队合作、解决问题和技术能力。斯坦福大学整合学习档案实验室帮助学生创建数字档案,涵盖学术、课外和个人经历,超越传统成绩。在新加坡,淡马锡理工学院正为今年毕业生开创技能成绩单。
请教育部阐述如何鼓励或支持学习评估创新,是否有相关研究,以及如何促进各机构间系统性分享良好实践和经验。
终身学习新机构
朱佩玲博士(蔡厝港) :主席,当我与学生和在职成人交谈时,问题很少是课程数量,而是:“如果我投入时间和精力学习,是否真的能推动我前进?”
在新加坡,我们长期相信努力应当开门,勤奋而非背景决定机会。这信念是我们社会契约的核心。
技能未来局与人力部合并意义重大。职业生涯更长且不再线性。支持必须在技能获取、工作转换和晋升间感到一体化。碎片化的旅程削弱信心;连贯的旅程增强信心。但仅有整合不足以赢得信任。终身学习必须转化为真正的流动性,而非仅仅参与。
首先,成果应更多关注持续进步。除了报名和初次就业,最终重要的是长期工资增长、就业稳定和技能与岗位匹配质量。若工作不反映升级能力,快速就业无益。努力明显带来晋升,自信自然增强。
其次,应设立明确政策框架。单一机构简化学习者、求职者和工人的旅程。但有时政策优先级不同。例如,在资源有限领域,应优先就业驱动成果还是长期职业发展培训?新机构将向教育部和人力部汇报,如何防止决策僵局?
第三,激励必须一致。终身学习只有在雇主认可技能并体现在晋升、薪酬和岗位调整时才会成功。若再培训不改变晋升路径,工人即使有补贴也会犹豫。培训必须改变轨迹,而非仅仅成绩单。在变化的经济中,每个愿意适应的新加坡人都应看到清晰前路。若执行得当,此改革将增强下一代对向上流动的信任。
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技能未来体验课程
何大卫先生(裕廊东-武吉巴督) :主席,我支持教育部继续加强技能未来作为终身学习支柱的努力,尤其是在我们的劳动力应对技术和行业需求快速变化之际。
截至目前,技能未来提供了丰富且不断增长的课程和补贴。但对许多新加坡人来说,最难迈出的总是第一步:知道该选什么课程,这课程是否符合我的兴趣、能力和长期志向。
现实是,有更强人脉的人更可能认识新兴或高价值行业的从业者。他们可以向这些人咨询应掌握哪些技能,应选什么课程以进入这些行业。但没有人脉或社会资本的人则需花更多时间、精力和资源去摸索路径。
我们的体系理应做得更好,降低这类成本,让决策更明智。在这方面,我建议在现有技能未来课程基础上,增设更简单、轻量且便于决策的“体验课程”,费用低廉甚至免费。
“体验课程”本身让人感受行业氛围或所需技能。好的“体验课程”应回答基本问题,如“这课程讲什么?”,“我在该行业或领域表现出色需具备哪些技能?”此外,体验课程还应提供广泛的职业路径图景。该行业有哪些职位,我应掌握哪些技能以承担这些职责?
“体验课程”还应涵盖清晰的学习路径。若学习者有兴趣深入,这些路径应按职位、技能类型、难度等级或行业类型分组,便于理解。
若能做好,个人在投入时间、精力、金钱甚至可能的职业转变前,将拥有信息和更好理解风险。这对新兴和专业领域尤为重要,这些领域兴趣高但理解常不足。
无论是前沿技术、绿色能力还是战略领域,我们希望每位新加坡人都能睁大眼睛进入这些领域。主席,提供“体验课程”还能促进公平,因为人脉弱、社会资本低者往往难以了解课程和行业范围。总之,技能未来“体验课程”能缩小信息差距,帮助个人做出更好决策,毕竟我们每天都在做许多决策。
国家人工智能技能的公平获取
王瑞秋小姐(丹戎巴葛) :主席,我支持政府对新加坡人人工智能技能的大力投资。扩大TeSA计划帮助非技术工人获得实用人工智能能力,传递了一个重要信号:人工智能不再是小众技能,而是基础技能。
在建设这些能力时,我们必须确保包容性同步推进,特别是对残障人士,避免产生新的数字鸿沟。国家人工智能计划支持的培训机构应提供合理便利,如兼容屏幕阅读器的材料、必要时的字幕或手语翻译,以及无障碍培训场所。部长能否说明有哪些要求确保这些便利得到持续提供?
面向未来的青年
黄伟中先生(西海岸-裕廊西) :主席,新加坡学生在国际学生评估项目(PISA)中全球排名第一。这是经过数十年有计划、持续政策努力的真实成就。问题不在于我们是否做得好,我们确实做得好。问题是我们是否在为未来经济培养全面的人类能力。
世界经济论坛2025年《未来就业报告》指出,未来十年增长最快的技能类别涵盖两个领域:认知方面的分析推理和创造性思维,情感方面的同理心、社会影响力和自我意识。两者被视为未来劳动力价值的同等驱动力。
麦肯锡全球研究院的自动化研究发现,全球多达30%的工作活动可能被现有技术取代,而最不易被取代的活动是那些需要社会和情感智力、复杂谈判、同理心判断和创造性协作的活动。
我们当前的系统在认知模式上投入甚多,即分析性、收敛性且精确可测量的能力。霍华德·加德纳的多元智能框架指出,至少存在八种不同的认知系统——语言智能、逻辑-数学智能、空间智能、音乐智能、动觉智能、人际智能、自我认知智能和自然观察智能。一个主要通过语言和逻辑-数学渠道进行评估的系统,只是在测量人类潜能的一个子集,而非其全部范围。我们需要更多的认知和情感多样性。
情感维度同样重要。研究者梅耶、萨洛维和卡鲁索证明,情商(包括自我意识、自我调节、同理心和人际关系技巧)是可以被测量和培养的。他们的情商模型显示,绩效和领导力成果在某些领域可与认知智商(IQ)相媲美甚至超越。
这正是神经科学所确立的。玛丽·海伦·伊莫迪诺-杨和安东尼奥·达马西奥的研究表明,情感和认知在神经上是整合的。负责执行功能和高级推理的前额叶皮层并非独立于边缘系统运作。他们的核心发现是:没有情感,生物学上不可能形成记忆、进行复杂思考或做出有意义的决策。情感脱离会损害认知表现,即使分析能力完好。
这对新加坡尤为重要。心理健康研究所的全国心理健康调查发现,15至35岁的年轻新加坡人中,有三分之一一生中曾经历过心理障碍。PISA数据显示,新加坡学生的考试焦虑水平在所有参与国家中名列前茅,86%的学生表示担心成绩不佳。
这一比例远高于经合组织66%的平均水平。研究表明,考试焦虑会积极限制认知灵活性和创造性冒险。研究者巴克及其同事对70名六岁儿童的日常活动日志与标准化执行功能测量进行了对比,发现孩子们在较少结构化、自主活动中花费的时间越多,其执行功能得分越高。
而结构化活动则呈相反关系。执行功能、目标追求和认知灵活性正是人工智能时代经济所重视的能力。执行功能通过自主体验得以发展。
综合来看,发展完整的认知和情感谱系并非学术严谨的补充,而是学术严谨发挥最大效益的前提。我们需要更多的认知和情感多样性。
我提出三项干预建议。第一是“白空间星期五”。每周两小时保护时间,供学生主导、自主探索。学生每学期注册一个项目或爱好,学校提供基础设施,如创客空间和音乐室。教师提供资源,但不指挥。无需评分标准,无需成绩。
这一建议基于斯坦福青少年中心的研究,发现通过自主探索发展个人目标的年轻人,在学业动力、心理健康和职业轨迹上均优于目标由外部指定者。
第二项建议是学生政策委员会。咨询与共治的区别至关重要。咨询是听取意见;共治则是参与权衡、约束和决策,在优先事项冲突时无法全部满足的情况下做出选择。正是在这一过程中,情感智力得以实践发展。
研究者泽尔丁、卡米诺和穆克考察了多机构的青少年-成人治理伙伴关系,发现真正拥有决策权的伙伴关系能显著提升青少年的自我效能感、同理心和公民归属感。这种效果在真正共治条件下明显强于咨询安排。
提议成立学生政策委员会,由校领导担任委员会的协调者和顾问,确保学生在学生福利、设施使用和可持续发展目标的讨论中拥有真正的发言权。学生被告知约束条件、预算和后勤,其意见具有正式分量。通过不同学生群体轮换,发展利益得以广泛分布,而非集中于狭窄群体。
第三项是国家发现基金。研究者埃里克·埃里克森在《身份、青年与危机》中指出,15至25岁是身份形成的关键心理社会窗口。后续神经科学研究也证实,青春期是神经可塑性增强期,特别是在自我概念、风险评估和社会认知的调控区域。这些是身份发展的基础。
我们应在25岁前加大投资。过了这一窗口,最关键功能的神经可塑性基本关闭。发现基金积分将为15至25岁的新加坡人提供更多自我发现、意识、自我管理和成熟发展的机会,这对长期发展至关重要。积分可用于非学术自主探索、区域实习、获取专业技能、独立项目材料,甚至社会企业资助。
可考虑分层积分结构,帮助弱势家庭应对探索性经历在收入阶层间分布不均的现实。长期来看,这有助于减少中年职业倦怠和职业错配带来的财政负担及其对缺勤、医疗利用和生产力损失的影响。
这三项干预共享一个逻辑。新加坡下一阶段发展需要能够跨越完整认知和情感谱系的公民,既能发散思维也能收敛思维,既能以同理心领导,也能分析并以智力严谨和情感韧性驾驭不确定性。
我以此结束。1959年,英国物理学家兼小说家CP·斯诺在剑桥发表演讲,后出版为《两种文化》。他的观察很简单:知识生活分裂为两个互不理解的群体——科学家和人文学者,他们基本停止理解或尊重对方的工作。两者之间存在着相互轻蔑的鸿沟,悄然削弱了社会解决最严重国家问题的能力。
斯诺在文明层面所识别的现象,我们今天在课堂、董事会、团队、社区和日常生活中都能观察到。分析能力强但无法“读懂场面”的学生,与我们评估体系无法识别的关系型天赋学生并肩而立。两种智能并存,却互不承认对方为智能。他们自然会屈从于各自群体的共识,忽视他人更丰富的连接性和情感多样性。
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斯通的警告是,允许这种分裂加剧的社会,不仅失去文化丰富性,还失去解决问题的能力和潜力。最重要的挑战需要认知和情感领域的真正整合。1959年如此,今天更是如此。我们必须不断磨砺自己,尊重连接性和情感多样性的能力,为新加坡和新加坡人做出更好的决策。
教育路径的拓宽
许淑慧女士(马西岭-裕廊西):主席,作为教育政策小组委员会副主席,我和同事们始终致力于确保新加坡人在生命各阶段均能获得教育机会,包括超越传统路径的多元途径。
随着国家加大人工智能教育力度并推动终身学习,我们必须确保适当基础设施支持每一位有志学习者,无论其起点如何。这关乎构建未来,而非仅仅获取知识。
根据我在伍德格罗夫选区的反馈,每逢工艺教育学院(ITE)和理工学院申请期,许多符合条件的居民因心仪课程超额报名而失望,尽管其成绩已达录取线。请问教育部能否分享目前ITE、理工学院及其兼职课程的占用率或利用率?是否有计划增加为兼顾事业和家庭的在职成人开放的名额?我呼吁全面审查容量,确保无合格学生被排除在外。
作为马西岭-裕廊西集选区的议员,我曾在议会提出在北部设立新ITE的建议。该校可兼作终身培训中心,服务该地区日益增长的人口。它可与共和国理工学院紧密合作,提供无缝“直通车”项目,实现从基础到高级技能的顺畅衔接。还可与附近JTC工业区的企业合作,使学习者能直接在工作中应用技能,毕业后获得就业机会,或便捷返校提升技能。此类设施将提升实用技能教育的可及性,弥合差距,促进持续成长文化。
仅有基础设施还不够。我们需要全面项目,覆盖可能被忽视的人群。因此,我呼吁与基督教青年会(YMCA)的职业及软技能项目深化合作,该项目为辍学青年和风险青少年提供就业能力和职业技能,帮助他们重建信心。许多年轻人因负面同伴影响或家庭背景复杂而感到迷失。推广和扩大此类项目与总理的愿景高度契合:每位新加坡人,无论起点如何,都应有公平机会追求理想,实现潜能。
为了让这些路径真正包容,教育融资必须跟上步伐。我呼吁审视并拓宽中央公积金教育贷款计划和学费贷款,涵盖更广泛课程——职业技艺、艺术及人工智能和可持续发展等创新领域。更多银行也应提供类似支持。这是对人才的投资,确保无梦想因经济障碍而延迟。请用普通话发言。
(普通话):[请参阅方言发言。]为支持技能未来计划的实施,人民协会自2016年以来在各社区俱乐部(CC)提供SkillsFuture@PA课程。该计划已运行近十年。我想问:课程数量及参与的社区俱乐部数量是否逐步增加?哪一年龄组参与者最多?
为鼓励更多新加坡人利用技能未来培训积分,我希望SkillsFuture@PA项目能进一步扩展。除社区俱乐部外,还可在居民网络中心开设课程,为长者及行动不便者提供更便捷和陪伴,激励他们报名参与。
(英文):主席,教育新加坡人是发展我们唯一的自然资源——人才。拓宽教育路径非奢侈,而是新加坡韧性未来的必需。通过扩充容量、建设针对性设施、与产业及社区项目合作及改革融资,我们能使终身学习成为常态,而非例外。让我们今天为青年、工人和国家共同承诺。
工艺教育学院路径与终身学习
哈米德·拉扎克博士(西海岸-裕廊西):主席先生,新加坡在重塑技能观念、应用学习和多元成功路径方面取得显著进展。今日的工艺教育学院是许多年轻新加坡人建立有意义职业的跳板。下一阶段不仅是获得机会,更是终身进阶。如果终身学习要奏效,进阶路径必须清晰。我想到一位新加坡人阿布·巴卡尔·西迪克先生,他起步于普通学术班,随后进入工艺教育学院、理工学院攻读工程,工作后获资助完成学士学位,现已完成硕士学位。他的故事表明,起点不决定终点,进步必须开放。
主席先生,工作学习文凭是未来学习的强有力模式。随着我们强化此路径,我有三点问题请教部长。第一,教育部如何让工艺教育学院通往工作学习文凭及更高阶段的进阶路径对学生和家长更具可见性,包括按行业划分的路径图和可叠加的资格证书,明确里程碑和入学标准?
第二,教育部如何赋予职场验证能力更正式的权重,确保评估严格且被雇主广泛认可?
第三,部长是否考虑试点为表现优异的工艺教育学院及工作学习学员设立结构化的有条件大学路径,基于持续的职场表现和升级学习,但不暗示大学是唯一结果?
主席先生,面向未来的教育体系不是早期分流学生,而是终身保持开放的门路。只要每条路径都能向前,更多新加坡人将走得更远。
成人教育者的认可
何泰伦副教授:我声明本人为培训和认证成人教育者以教授SkillsFuture课程的教育机构高级管理人员。
自技能未来运动启动以来,新加坡的终身学习生态系统在过去11年发生了变革。技能未来新加坡及其合作伙伴的努力使培训和再技能提升变得负担得起、易于获得且质量高,满足学习者多样化需求。
成人教育者对继续教育培训(CET)的质量至关重要,正如学校教师确保学校教育质量一样。去年预算辩论中,我记得谢耀权议员谈及成人教育者专业发展和认可的重要性。今年4月起,教授SkillsFuture资助课程的成人教育者必须注册国家成人教育者名册,并每两年更新注册,需完成最低实践小时及持续专业发展。该公开名册将支持成人教育者专业发展,增强公众对继续教育培训体系的信心。
除了设定最低标准,我们还应鼓励并认可成人教育者的卓越表现。我所在的成人学习研究所将授予更多成人教育研究员称号,认可他们为各自领域的领军教育者,能激励其他成人教育者并与专业社区分享专长。
我相信我们可以做得更多。正如总统教师奖表彰通过创新教学方法和终身学习承诺激励学生和同侪的杰出教师,教育部是否考虑设立总统成人教育者奖?这将使成人教育者作为终身学习的守护者,在认可度上与教师职业相当。
在快速变化的工作和技能需求时代,成人教育者在激励和启发成人学习者持续学习和掌握新技能方面发挥关键作用。成人教育者需基于最新成人学习研究,创新教学和引导方法,适时利用人工智能和新数字工具。他们自身也必须成为终身学习的典范。我认为,随着我们在就业前培训和继续教育培训之间重新平衡关注,强化成人教育者的认可正当其时。
主席:何大卫先生,您可以将两段发言合并进行。
归属感、多样需求与公平
何大卫先生(裕廊东-武吉巴督):谢谢主席。我想谈谈归属感以及教育部在学校认同、多样化学习需求和公平之间必须取得的平衡。学校归属机制和家长校友归属感长期以来是我们教育体系的一部分。它们有助于维系学校精神、社区和传统。许多校友持续为学校做出有意义贡献,这种精神应予以保留。
但在当今的背景下,教育部也应评估附属关系是否可能导致了意想不到的后果。它是否赋予某些学生不成比例的优势,削弱了公平、择优录取和社会融合的认知?一个实际问题是,附属关系导致的录取分数线差距有多大,这种差距如何转化为课堂上不同的学业准备水平,这使得有针对性的教学更加困难,并增加了教师的备课负担。
让我举例说明这种差距。附属学生和非附属学生在小学六年级的录取分数线差距可能非常大。在我的研究中,我发现2025年某所热门学校,非附属学生的录取分数线是10分,而附属学生的录取分数线是20分。差距是10分,而不是10分的分数差。
这并非个例,因为有几所学校的附属相关录取分数线差距同样很大。这很重要,因为在我们当前的AL系统中,某些等级覆盖了很宽的分数范围。例如,AL 6的分数范围是45分到64分,AL 5是65分到74分。因此,录取分数线差距一分就可能代表学业准备水平的巨大差异,更何况是10分的差距?这会显著扩大同一学科课堂内学生的能力差异。这反过来会增加差异化教学的需求,使课堂和课程规划更加复杂,即使我们已经实施了完整学科分班(FSBB)。虽然FSBB有助于学科层面的分组,但无法消除同一学科班级内准备水平的巨大差异。
第二个问题是附属关系对上游的激励作用。你看,附属优势过大可能促使小学阶段的过早竞争。一个可能的意外后果是,家庭选择小学时并非真正基于价值观、文化或课程,而是为了确保将来进入优质中学的附属学校路径更容易。随着时间推移,这可能加剧不平等,因为搬家能力、安排托儿、动员校友关系的能力在人群中分布不均。因此,我鼓励教育部考虑是否需要审查当前中学入学的学校附属机制。
关于这方面,我有一些建议。教育部或许可以考虑将附属与非附属录取分数线的最大差距限制在两到三分,同时审查各AL等级内的分数范围,以准确反映学生的准备水平,或者干脆取消附属录取分数线。
明确一点,这里的目标不是废除学校身份认同,而是确保这种身份认同不会以牺牲公众对公平的信心或无意中削弱社会融合为代价。这也与小学一年级入学有关,尤其是在第二阶段A中,优先考虑校友家长。教育部必须在合法的社区联系与学校应保持包容性的原则之间取得平衡。
为了保持包容性,我想知道教育部是否可以考虑在超额报名的学校为非校友学生提供更多保护名额,以免小学选择被网络或资源的结构性优势驱动。
实习、外部实习和学习之旅
主席,我感谢教育部努力拓宽路径,使我们的学生能够做出更好的职业选择,比如在学校配备教育职业顾问。这很重要,因为它帮助我们的学生和年轻人决定追求什么。
然而,我认为在这方面还可以做得更多,以实现更大、更有意义的变化,尤其是对那些网络较少的学生。
这里指的是实习、外部实习、学习之旅和结构化职业体验。
晚上7点45分
如今,许多此类机会存在,但获取不均。例如,资源较丰富的学校,尤其是我们的独立中学,通常拥有更强大的校友网络、更成熟的行业关系和更强的组织访问、讲座或实习的能力。
在最近一次克莱门蒂社区活动中,我与一名学生交谈,他告诉我他们学校很快,大约一周后,将为中四年级学生安排一个休假周。这些学生可以选择多种不同的项目,以获得课堂之外的体验。他还告诉我,他的高年级学长以前在假期期间做过实习。
作为一名前教育者,我理解他的世界观,但我也知道这并非新加坡大多数中学的真实情况。对于来自资源较少或弱势背景的学生来说,发现兴趣的机会更为重要,因为如果你来自没有强大职业网络的家庭,你无法轻易从父母或朋友那里借鉴职业见解,也难以通过社交关系找到非正式实习机会,因为你所能看到的就是你所能想象的,而你所能想象的塑造了你敢于追求的目标。
因此,如果结构化的职业体验做得好,它就成为一种平衡器,因为它替代了“你认识谁”,帮助学生建立信心、抱负和更清晰的适应感。所以,我敦促教育部考虑以下三项措施。
第一,扩大并更好地标准化各校的职业体验机会。这包括实习、外部实习(在可行的情况下),以及更短、更可扩展的形式,如学习之旅、职场访问、跟岗日和包含真实工作内容的结构化职业日。目标是确保这些体验不仅限于部分学校,而是在整个系统中普及,尤其是非学术计划(非IP)学校和资源较少的教育机构。
第二,教育部应考虑根据新加坡重点发展的行业或领域,更好地结构化这些体验。我们可以与行业合作伙伴和学校领导合作策划此类体验。这些体验不应是一次性的,而应是持续的,让学生了解工作的性质、所需技能和职业路径。
第三,对于此类项目,应优先考虑最需要帮助的学生。如果我们相信公平,就必须为资源较少或来自弱势背景的学生设计优先参与机制。应消除实际障碍,例如简化报名流程、提供交通支持,如有需要,提供小额津贴,以确保参与不受学生经济或家庭状况限制。除了技能未来课程外,我们还应为成人推广短期学习之旅,让成人获得更现实的职业视角。
培养学生的韧性
陈嘉玲博士(淡滨尼):主席,韧性不应取决于孩子就读哪所学校。虽然已有相关举措,但实施情况不一。有些学校将韧性技能、同伴系统和早期识别融入其中,而另一些则严重依赖当地资源和优先事项。如果韧性是基础,某些元素必须在全国范围内得到保障。高绩效体系已经这样做了。
芬兰将福祉作为国家课程的正式目标。丹麦规定每周一节课,称为“Klassens Tid”,专门用于情感对话和冲突解决。日本的Tokkatsu是其国家课程的一部分,系统培养社会责任感和情绪调节能力。这些不是可选的附加内容,而是结构化的期望。
因此,我提议设立全国学校心理健康福祉宪章。原则明确:标准和问责集中,执行和创新分散。
第一,设立韧性教育的国家基线:在品格与公民教育(CCE)中每年最低分配时间用于心理健康素养和应对技能;在关键阶段定义发展能力;中央审核外部服务提供者。
第二,标准化福祉框架。丹麦使用国家数字福祉审计系统,系统跟踪学生情绪和福利趋势。新加坡可以采用经过国家验证的年度工具,测量归属感、应对信心和心理安全,用于内部改进,而非公开排名。
第三,明确支持基准。芬兰的三级支持模型确保及时干预需要更多帮助的学生。我们的宪章应定义辅导员访问时间表、同伴支持者的最低培训和监督标准、结构化转介路径。
认证应分级且具有发展性,认可能力建设而非仅仅合规。这是可行的。CCE存在,调查存在,同伴系统存在,辅导员已部署。
宪章将这些纳入明确的国家框架。国际证据显示,韧性在嵌入、测量和系统化时得到提升。没有基线保障,结果不均衡。有了结构化标准,每个学生无论在哪所学校都能获得一致支持。
艺术在学生福祉中的力量
陈艾丽莎女士:先生,在我的预算辩论中,我谈到了艺术在促进心理健康中的力量。部长已概述支持弱势学生、培养人工智能时代以人为本品质和更新品格与公民教育课程的努力。艺术是自然的补充。
2023年,新加坡交响乐团带领200名学生参加音乐会。半数学生从未参加过音乐会,三分之一住在租赁或较小的公寓中。学生报告心理健康提升13%,积极情绪提升17%,消极情绪下降41%,社交联系增强,这都是一次音乐会带来的效果!
如果一次共享的艺术体验能产生如此效果,想象持续参与对防止欺凌、社会情感发展和社会融合的影响。艺术还吸引动觉型学习者,培养创造力,强化解决问题能力。这不是增加教师负担,而是为他们配备训练有素的合作伙伴。
我亲眼见证了新加坡戏剧教育者协会举办的回放剧场活动,观众分享真实的欺凌经历,训练有素的主持人通过即兴表演再现这些经历。实践者建议将此作为通过培养同理心和支持修复性方法来解决欺凌的途径。他们准备与学校合作。
我想问部长:教育部是否会委托研究艺术如何影响学生心理健康?其次,教育部是否会与艺术从业者合作,解决欺凌问题并在学校培养社会情感能力?
正如新加坡艺术家陈瑞献所说:“艺术不仅是生活的反映,更是变革的催化剂。”我们的孩子本身就是艺术品,能够成为强大的变革催化剂。通过将艺术引入教育,我们可以帮助学生不仅在学业上成长,更成为富有同理心、韧性和创造力的个体。
特殊教育需求(SEN)学生
潘丽萍女士:先生,关于支持主流学校和特殊教育(SPED)学校中的特殊教育需求学生,我们在这方面取得了实质进展。非常感谢教育部、合作的残疾机构和工作人员。
但被诊断人数和需求在增加,我们的支持模式必须更强大。
首先,关于主流学校,从可及性到持续的质量。过去十年,教育部加强了校内能力。SEN官员从2017年的约450人增加到2024年的约750人。小学现在开展结构化项目,如基于学校的阅读障碍矫正、朋友圈同伴支持和过渡支持计划(TRANSIT)。这些是重要投资。但主流学校有两个方面需要关注。
第一,融合质量仍不均衡。家长仍反映早期识别、教师信心和支持一致性存在差异。我们需要更明确的国家分级框架,定义每位课堂教师必须具备的能力、校内专家提供的支持以及需要多学科干预(包括心理健康)的情况。支持不应取决于孩子入读哪所学校。
第二,生活技能必须有意教授。对于许多主流学校的SEN学生,仅有学业支持不足以满足需求。执行功能、自我倡导、情绪调节、工作习惯和数字责任等必须系统嵌入,而非可选附加。这些是终身学习和就业能力的基础。不包括它们会带来负面后果。
接下来是特殊学校,扩充容量并重新构想其定位。在特殊教育方面,投入更多支持。容量将从2024年的8,300个名额增加到2030年的10,000个。需求和复杂性持续上升。
第一,人力是最紧缺的瓶颈。如果我们建新校而不扩大人力,势必造成拉锯。特殊教育与主流教育相互竞争,主流教育与特殊教育相互竞争,两者还与私营部门竞争。
我们需要有针对性的人力策略:扩大特殊教育教师和相关专业人员的资助培训渠道,规模化结构化的中途职业转换路径,允许外籍人力补充,部署区域多学科团队服务多所学校,竞争性地分配员工,包括教育者、言语病理学家、治疗师和辅导员。留任即是能力。
第二,我们必须解决特殊教育后的“断崖”问题。除了扩容,我们还要问:未来的特殊学校应是什么样?应采用终身学习模式,融合学术基础、工作准备和职业体验,生活技能以实现独立和有尊严的生活,社会情感成长和社区参与,以及积极应对快速变化生活和工作环境的人工智能工具。
特殊学校应是迈向成年生活的跳板,而非终点。没有年轻人应在特殊学校茁壮成长多年后,面临不确定的断崖。这断崖是我们必须消除的。
SEN学生的课程接入
潘国贤教授(提名议员):主席先生,我想声明我在此议题上的利益,作为心理学家、特殊教育者以及具有实践经验和研究兴趣的学者,关注特殊教育需求学生的需求。
据2024年残疾趋势报告,截至2023年,新加坡学校中约有36,000名SEN学生。其中约80%,即近29,000人就读主流学校,较2022年的27,000人有所增加。今天我想聚焦这部分学生。
与尊敬的潘丽萍女士一样,我赞赏教育部过去十年在教育系统中差异化支持的重大投入。这使更多SEN学生能够获得适合其需求的教育路径。
主流学校现在为SEN学生提供国家课程的学习机会,并配备受过SEN培训的教师、SEN官员及多层次支持系统。在此背景下,SEN学生不仅能从国家课程的挑战中受益,还能与同龄人共同学习。
当必要支持到位时,SEN学生在主流环境中表现良好。然而,有些SEN学生能够参与国家课程的部分内容,但其持续参与课堂教学依赖于学校环境中并非总能提供的支持。这些支持可能包括针对学习、执行功能、社交技能以及情绪和行为调节的额外服务。
当此类支持不持续可用时,学生参与课堂教学和在国家课程中进步的能力可能受影响。这可能短期内影响学生的参与度、学习和社交互动,也可能随着时间影响其动机和身份认同,甚至对就业能力和社会参与产生潜在长期影响。
晚上8点
此类支持的获取可能取决于可用性、成本及跨机构协调,这些机构可能包括医院、社会服务机构或私人提供者。在这种情况下,维持学习支持的责任可能从学校内部的制度安排转移到个别家庭协调教育、医疗和社会服务支持的能力上。
我在早前的预算演讲中强调了有意义参与和在凝聚社会中拥有发言权的重要性。因此,我想请教部长,政府能否分享如何调整课堂教学,以支持那些需要学校环境中不总是可持续支持的SEN学生,以及如何让SEN学生及其家庭参与塑造他们在主流学校获得的支持类型?
先生,我今天提出的问题不是我们是否应该投资于SEN学生的支持。我相信我们已经做了。问题是如何持续保障那些在学校环境中不总是能获得支持的SEN学生在主流学校中有意义的持续参与。
我期待部长对此事的澄清。
在主流学校扩大特殊教育需要(SEN)支持
陈嘉玲博士:主席,随着融合教育在我们的主流学校中不断深化,我们必须确保支持能够足够早地到位,并且迅速扩大,以缓解课堂压力。
在小学一年级,老师不仅教授识字和算术。他们还帮助孩子学习如何安静坐好、保持注意力、控制冲动以及在任务之间转换。当一个班级中有多名学生在这些基础技能上存在困难时,老师会花费大量课堂时间来管理行为。教学时间缩短,教师和学生的压力增加。
教育部已经在小学一年级进行系统的识字和算术筛查,特殊教育需要官员也支持教师识别社会行为方面的困难。然而,行为识别主要依赖于观察和长期监测。
我建议通过将结构化的执行功能指标纳入现有的小学一年级筛查框架,来加强这一过程。一次约30至45分钟的全体学生基线测试,可以提供关于学习准备技能的客观数据,如注意力调节、工作记忆和冲动控制。
这不是诊断,也不会给孩子贴标签。它加强了早期规划,使学校能够及早识别哪些年级组可能需要更重的课堂支持,从而避免压力积累。重要的是,这些信息可以与校准的人力部署相结合。
如果小学一年级某个年级组显示出高于常规的支持需求,可以更早部署临时助教或协同教学支持,而不是在问题长期升级后才介入。对于支持密度特别高的班级,应考虑班级组成或规模的灵活调整。没有单一理想的班级人数,关键是班级结构是否符合其中的需求。
当早期干预有效时,行为和学习差距通常会缩小。随着学生成长,支持强度减少,人力资源可以重新部署到新入学的年级组。通过这种方式,我们从被动升级转向早期校准。这种方法减轻了教师的工作负担,降低了各年级的累积压力,并确保孩子们在最关键的成长阶段获得及时支持。
如果我们能够早发现、早部署,就能支持教师,提升学生成果,并让家长相信融合教育既富有同情心又切实可行。
重新点燃我们对母语的热爱
李慧莹女士:主席, 请允许我用普通话发言。
(普通话):[请参阅方言发言。] 双语教育是新加坡身份认同的核心,但仍存在差距。一些学生在英语和母语两方面都存在困难,且对母语的兴趣正在减退。
我以个人经历发言,作为前语言选修课程(中文)学生,我为能享受我的母语感到自豪。作为双语新加坡人,我们的身份非常特殊。双语教育不应仅仅是一项政策,而应成为学生自信且自豪地掌握的技能。
然而,掌握两种语言绝非易事。它常被视为一场考试,是压力的来源,而非一种活生生的语言。我们的现行政策是否跟上了时代?我们如何重新激发兴趣?我想知道教育部是否会为家长提供更多支持,使幼儿在家中沉浸式学习,并利用数字平台使学习更具吸引力。我们需要针对弱势学习者的定向支持,更强的教师培训以及使语言学习相关且有趣的课程。
评估应奖励实际应用,而不仅仅是考试成绩。只有这样,双语能力才能成为终身技能,赋能我们的学生,传承我们的文化遗产。
社区合作推动双语教育
哈米德·拉扎克博士:主席先生,双语教育今天不能仅靠学校维系。语言的衰弱并非因其难学,而是因为语言不再在课堂外被使用。如果我们希望母语能力得以持续,就必须不断丰富语言环境,使孩子们在日常生活中使用并享受母语。这就是为什么双语教育的下一阶段必须是全社区的共同努力。
首先,我们可以考虑为社区主导的双语项目提供催化性的小额资助——小规模、简单且以成果为导向——支持讲故事会、读书圈、戏剧和代际活动。
其次,我们应支持定期的社区语言空间,例如图书馆、社区俱乐部或邻里节点,使语言使用成为常态,而非偶尔的节日活动。
第三,让我们通过简单的工具包和提示加强家长能力,帮助家庭在家中以实际方式使用母语,比如在用餐时、日常生活中和共享活动中。因为双语教育不仅在学校教授,更在社区中得以维系。
主席先生,我若不以母语发言,谈论双语教育就不完整。请允许我用泰米尔语发言。
(泰米尔语):[请参阅方言发言。] 为什么我们称母语为“母语”?当我们提到“母亲”时,想到的是爱、支持和养育。这些美好的情感需要在我们用母语交流时不断在心中更新。因此,我们不能仅靠学校教授母语。这是社区的共同努力。让我们携手共进,弘扬母语的母性之美。母语万岁。
英文原文
SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02
The Chairman : Head K, the Ministry of Education (MOE). Mr Darryl David.
6.02 pm
AI and Education
Mr Darryl David (Ang Mo Kio) : Chairman, Sir, I move, "That the total sum to be allocated for Head K of the Estimates be reduced by $100".
Sir, we are living through a structural shift in how knowledge, skills and work intersect. Artificial intelligence (AI) is not merely another technological trend. It is reshaping industries, transforming organisational modes and models and redefining the skills needed to create value.
In Singapore, the transformation is evident across sectors. Firms are accelerating AI adoption and workers are seeking opportunities to reskill and adapt. Yet, recent industry discussions reported in The Straits Times highlight that many small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are struggling with AI implementation, particularly in workforce training and identifying clear pathways forward. This underscores a critical point, that technological progress, if unsupported by structured education and training strategies, risks widening capability gaps rather than closing them.
The policy imperative is clear. To build a workforce capable of harnessing AI, AI literacy must be embedded across the entire learning life cycle, from the early years of schooling to continuing education and training (CET) for working adults.
Sir, in this AI-driven era, we must be deliberate about what constitutes foundation and what roles schools play in building it. AI literacy does not begin with sophisticated tools or computer programmes or complex algorithms. It begins much earlier, with students developing the ability to understand how systems work, recognise the limitations of automated output and exercise independent judgement.
In a world where generative AI can produce essays, code and analysis within seconds, the differentiator will not be access to technology. It will be the capacity to engage with these tools critically and to harness them to enhance meaningful work.
As AI tools become increasingly embedded in everyday life, foundational competencies must be sequenced more deliberately. AI literacy is cumulative. A student's ability to interrogate an AI system at graduation depends on habits of reasoning formed years earlier.
At the primary level, this means cultivating cognitive discipline – recognising patterns, following logical sequences, distinguishing correlation from causation and interpreting simple data. These are not merely technical proficiencies. They form the mental scaffolding required to understand how automated systems arrive at decisions.
But Sir, as students mature, abstraction and systems thinking can be introduced deliberately at the secondary level. Learners can examine how algorithms are designed, how datasets shape outputs and how human choices influence technological outcomes. And by pre-university, students should be capable of critical interrogation – evaluating AI-generated content, identifying limitations and weighing ethical trade-offs. This sequence reflects not only curricular design but developmental readiness. So, what we are talking about here is the scaffolding of AI learning, a scaffolding of AI education throughout the entire learning journey in schools.
Equally important is differentiation. Students with strong aptitude should have access to structured enrichment pathways – advanced computing modules with AI components, collaboration with AI Singapore on student projects, supervised industry mentorships and national AI challenge competitions.
Now, Sir, I understand that countries, such as Finland and South Korea, have implemented nationally structured AI curricula that integrate technical skills with ethics and civic awareness from an early age. Singapore should ensure that its approach is equally progressive, inclusive and systematic.
Sir, now on to the teaching, assessment and the core of education in the AI age. With this roadmap in place, the next challenge is how schools teach and assess in an AI-pervasive environment. Education in an AI age should not overload students with content but rethink pedagogy to emphasise reasoning, judgement and creativity. Now, these are competencies that AI cannot replicate.
Teachers should position AI as a tool to deepen learning, not as a shortcut. Lessons and projects could encourage students to question outputs, iterate solutions and critically evaluate information. Assessment practices must evolve accordingly. If AI tools are used in assignments, evaluation should thus measure meaningful application of concepts, the reasoning behind solutions and thought processes, rather than merely the final product.
Practical approaches could include reflective journals documenting AI use, oral defences to explain reasoning and process documentation, such as prompt logs or iterative drafts. Project-based assessments requiring real-time collaboration and problem-solving can further reveal student understanding and agency. Transparency, accountability and authentic demonstration of skills should guide assessment design rather than prohibit or limit AI use.
Equally important, Sir, is cultivating skills AI cannot replicate. Leadership, empathy, ethical judgement, collaboration, public speaking and resilience remain essential to holistic education. Teachers play an indispensable role in developing these capacities, ensuring students grow intellectually, socially and emotionally into confident, capable individuals. Education must remain about shaping thoughtful, adaptable citizens, not merely producing technically competent operators.
Sir, a word on teacher capacity and professional development. The success of an AI-ready curriculum depends on teachers. Even the best-designed lessons and assessments fall short if educators lack confidence in using AI tools, integrating them into learning or guiding responsible, ethical use. Strengthening teacher capacity is therefore essential.
Teachers in AI-augmented environments must act as facilitators, mentors and guides. They need proficiency not only in AI technologies but also in embedding them – how to embed them responsibly into lessons – designing assessments that measure critical thinking and supporting holistic development.
I urge MOE to implement tiered professional development programmes for teachers. Foundational training should cover AI tools and digital pedagogy while advanced modules focus on curriculum design, ethics and mentoring. And continuous professional development should track emerging AI trends to keep educators equipped.
And now, Sir, something on inclusive AI education for different learners' profile. As we advance AI literacy, we must support students with neurodiverse profiles, learning differences or disabilities. Tailored programmes and scaffolds are essential to ensure all learners can fully engage with AI learning environments.
Adaptive learning systems can personalise content to a student's pace, proficiency and cognitive profile, providing targeted support to address gaps and reinforce strengths.
Inclusion also depends on structured support within schools. Educators and learning specialists should be trained to use AI tools in ways to complement individual learning profiles. For example, analytics dashboards to identify early signs of struggle, designing customised practice pathways or integrating AI-assisted feedback to support self-paced learning.
The aim is not simply to adopt AI because it is available but to use it thoughtfully to respond to the diversity of learners in our classrooms. By embedding inclusive design principles in AI education, from platform design to classroom practice, we can ensure technology lifts all learners, not just those already advantaged. Inclusive AI education strengthens equity and affirms our commitment to leaving no student behind.
Sir, I would like to talk about AI in the classrooms right now to AI classrooms of the future. I think AI can be used, Sir, to really create learning environments in the hardware and the very structure of the classrooms to enhance how the classroom functions, to complement the ability of teachers to deliver in the classrooms. I had mentioned earlier, Sir, that core to our education experience, are our teachers, and may they always remain core, our physical teachers.
However, we can explore. How we can explore AI to perhaps enhance what a teacher is doing, create teacher avatars or one educator in the classroom, for example, that that person could be doing multiple things at the same time in different parts of the classroom. Now, this might sound like something from science fiction, but I believe that it is possible, Sir, to have a version, say, of a teacher Jeffrey in the classroom and then perhaps create AI avatars of teacher Jeffrey that could perhaps go and work in different groups in the classrooms concurrently and then come back again where teacher Jeffrey talks, say, to the rest of the classroom.
This would also address the issue of class sizes indirectly in a way. We have talked about class sizes and reducing class sizes for quite some time now over the past five, 10, even 15 years since I came into Parliament. And what we are talking about in class sizes is not so much reducing the class size per se but improving the ratio of the teacher and the student in the education experience. For example, if you have a class size of 20, one teacher is a ratio of 1:20. You can either reduce the class size to 10 or perhaps have two teachers come in. You have the same effect therefore of 1:10 ratio.
So, let us explore. Let us explore how we can perhaps use AI in a way that would be able to address the issue of class sizes in a creative manner, such that the end goal is not simply reducing the class size to smaller numbers in a class but enhancing and improving the teacher-student ratio.
Sir, I would like to move on now to creating an AI learning ecosystem for CET. Beyond the school classrooms, a robust AI education ecosystem requires infrastructure and support mechanisms to enable learning across life stages. While schools lay the foundation, working professionals must access structured pathways to upskill and remain relevant.
The Government could consider establishing a dedicated CET centre focused on AI and data literacy for adult learners. A dedicated AI CET centre could offer modular programmes ranging from foundational literacy to advanced applications in responsible AI governance, sector-specific problem solving and workplace integration. This would complement existing offerings from polytechnics and universities, such as Professional and Adult Continuing Education academies, which already provide professional courses in AI and data analytics.
Mr Chairman, artificial intelligence is reshaping the skills, work and society our young people will inherit. The foundation we lay today in schools through deliberate curriculum design, thoughtful pedagogy and inclusive learning will determine whether Singaporeans can navigate this transformation with confidence, creativity and responsibility. I urge MOE, the Government and other stakeholders to continue building a cohesive AI education ecosystem, one that nurtures curiosity, equips students for the future and ensures Singaporeans remain leaders and innovators in an increasingly digital, AI-augmented world.
[(proc text) Question proposed.(proc text)]
The Chairman : Mr Darryl David.
6.15 pm
Enhancing Individual Students' Strengths
Mr Darryl David : Thank you, Sir, for indulging me again. Sir, at the 2024 National Day Rally, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong announced that the Gifted Education Programme (GEP), in its current form, would be discontinued and refreshed. This decision marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of Singapore's education system.
Since its inception in 1984, the GEP has played a crucial role in nurturing some of our most academically able students. Many alumni have gone on to contribute meaningfully across academia, Public Service and industry. The programme was, in many ways, a product of its time, a deliberate effort to ensure that academic excellence was not left to chance.
Yet, over the decades, legitimate questions emerged. The centralised model, which extracted students from their schools into smaller number of designated centres, inevitably reduced social mixing at a formative age. Whether or not elitism was intended, the programme also came to be perceived as accessible only to the affluent, especially with an increasing correlation between socio-economic status and academic results.
The new model, in which higher-ability pupils remain in their schools while attending after-school enrichment modules, reflects a broader shift in our educational philosophy, that excellence and inclusivity need not be mutually exclusive concepts. If implemented thoughtfully, this approach has the potential to stretch our brightest learners while strengthening, rather than fragmenting, our social fabric.
Unlike the Secondary School-Based Gifted Education (SBGE) model, which is concentrated in "branded" elite schools and mirrors many clustering tendencies of the old GEP, the revamped primary-level programme allows us to reimagine excellence in a more inclusive and socially integrated way.
Sir, I propose that after-school enrichment modules be situated in non-branded, non-elite schools rather than concentrated in a few established or prestigious primary schools. Such a design transforms these schools, many of which are located in heartland neighbourhoods, into local "centres of excellence", enabling students to stretch their abilities in environments that are both familiar, yet socially diverse.
Beyond academic growth, this approach exposes learners to peers from different socio-economic backgrounds, fostering empathy, resilience and social awareness, qualities as critical to a child's development as intellectual development and growth.
At the same time, neighbourhood schools can cultivate distinctive programmes and reputations for nurturing talent, creating a distributed ecosystem of excellence that benefits students, educators and the broader community.
Sir, on a practical note, high-ability students may need to attend different modules at different centres on different days, creating potential burdens in travel and scheduling. As such, I hope that thoughtful alignment of module locations and timetabling with students will ensure the programme remains accessible and manageable without placing undue strain on students, parents or caregivers, in terms of travelling from school to the centre.
The placement and operation of these centres is not merely administrative. It gives us the opportunity to stretch our brightest learners, broaden their perspectives and reinforce social cohesion, cultivating students who are academically capable and socially grounded.
Sir, the true value of the redesigned GEP lies not only in where students learn, but in what they experience. These after-school modules should not function as accelerated tuition, teaching more of the same content at a faster pace or providing direct advantage for the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE). Instead, they should broaden and deepen engagement with subjects in ways the standard curriculum cannot, fostering curiosity, creativity and applied thinking. They should thus provide guided opportunities for students to apply their skills in meaningful contexts.
For example, students in advanced English modules could explore literature, journalism or creative writing, extending well beyond what is assessed in schools or national examinations. Mathematics modules might introduce basic financial literacy, logic puzzles, or problem-solving in everyday contexts. Science modules could offer hands-on experimentation, design-thinking challenges, or introductory environmental and sustainability projects suitable for nine- to 12-year-olds.
To complement these experiences, enrichment modules could include informal mentorship opportunities with educators, researchers, or even industry professionals who can guide students' exploration in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), the arts, or humanities. While not formalised as a teaching approach, these interactions allow students to gain early insight into real-world applications of knowledge, nurturing responsibility, resilience and ethical awareness alongside intellectual growth.
Sir, the aim of this new model should not be to separate students by ability, but to cultivate diverse strengths in every learner. By situating enrichment within neighbourhood schools, broadening the scope of learning beyond examinations and nurturing pathways for high-potential students, we can combine academic excellence with inclusivity and social cohesion.
Sir, this approach aligns with the broader vision of Singapore's education pathways, a system that values personalised learning, nurtures diverse strengths and emphasises inclusion and social cohesion.
Broadening Access to Talent Development
Ms Elysa Chen (Bishan-Toa Payoh) : Sir, for 40 years, the GEP concentrated differentiated instruction in nine schools. From 2027, it will be discontinued in its current form.
[Deputy Speaker (Mr Christopher de Souza) in the Chair]
At its best, the GEP fostered curiosity and independent thinking. We should preserve that spirit, empowering bright and motivated students to take ownership of their learning. The expertise built over four decades should also be spread system wide. More teachers need professional development in differentiated instruction, and more students should access enrichment beyond the examinable syllabus to prepare them for future-oriented work.
We must also manage the risks even as we seek to develop our high-ability learners and avoid students feeling like they are in a pressure cooker, with stiff competition between peers. A National Institute of Education (NIE) study in 2024 of intellectually gifted secondary students in Singapore schools found that their academic environments often produced a socio-emotional state of lowered self-esteem, heightened stress and increased effort, despite outward success.
May I ask how will MOE resource teachers across schools to deliver differentiated instruction well? How will this expertise be scaled across the system? Will MOE adopt more child-led approaches, given that higher-ability learners can be self-directed? Will MOE encourage more peer learning, so high-ability learners shift from a competitive mindset to a collaborative one? And how will schools safeguard students' psychosocial development and self-actualisation in a high-pressure environment?
Let us ensure that in nurturing our brightest minds, we cultivate not just their knowledge, but their confidence, curiosity and capacity to thrive as whole, resilient individuals.
Making Classrooms Effectively Smaller
Assoc Prof Jamus Jerome Lim (Sengkang) : Sir, Singapore's class sizes remain large. As of 2024, classrooms averaged 34 pupils at the primary level and 33 in secondary schools. This is significantly larger than the average in advanced industrialised countries where the numbers are 21 and 23 respectively and speak to the disparity that still exists in the amount attention our kids from their teachers in our public schools, relative to other countries.
To be clear, this is not an argument that smaller class sizes automatically translate into superior outcomes. That evidence is, indeed, mixed, although there is indication that the greatest benefits do come in the early grades and when egregiously large classes of 40 are moderated into something closer to 30.
However, that is far stronger evidence that smaller class sizes improve things like classroom management, strengthen student learning and reduces teacher's stress. This is eminently commonsensical and is one that is already abundantly clear when one actually speaks to teachers.
Notably, the Ministry has also considered that smaller class sizes have clear benefits in certain specific circumstances. For instance, in recognition of the challenges faced by the young learners adapting to a new educational setting, Primary 1 and 2 classes are kept at 30 students. Children in the former GEP, who may require more customised learning to fully unlock their intellectual potential, enjoy classrooms of closer to 20-plus, and foundation classes, which focus on building fundamentals for students who require additional support, range between 10 and 20 students.
I argue that the benefits of smaller classrooms should not just be limited to these special cases. Furthermore, the most recent edition of the Teaching and Learning International Survey points to another clear problem with large classes. It taxes our already overworked teachers. Our teachers spend more than 47 hours a week working, six hours more than their Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) counterparts. Paradoxically, these added hours come at the expense of classroom hours. Teachers in the OECD managed to squeeze in almost 23 hours teaching, compared to only 18 here.
Disappointingly, however, the news that Singapore will increase teacher recruitment from 700 to 1,000 annually was followed by a sucker punch. The Allied Educators in teaching and learning would be scaled back. This is the opposite direction of where we should be heading. Taken together, it is clear that the debate is not so much about whether we should reduce our class sizes, but about how. The straightforward solution is, of course, to hire more teachers.
The Ministry standard response to this has been that this will compromise the quality of the teachers that we hire while robbing other sectors of talent. MOE also says that there is a dearth of teaching talent. I have always found such arguments to be disingenuous. After all, are we implicitly suggesting that teachers from two decades ago, where there were more of them as a share of the workforce, were somehow not of the same quality as teachers today, or the investments in our future workforce are somehow a lower priority than those that drive our economy today?
In a sense, economics also tells us the solution. Should we worry about the ability to attract talent into teaching? And the answer is simple. We should pay our teachers more or reduce their workload. This will solve the chicken and egg problem of teachers who otherwise wish to remain in the profession but leave due to burnout. As any human resources professional knows, retention is more than half the battle compared to recruitment.
Even if we believe that the transition to smaller class sizes will take time, there is a more immediate solution. We can reduce the effective size by adding a teaching aid or Teaching Assistant for every classroom. Such Teaching Assistants can guide students that lag behind during breakout sessions or handle disruptive students so that the teacher can carry on with the curriculum. Another upshot of such professionals is that they can also take on administrative and planning tasks or at the very least, do so in collaboration with the main teacher. This burden is clearly something that teachers struggle with, as it occupies the majority of their time, distracts them from what they were primarily hired to do and adds unduly to their stress levels.
Sir, even if we accept that learning journeys and co-curricular supervision are valuable parts of holistic education, they are undeniably secondary to instruction per se. Redirecting the workload of teachers away from non-teaching tasks can only improve educational delivery. I, therefore, reiterate the Workers' Party call to cap class sizes closer to the OECD average, which is currently at 21, especially at the primary level; failing which to complement every classroom with teaching and learning Allied Educators or Teaching Assistants that will serve the students and ensure that they succeed in the classroom of tomorrow.
Education Arms Race
Ms Denise Phua Lay Peng (Jalan Besar) : Sir, the education arms race in Singapore is real and it now has three fronts.
First, the PSLE. MOE's move from T-scores to achievement levels was thoughtful and reduced fine differentiation. But when families still believe that performance at age 12, Primary 6, influences access to certain secondary schools and future pathways, they will still invest more time, more effort and money to secure an advantage.
In 2023, households spent $1.8 billion on private tuition. The top 20% spent more than four times what the bottom 20% did. When stakes are concentrated, pressure and spending concentrate. That is the dynamic of an arms race.
The second race: Direct School Admissions (DSA). DSA was designed to broaden definitions of success and its intention is right. But admissions rose from about 3,500 in 2019 to about 4,400 in 2023, around 11% of the cohort. Applications have surged with 38,000 in 2023. When DSA becomes another prized gateway, families respond with earlier coaching and curated portfolios. We now risk running two races, an academic race through PSLE and a portfolio race through DSA.
Third, the AI acceleration. In an AI-disrupted world, careers will shift multiple times and skill upgrading must be continuous over life. AI tools can now personalise practice and provide instant feedback. But many advanced tools are subscription-based or require strong home support. If unmanaged, AI becomes the new tuition and the arms race becomes digital.
6.30 pm
Why does dismantling this arms race matter? Some argue that as long as employers value academic credentials, then competition is inevitable. But labour market norms will not shift overnight. Our education policy therefore must respond now. In an AI-driven world, success will depend less on early sorting and more on adaptability, deep thinking and lifelong learning habits. These cannot be built in a sprint to age 12.
What should we do? First, refine DSA so it broadens opportunity rather than amplifies preparation advantage – through structured outreach, authentic school-based nominations, and clearer criteria to reduce portfolio gaming.
Second, make AI a national equaliser – guarantee baseline access in schools, teach AI literacy, and shift assessments toward reasoning and authentic application.
But this may not be enough. MOE should consider a carefully safeguarded, voluntary 10-year through-train pilot from Primary 1 to Secondary 4. Under such a pilot, standards remain aligned with national expectations, students graduate with recognised qualifications such as the GCE, mobility and transfer options are preserved, and subject-based banding can start at an earlier age and deploy teachers according to the needs of the students using a “flexible class size” model instead of a “universal small class size” model. Not small classes everywhere, but right-sized classes, flexible and fit for purpose. Evaluation should examine academic performance, student well-being, tuition reliance and socio-economic mobility. Scaling should be considered if outcomes are at least as strong, with reduced pressure.
Sir, we do not have a weak system. But there is urgency in building an education system ready for a very different future, one centered on lifelong learning, adaptability and strong character. Dismantling the PSLE, DSA and AI-driven arms race is only the beginning of redesigning education for the long race ahead.
PSLE
Ms Eileen Chong Pei Shan (Non-Constituency Member) : Mr Chairman, during the recent Lunar New Year, my soon-to-be 11-year-old cousin Denise asked me a question I could not answer. She asked, "Why does the PSLE have to exist?" Before I could respond, Denise clarified herself. "I'm not saying no exams. I understand we need to be assessed. But why does how I perform on a single day determine the outcome of my six years in primary school? If AI can do so many things, why do I still need to memorise so many things for PSLE? Why can't we just add up the scores of all of my weighted assessments?" My response was, why indeed?
What struck me the most was not the stress that Denise had described, one and a half years away from sitting the PSLE. It was a decision that she had already made on her own. Going into Primary 5, she had pre-emptively dropped Higher Chinese, not because she had done badly but because she was worried she could not cope in Primary 6. She had looked at the road ahead, thought about her korkor and jiejie's experiences and decided to limit herself before a single PSLE paper had been sat.
While I had no good answer for Denise, I promised her that I would raise this in Parliament.
What Denise had identified intuitively is a tension that sits at the heart of our education system. Our desired outcomes of education for our children to become confident persons, self-directed learners, active contributors and concerned citizens. By the end of primary school, we want our students to know their strengths and areas for growth. Yet we assess six years of learning via a high stakes, timed, written examination across four subjects in a week. We say one thing and we measure another.
This is not a new observation, but it has never been more urgent. We just passed a Budget that commits billions to AI adoption that urges Singaporeans to move up the value chain, to exercise judgement, creativity and human insight. Yet come September, will we be assessing the 35,000 12-year-olds who will sit the PSLE on any of these skills? I welcome the long overdue review of our education system.
The WP has proposed making the PSLE optional. Students who are academically inclined can choose to sit the exam and compete for a select number of academically specialised secondary schools. Every other student should have a default through-train pathway to a partner secondary school. We should have an education system where the default is that every child passes through compulsory education without a high stakes written exam determining their trajectory at age 12.
The question is not whether to assess, but how. Removing PSLE as a default would free up months of curriculum time currently consumed by PSLE exam preparation and give our students more time and space to develop genuine strengths, deeper interest in subjects and also 21st Century Core Competencies.
Denise did not ask us to make school easier, she just asked for it to make sense.
Less Stressful, More Joyful Learning
Ms Lee Hui Ying (Nee Soon) : Mr Chairman, education should be joyful. Yet in Singapore, once every six years, parents face intense pressure over two milestones: Primary 1 registration and the PSLE. The uncertainty of school placements, combined with the high stakes of academic outcomes, creates enormous stress – stress that no parent should face alone.
The Primary 1 registration process focuses on what the parents have done. Whether they live nearby, are alumni, or volunteer. We should spotlight our children instead. We go great lengths to get priority. I have deep respect for their efforts to do what they believe is best for their children. But we must reflect on how or whether the system unintentionally amplifies anxiety, undermines fairness and detracts from the schooling experience.
As MOE embarks on a review of the Primary 1 registration process, I have two points to make. How does the current system create stress? In our meritocratic society, every child who works hard should have the opportunity to thrive. One practical step could be removing the secondary school affiliation advantages, so all students compete on a fair footing.
Second, can the process better support students of diverse backgrounds and talents? The system should feel like Harry Potter’s Sorting Hat, helping parents choose the school where their child can maximise their own unique potential. Let us centre the child – and match or sort each one to a school where their unique potential can flourish.
Sleep Health and Later School Start
Mr Dennis Tan Lip Fong (Hougang) : Sir, Chairman, the Grow Well SG initiative correctly identifies sleep as a fundamental pillar of the seed habit framework, referring to sleep, eat, exercise and device usage. I am calling for MOE to set a national standard to synchronise school start times to 8.30 am for primary, secondary schools and junior colleges, alongside an integrated school day specifically for primary school levels. This build on calls by my hon friend, Sengkang Member of Parliament Assoc Prof Jamus Lim, regarding the benefits of later start time for adolescent health.
Current data is sobering. The 2024 Singapore Youth epidemiology and resilience study shows nearly 85% of secondary school students feeling unrested, while Duke NUS research indicates they average only six and a half hours of sleep, well below the recommended eight to 10 hours.
The stakes are equally high for our primary school students. Between ages seven and 12, a child's brain and body are in a state of rapid fundamental construction. Science tells us that deep sleep stage, non-Rapid Eye Movement sleep is when the pituitary gland releases the vast majority of growth hormones necessary for physical development. For these younger children, getting the recommended 10 hours of sleep is not a luxury. It is a biological requirement for physical health and cognitive wiring. When a primary school student is chronically under slept, the first thing to suffer is executive function, the ability to manage emotions, follow instructions and focus. We see this manifesting in classrooms as increased irritability and the lack of resilience. By failing to protect their sleep, we are effectively handicapping their formative years, trading long-term neurological health for short-term academic grind.
For adolescents, this is a matter of biology. During puberty, the brain undergoes a phase delay. Their bodies do not release melatonin until much later. It has been said that waking a teen at 6.00 am is physiologically equivalent to waking an adult at 3.00 am. We cannot legislate against the circadian rhythm.
While MOE has brought forward personal learning device default sleep modes to 10.30 pm, we must also address wake times. Currently, many primary school students on early bus routes are picked up from 6.00 am or even earlier. Shifting to 8.30 am ensures students do not start their day exhausted.
I propose an integrated school day for primary school starting at 8.30 am and ending at 3.30 pm. By incorporating co-curricular activities (CCAs), structured work instead of homework and remedials into these hours, we ensure that when a child reaches home, school responsibilities are largely complete, making the lights out boundary more achievable. Rather than relying on school level autonomy, we need a clear national standard. Let us set the bell for 8.30 am and give our children the rest they need to reach their full potential.
Introduce Entrepreneurship in Schools
Mr Azhar Othman (Nominated Member) : Trade is the lifeblood of Singapore, making it essential for us to facilitate as much trade as possible. This requires a focus on establishing numerous companies and fostering a mindset of entrepreneurship that can create significant impact.
Nurturing this entrepreneurial mindset and skill set should begin at a young age and schools are the perfect environment for this exposure. By integrating entrepreneurship into the CCAs, students can learn about business establishment and experience what it means to be an entrepreneur. There are already some schools implementing this but we should make this apply across all schools for students to be given the opportunity to participate.
This co-curricular activity can be one of many programmes launched in primary and secondary schools. Trade associations and chambers can play a vital role in developing the curriculum and nurturing young entrepreneurs. For instance, the Singapore Malay Chambers of Commerce and Industry has initiated a programme where students visit the chamber to gain insights into how businesses are established and operated.
By implementing such a curriculum, students will acquire a diverse range of skills, including marketing, distribution, operations, finance, resourcefulness and negotiation. Introducing entrepreneurship in schools will activate their innovative and creative minds, positioning us as a nation of creators and innovators capable of establishing companies and business solutions. In time, this initiative will not only increase the number of companies but also enhance our global trade presence, connecting Singapore with other regions of the world.
Air-conditioning in Every Classroom
Mr Kenneth Tiong Boon Kiat (Aljunied) : Sir, last year, I asked the Minister about thermal inequality in school classrooms. Research shows that each temperature degree of temperature increase cuts learning by 1% to 2%, hitting lower-income students hardest. The Minister acknowledged that. He listed measures, cool paint, faster fans, physical education (PE) attire, mixed mode air conditioning for halls. For classrooms, continue to explore. If an unfair learning gap is forming, can we afford to wait?
Every MOE school is already air-conditioned: computer labs, science labs, libraries, lecture theatres, staff rooms, admin offices, all air-conditioned. The Ministry is now installing mixed mode air-conditioning in school halls, so the electrical infrastructure is there. The condensers are there. The maintenance contracts are there. The only rooms without air-conditioning are the classrooms where 420,000 children spend most of the day.
We should extend aircon to the rooms that matter most. A primary school teacher told me by 11.00 am in the morning, classrooms are unbearably hot. Fans just circulate hot air and create noise that drowns out teaching. Children cannot sit still. They ask to go to the toilet just to escape the heat. Teachers cannot teach effectively in that heat either.
A National University of Singapore study in Building and Environment found cognitive performance in Singapore's fan ventilated classrooms drops 9% in slightly warm conditions and 18% in warm conditions. There is no temperature standard for classrooms. To avoid thermal inequality, we should set one.
In 2023, the Government's Mercury Taskforce designated community centres and sports halls as airconditioned cooling spaces for the public. But for schools, reduce outdoor activities, relax dress code, send children home. So, we will air-condition community centres for adults, but close schools for the kids.
International schools and independent schools have air-conditioned classrooms. Neighbourhood schools have ceiling fans. The children who can least afford the learning penalty are paying it. Capital cost, less than $100 million for all classrooms, under 1% of the MOE's budget paid once. On running costs, 130 schools already have rooftop solar under Solar Nova. Expand it to all schools and offset the additional electricity partially.
I am not asking to switch on air-conditioning all day. Set a target temperature, switch on when the thermostat exceeds it. MOE headquarters (HQ) already runs a similar system, centralised air-conditioning with automatic start times and cut-offs. Just extend it to our classrooms.
Sir, two questions. Will MOE establish indoor temperature standards for classrooms? And will MOE commit to a timeline for a phased programme – beginning with primary schools – to install mixed mode air-conditioning in all classrooms?
Interfaith Learning for Social Cohesion
Ms Diana Pang Li Yen (Marine Parade-Braddell Heights) : Chairman, I rise to speak on inter-faith learning for social cohesion.
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Singapore's harmony did not happen by accident. It is the result of deliberate policies and hard work, by our founding fathers over many decades, that build trust across the communities. I would describe this as the Singapore model of practical harmony – not just tolerance, but day-to-day cooperation, a shared civic space and the instinct to navigate differences thoughtfully in our society.
In a multiracial, multi-religion society, this harmony must be renewed in every generation. Chairman, schools are where this renewal can be made real.
Inter-faith learning should not be treated as a niche topic or something left to certain communities, certain neighbourhoods or only to those who are already exposed. If we want mutual understanding to become a shared national norm, every student should have balanced, age-appropriate exposure to major religions and beliefs that shape Singapore in a way that builds trust, reduces stereotypes and equips them to navigate difference with confidence.
Chairman, I therefore hope MOE can consider deepening inter-faith education in three practical ways.
First, MOE can strengthen a clear structured baseline of inter-faith literacy with age-appropriate content that focuses on understanding, common values and how Singapore manages diversity. The aim is not theological depth. The aim is civic understanding and mutual respect for the various religions in Singapore.
Second, MOE can make inter-faith learning more experiential. Lived, not classroom-based, and more fun. Schools can be supported to run structured dialogues, visits and interfaith learning journeys. Here, MOE can partner and work with non-Government organisations, for example, Inter-Religious Organisations, which has a long and extensive experience in engaging different faith communities in a constructive and practical way.
Third, MOE can support teachers and school teachers with ready-to-use resources and facilitation guides. Inter-faith discussions require careful handling. I believe many educators will welcome clearer frameworks, case studies and training so that they can facilitate confidently, especially when sensitive questions are being raised.
Chairman, my point is that ultimately, inter-faith understanding is not about preventing conflict, it is about building social capital. It is about ensuring that our young grow up with the instinct to ask, to listen and to respect. When students learn early that different faiths can coexist and share the same space, we strengthen the roots of cohesion that hold Singapore together.
If we want Singapore to remain united in a more polarised world, we must invest not only in academic outcomes, but also in the social fabric. Inter-faith learning is one of the quiet, high-impact investments that will pay dividends for decades to come.
Physical Education Time in Schools
Mr Gerald Giam Yean Song (Aljunied) : Sir, our children are spending more time in sedentary digital engagement. This poses a risk to their physical well-being and cognitive development. Primary schools provide two to 2.5 hours of PE weekly, but logistics can eat into this short duration. This is insufficient to build a robust physical foundation in children, who need at least 60 minutes of moderate to rigorous physical activity daily.
Improving fundamental motor skills early enhances movement confidence, cultivates lifelong habits and broadens our pipeline for national athletes and combat-fit soldiers. Better physical fitness also improves academic performance and cognitive focus.
For a small nation, our competitive edge lies in the quality and resilience of our human capital. PE is therefore not a break from learning but a critical investment in our collective strength. I propose increasing the minimum PE curriculum time in primary schools to five hours per week. To address manpower constraints, MOE could supplement PE teachers with qualified coaches from the National Registry of Coaches and the National Registry of Exercise Professionals.
Not all PE time needs to be conducted by PE professionals. Subject-based teachers could conduct movement-based lessons where science concepts, like velocity, can be taught through active outdoor experimentation, bringing knowledge to life. To overcome space constraints, canteens could be fitted with nonslip flooring and movable furniture to create multi-purpose play areas. Surfaces in schools could be covered with plastic sports tiling to expand usable PE space.
By raising the floor of our children's fitness, we can raise the ceiling of what Singapore can achieve.
AI-ducation
Ms Lee Hui Ying : Mr Chair, AI is transforming education. But our goal must be clear. Students should be not just learners or users of AI, but innovators and creators of AI. AI-ducation – the use of AI to personalise learning, identify gaps and guide teaching – can help students progress at their own pace while freeing teachers from repetitive tasks to focus on mentorship and meaningful learning.
To be AI-ready, how will students and teachers be equipped with the resources and skills needed to thrive in an AI-ducation environment?
Our next bound of staff development must focus decisively on AI proficiency.
First, AI can be a force multiplier to address staff strength challenges. We need to up the AI proficiency of all staff so they can free up "human bandwidth" for high-value student interactions. Second, teachers must be practitioners of AI before they can be teachers of AI. Beyond standard professional development, is there a structured AI proficiency roadmap so every teacher can use AI confidently as a daily assistant? How do we ensure AI tools are deployed to subtract admin workload rather than add a new layer of tech management duties? Is there a framework to regularly benchmark teachers' AI competency?
Our students and educators must not just use AI. They must innovate it, create it and lead its future.
Unlocking Potential Through Data
Mr Abdul Muhaimin Abdul Malik (Sengkang) : Sir, in Malay.
( In Malay ) : [ Please refer to Vernacular Speech .] The educational gap facing the Malay community is well-documented, but our understanding remains incomplete. We know the outcomes are unequal, yet we lack the granular data needed to design truly effective interventions. Let me be clear about what the three data points I proposed would enable.
First, annual university graduation rates by ethnicity would provide continuous monitoring rather than sporadic snapshots. We track economic indicators monthly, yet assess educational equity only when politically convenient. This inconsistency undermines accountability. Annual tracking would reveal whether our interventions are working or merely well-intentioned.
Second, data linking income and ethnicity in university access would answer a critical question: Are financial barriers or other factors driving the gap? MENDAKI subsidy data would show whether lower-income Malay students are accessing higher education at improving rates. Without this, we cannot distinguish between solvable financial constraints and deeper systemic issues.
Third, dropout rates by income and ethnicity would identify where students are falling through the cracks. Is attrition concentrated among low-income families? At specific educational levels? Among particular demographic groups? Each pattern requires different solutions. The Malay community deserves policies built on evidence, not presumption. Singapore has the technical capacity for this level of analysis.
Rebalancing Education for AI Age
Assoc Prof Kenneth Goh (Nominated Member) : Thank you, Chairman. Sir, AI will not just change jobs, it will change learning. MOE has taken important steps to use AI to reduce administrative workload for teachers. That is welcome. But if we stop there, we risk using a transformational technology merely to improve efficiency.
I have four points to make.
First, AI must be used as a pedagogical tool, not merely as an efficiency tool. Beyond automation, how might we use AI to redesign pedagogy? AI can provide real-time feedback, identify misconceptions early and support differentiated instruction at scale. It allows students to progress at different paces and receive targeted support without stigma. Used thoughtfully, AI can shift assessment from ranking students against one another to tracking their individual growth.
MOE has also rightly spoken about reducing the arms race in education. AI could help us further rebalance the system, retaining necessary standards while placing greater emphasis on calibration and support. AI-enabled formative assessments provide real-time feedback, detect misconceptions early and adapt learning as students' progress, reducing reliance on a single high-stakes checkpoint. If such formative systems can be scaled up, we may have an opportunity to rethink the timing and role of high-stakes examinations.
Research suggests that very early high-stakes selection does not necessarily improve long-term outcomes. In some cases, it narrows learning and intensifies anxiety without improving standards. So, if continuous diagnostic assessment can provide clearer signals of student progress and learning gaps, then early high-stakes exams may not need to carry such disproportionate weight.
In that regard, will MOE pilot AI-enabled formative assessments at scale and could such pilots enable a recalibration of the timing and weight of high-stakes examinations? Relatedly, how does MOE evaluate whether early high-stakes selection meaningfully improves long-term student outcomes compared with delaying such assessments until students are older?
Second, as AI replaces more routine cognitive work, we must strengthen distinctly human capabilities. As structured cognitive tasks become automated, our advantage will lie increasingly in the human capabilities like imagination, collaboration, resilience, physical vitality and initiative.
MOE has long emphasised 21st century competencies. In the AI era, these will become even more central. How are these competencies being embedded in classroom practice and assessment, and not just articulated in policy documents?
Ensuring space for the arts, sport, recreation, project-based learning and entrepreneurial exploration will be critical. In an AI-driven economy, how does MOE ensure that these areas are protected and strengthened within the curriculum?
Reducing the arms race is not about lowering standards. It is about aligning our standards with the capabilities that matter most for the future.
Third, we should address concentrated demand for certain primary schools. Persistent pressure around Primary 1 registration suggests that demand remains concentrated in a number of highly sought-after schools. If we are serious about reducing competition intensity, structural supply deserves consideration alongside the messaging.
So, could MOE consider expanding the footprint and capacity of high-demand schools by establishing additional campuses or increasing the intake in more locations? In doing so, what key factors determine whether a successful school model can be replicated elsewhere?
Fourth, talent pathways must reflect long-term development, not early acceleration. If we seek to reduce excessive academic pressure, we must also ensure that competitive intensity is not simply directed to other domains.
The original intent of DSA was to recognise diverse talents beyond academics in sports, the arts and other areas of strength. That intent remains important. However, in a competitive environment, DSA may inadvertently incentivise earlier and more intensive specialisation. In some cases, this increases the risk of burn-out, injury or loss of intrinsic motivation.
Without longitudinal data on how these students progress through the DSA pathway, whether they remain engaged, transition successfully or exit early, it becomes difficult to assess both the intended and unintended outcomes of the DSA pathway. So, in this context, could MOE consider conducting longitudinal studies to evaluate whether DSA supports: (a) a sustainable national talent pipeline in the respective domains, and (b) reducing both short-term and long-term outcomes for individual students?
The Chairman : Mr Alex Yam. Kindly deliver both your cuts together.
Strengthening Students' AI Literacy
Mr Alex Yam (Marsiling-Yew Tee) : Thank you, Chairman. AI is shaping the way we learn and the way we work. But it also raises deeper questions about judgement, equity and the preservation of human creativity.
Our students are already encountering AI tools in their daily lives. AI literacy must mean more than technical familiarity. It must include the ability to question outputs, detect bias, understand limitations and exercise ethical judgement. A student should know not only how to generate an answer through AI, but how to interrogate it.
In practical classroom terms, this may mean requiring students to produce an initial draft before consulting AI and assessing them on how they evaluate and refine AI suggestions. It may mean presenting students with an AI-generated essay and asking them to critique its weaknesses.
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In Mathematics and Science, we might place greater weight on explaining reasoning rather than simplify and presenting a solution. In the arts, AI, of course, can generate various variations, but the creative direction must remain firmly in the hands of the student.
The principle therefore is simple. AI should be a thinking partner, not an answer engine. It should expand imagination and not standardise it. It should accelerate our ability to iterate but not eliminate intellectual struggle.
We must be careful that creativity is not stifled by convenience. The most complex processing tool ever is the human brain. It would be deeply ironic if, in building ever more powerful machines, we allowed our own capacity for deep thinking and problem solving to weaken. Some degree of cognitive effort, even friction, is necessary for growth. If AI removes that effort entirely, the learning becomes hollow.
At the same time, we must ensure that there is equitable access. AI literacy must therefore be embedded systematically and age appropriately across the education journey, with teachers supported through clear guidelines and professional development. But the conversation does not end at graduation.
AI Upskilling Access for the Workforce
AI is reshaping industries across the board. Continuous learning is becoming essential not only for engineers, programmers, accountants, designers, logistics consultants and frontline supervisors. Yet, mid-career and mature workers may find AI training inaccessible due to cost, time constraints or being unfamiliarity with digital tools.
Here, accessibility and relevance are key. Upskilling pathways must be modular and practical, integrated into mainstream continuing education rather than confined to specialist tracks. Training should be directly linked to real workplace tasks. And smaller firms that lack in-house capacity will need further support. Lower-wage workers must not be left behind as automation advances.
If digital literacy has become a baseline skill over the past two decades, AI literacy must now become a shared national competency. It should not be a niche advantage enjoyed by a small group, but a common capability that strengthens our collective resilience.
Ultimately, AI is a tool. Whether it empowers or diminishes us depends on the norms and structures we build around it. If we are intentional, we can raise a generation that masters AI without being mastered by it and a workforce that uses AI to enhance judgement rather than outsource it. In doing so, we ensure that technology amplifies what is makes us uniquely human.
Preparing Graduates for an AI Job Market
Mr Ng Chee Meng (Jalan Kayu) : Chairman, our young graduates are entering the workforce at a time in a disrupted age. AI is becoming more advanced, even at entry-level tasks. And throughout their careers, they will need to adapt and pivot several times, as the pace of change and skills obsolescence increases.
If our education system does not evolve, there will be a growing mismatch between graduates' skills, job expectations and experiences and evolving market needs.
Our education system, especially our IHLs, must become more agile and proactive in anticipating future skills demands, especially in this AI disrupted age. This must happen at every level and not just at our universities, but in our polytechnics and ITEs too.
In light of this, how will the Ministry be ensuring that our IHLs refresh their curriculum and pedagogy to ensure that our students are ready for an AI-disrupted job market, with better chances of securing a good job?
SkillsFuture Quality - Micro-credentials
Mr Low Wu Yang Andre (Non-Constituency Member) : Chairman, in my maiden speech at the debate on the President's Address, I said that SkillsFuture risks is becoming a supermarket of choices, plenty of choice but no clear ladder to climb towards better career outcomes. Today, I want to return to that concern and ask the Ministry to take three concrete steps.
The urgency is real. According to Randstad Workmonitor 2026 Report, global job postings requiring AI agent skills surged by over 1500% in 2025 alone. A three or four-year bachelor's degree cannot keep pace with that kind of velocity, and neither can our current continuous education ecosystem that is still struggling to get employers to recognise lifelong learning credentials at all.
Firstly, as I suggested in my maiden speech, the Careers and Skills Passport should evolve into a dynamic living credential. Right now, it functions largely as a digital filing cabinet. Former Education Minister Chan articulated a vision in July 2024 of a living ecosystem, where micro-credentials from across our IHLs stacked into formal qualifications. That vision remains aspirational. I ask the Ministry to set a concrete timeline for full-cross IHL recognition across universities, polytechnics and our ITEs so that adult learners can build towards a credible recognised qualification piece by piece with each step appropriately documented in the Careers and Skills Passport.
Secondly, cross recognition only works if there is enough worth recognising. I welcome the new AI programmes our IHLs have been launching. But the pace of market demand is out running the pace of supply. I ask the Ministry to set explicit targets for IHL micro-credential offerings in fast-moving sectors and to report progress against those targets annually so that we can hold ourselves accountable.
Thirdly, we must look beyond our shores. Singapore prides itself on being open to the world and our upskilling framework should be no different. There is a vast ecosystem online of world-class universities offering Masters level micro-credentials through various platforms. Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT's) MicroMasters Programme on edX and Georgia Tech's Michael Masters in Analytics, which stacked directly towards their fully accredited and well-regarded online Master of Science and Analytics, are exactly the kind of high signals stackable credentials that carry global employer recognition.
I ask the Minister to extend SkillsFuture Credit eligibility and Career in Skills Passport Recognition to such credentials from reputable overseas universities, not to replace our IHLs but to fill gaps while our local capacity develops.
The Prime Minister has made AI a centrepiece of this year's Budget. The world not waiting, our workers are not waiting. Our continuous education, ecosystem must keep pace.
AI Impact on IHL Teaching and Assessment
Assoc Prof Terence Ho (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, I declare my interest as a university educator and administrator.
As I follow the recent discourse on AI and education both in Singapore and globally, I observe two seemingly polarised views on the impact of AI on education, particularly higher education and CET. One is that little will change and the other is that everything must change in the age of AI.
I see elements of truth in both views. On the one hand, AI will affect both content – what is taught – and instructional methods – how knowledge is shared and learnt. Students will need to know how to use AI tools and interpret AI output with discernment, as many Members have raised, while new technologies can enable more personalised learning experiences.
On the other hand, there is genuine concern about cognitive offloading if students rely excessively on AI. For instance, an MIT study published last year found that heavy reliance on AI tools for essay writing may lead to long-term cognitive harm as measured through brain scans. Students who repeatedly relied on AI had weakened neural connectivity, poorer memory recall and had a reduced sense of ownership over their own writing. This underscores that there is no substitute for building foundational skills in thinking and writing.
So, there is a need for clarity on what should change and what should be retained in regard to education in the AI age.
What is becoming clear is that tertiary education, in particular, needs to be revamped more quickly. When students can acquire knowledge for themselves with the help of AI tutors that are available around the clock, IHLs need to consider what value they can bring to their students and hence, how to make the best use of curriculum time.
It should no longer be about lecturers downloading information to students. Time spent in classes would be more productively used for case discussions, problem-solving and Socratic dialogue with facilitators and peers, to maximise opportunities for mutual learning, evaluation and reflection. IHLs are also uniquely positioned to help students develop interpersonal skills, make friends and build networks.
To their credit, our IHLs are already alert to the needs in this changed environment and are feeling their way forward. Various pilots are being done to revamp curriculum and update instructional methods.
I would like to know what plans the Ministry has to support IHLs in doing so and, in particular, what can be done to facilitate the evaluation of outcomes and to promote sharing of learning points and propagation of good practices more systematically across IHLs.
It is also clear that AI will significantly influence how student learning is assessed. If instructors assign take-home essays, I think it would be unrealistic to ask or expect students not to use AI tools. Trying to police unauthorised AI use could lead to contentious disputes between faculty and students in all but the most clear-cut cases.
Fortunately, there are alternatives. Where the objective is to assess independent thinking without AI assistance, instructors may use supervised assessments with restricted Internet access. For take-home assignments, a larger proportion of marks come from vivas or oral examinations to evaluate the student's thinking process, even when AI tools are used.
With different forms of assessment, there is also a need to better reflect the range of knowledge and skills that students acquire. A single course grade may not fully capture a student's competencies and skills particularly when there are both technical concepts and skills to master, as well as an evaluative or problem-solving dimension.
Take a business course for example. Students are expected to master economics, accountancy and business concepts, apply these to business decisions through case discussions and collaborate effectively in teams.
A single course grade or Grade Point Average offers limited insight into these distinct dimensions. It may therefore be useful for an academic transcript to reflect multiple components, knowledge and technical skills, evaluative and applied capabilities and interpersonal competencies. While the first component may be more objective, the latter two are arguably more important.
Internationally, examples are emerging. The University of Michigan has piloted skills transcripts for engineering students to highlight teamwork, problem-solving and technical proficiencies. The Stanford University Integrative Learning Portfolio Lab helps students create digital portfolios that capture academic, co-curricular and personal experiences beyond traditional grades. In Singapore, Temasek Polytechnic is pioneering a skills transcript for students graduating this year.
Could the Ministry elaborate on what is doing to encourage or support innovation in learning assessment, whether there is ongoing research in this area and what can be done facilitate systematic sharing of good practices and learning points across institutions?
New Agency for Lifelong Learning
Dr Choo Pei Ling (Chua Chu Kang) : Chairman, when I speak with students and working adults, the question is rarely about the number of courses available. It is this: "If I invest time and effort in learning, will it genuinely move me forward?"
In Singapore, we have long believed that effort should open doors, that hard work, not background, determines opportunity. That belief is central to our social compact.
The merger of SkillsFuture Singapore and Workforce Singapore is therefore significant. Careers are now longer and less linear. Support must feel integrated across skills acquisition, job transitions and progression. A fragmented journey erodes confidence; a coherent one strengthens it. But integration alone will not secure trust. Lifelong learning must translate into real mobility, not just participation.
First, outcomes should increasingly focus on sustained progression. Beyond enrolment and initial placement, what ultimately matters are longer-term wage growth, employment stability and the quality of skills-job matching. It is not enough to move someone into a job quickly if that job does not reflect their upgraded capability. When effort visibly leads to advancement, confidence strengthens naturally.
Second, a clear framework should be set for policy decisions. A single agency simplifies the journey for the learner, jobseeker and worker. But sometimes, policy priorities diverge. For example, in resource-constrained segments, should employment-driven outcomes or longer-term career development training needs take priority? As the new agency will report to both MOE and MOM, how can decision-making gridlocks be prevented?
Third, incentives must align. Lifelong learning succeeds only when employers signal that skills are recognised in promotion, pay and job redesign. If retraining does not shift progression pathways, workers will hesitate, regardless of subsidies. Training must change trajectories, not just transcripts. In a changing economy, every Singaporean who is willing to adapt should be able to see a clear path forward. If implemented well, this reform will strengthen trust in upward mobility for the next generation.
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SkillsFuture Taster Sessions
Mr David Hoe (Jurong East-Bukit Batok) : Chairman, I support MOE's continued efforts to strengthen SkillsFuture as a pillar of lifelong learning, especially as our workforce navigates rapid shifts in technology and industry demand.
As of today, we have a wide and growing menu of courses and subsidies under SkillsFuture. But for many Singaporeans, the hardest step is always the first step, knowing what course I should choose, whether this course aligns to my interests, my aptitude and also my longer-term aspirations.
Today, the reality is this: those with stronger networks will have a higher likelihood of knowing people working in emerging or high-value industries. They can talk to these people to ask about what kind of skills they should acquire, what kind of course they should take so that they can enter such industries. But the truth is those without networks or social capital, however, have to spend more time, more energy, more resources figuring out which pathways to take.
Surely, our system can do better to reduce such costs, so that decisions can be made better. In this regard, I propose complementing our existing SkillsFuture offerings with something simpler, lighter and decision-friendly. I call this SkillsFuture "Taster Sessions", at lower costs or no cost.
"Taster Session" itself gives a flavour of what industry is like or what skillsets you require. A good "Taster Session", however, should provide answers to basic questions, such as "What is this course about?", "What are the skills required for me to do well in this industry or sector?" Furthermore, such Taster sessions can also provide a broad roadmap, a landscape of professional pathways. What are the positions that are there in this industries, and what kind of skills I should acquire, so that I can assume responsibility in these roles.
"Taster Sessions" can also cover clear learning pathways. In the event that a learner is interested to deep dive, these pathways should be grouped in a way that is easily understood by individuals, grouped by job role, skills type, level of difficulty or industry type.
If we are able to do this well, individuals will have information and better understanding of the stakes involved before committing time, energy, money and even, potentially, a career change. This is especially important for emerging and specialised areas, where interest is high, but understanding is often lacking.
Whether be it frontal technologies, green capabilities or strategical domains, what we want is for every Singaporean to be able to enter this fields with eyes wide open. Chairman, providing "Taster Sessions" can further strengthen equity, given how those with weaker networks and lower social capital often have limited means to understand the scope of course and industries. To summarise my cut, SkillsFuture "Taster Sessions" can help to close the information gap and enable individuals to make better decisions, because do we not make many decisions every single day?
Equitable Access to National AI Skills
Miss Rachel Ong (Tanjong Pagar) : Chairman, I support the Government's strong investment in AI skills for Singaporeans. Expanding the TeSA programme to help non-tech workers gain practical AI capabilities sends an important signal, that AI is no longer a niche skill, but a foundational one.
As we build these capabilities, we must ensure that inclusion keeps pace, especially for persons with disabilities, so that new divides are not created. Training providers supported under the national AI initiatives should incorporate reasonable accommodations; such as screen-reader compatible materials, captioning or sign language interpretation where needed and accessible training venues. Could the Minister clarify what requirements are in place to ensure such accommodations are consistently provided?
Future-ready Youths
Mr Shawn Huang Wei Zhong (West Coast-Jurong West) : Mr Chairman, Singapore's students ranked first globally for Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). That is a genuine achievement and the result of deliberate, sustained policy work over decades. The question is not whether we have done well. We have. The question is whether we are developing the full range of human capacity for the future economy.
The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025 identifies the fastest-growing skill categories for the coming decade. They span across two domains, analytical reasoning and creative thinking on the cognitive side, empathy, social influence and self-awareness on the affective side. Both are identified as co-equal drivers of the future workforce value.
McKinsey Global Institute's automation research finds that up to 30% of work activities globally could be displaced by current technologies, with activities least susceptible to displacement being those requiring social and emotional intelligence, complex negotiation, empathetic judgment and creative collaboration.
Our current system has invested heavily in the cognitive mode, that is analytical, convergent and precisely measurable. Howard Gardner's multiple intelligences framework identifies that at least eight distinct cognitive systems – linguistics, logical-mathematical, spatial, musical, kinaesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal and naturalist. A system that assesses primarily through linguistic and logical-mathematical channels is measuring only a subset of human potential, not its full range. We need more cognitive and affective diversity.
The affective dimension carries equal weight. Researchers Mayer, Salovey and Caruso, established that emotional intelligence, comprising of self-awareness, self-regulation, empathy and relational skill, can be measured and developed. Their model for emotional quotient (EQ) showed that performance and leadership outcomes are comparable to, and in some domains exceed, those of cognitive intelligence quotient (IQ).
This is what the Neuroscience establishes. Research by Mary Helen Immordino-Yang and Antonio Damasio demonstrated that emotion and cognition are neurologically integrated. The prefrontal cortex, responsible for executive function and higher-order reasoning does not operate independently of the limbic system. What was their central finding? It is biologically impossible to build memories, engage complex thoughts or make meaningful decisions without emotion. Affective disengagement impairs the cognitive performance even when the analytical capacity is intact.
This matters for Singapore specifically. The Institute of Mental Health's National Study on Mental Health found that one in three young Singaporeans, aged 15 to 35, had experienced a mental disorder in their lifetime. PISA data shows Singaporean students report among the highest levels of test anxiety of any participating country, with 86% of students reporting that they worry about poor grades.
This is significantly above the OECD average of 66%. Research establishes that it actively constrains cognitive flexibility and creative risk-taking. Researcher Barker and colleagues examined the daily activity logs of 70 six-year-old children against standardised measures of executive function. Their finding was direct, the more time children spent in less-structured, self-directed activities, the stronger their executive function scores are.
Structured activities showed the inverse relationship. Executive function, goal pursuit and cognitive flexibility is precisely what the AI-era economy will value. Executive function develops through the experience of self-direction.
The synthesis is straightforward. Developing the full cognitive and affective spectrum is not supplementary to academic rigour. It is the condition under which academic rigour produces its maximum return. We need more cognitive and affective diversity.
I suggest three Interventions for consideration. The first is "White Space Fridays". Two protected hours per week for student-led, self-directed exploration. Students register a project or hobby each semester, and schools provide the infrastructure, such as makerspaces and music rooms. Teachers provide the resources, not direction. No rubrics, no grades required.
The rationale draws from the research at the Stanford Center on Adolescence, found that young people who develop personal purpose through self-directed exploration demonstrate greater academic motivation, stronger mental health outcomes and more robust career trajectories than those whose goals are externally assigned.
The second suggestion is Student Policy Committees. The difference between consultation and co-governance is consequential. In consultation, views are heard. In co-governance, the participant is present for trade-offs, constraints and decisions where competing priorities cannot all be satisfied. That particular experience is where affective intelligence develops in practice.
Researchers Zeldin, Camino and Mook examined youth-adult governance partnerships across multiple institutional settings and established that genuine partnerships, involving real decision-making authority, produce durable improvements in youth self-efficacy, empathy and civic belonging. The effect was significantly stronger in conditions of genuine co-governance than in consultative arrangements.
The proposal to form Student Policy Committees, with school leaders being the facilitator and advisors to the committee. This will provide genuine standing in discussions on student welfare, facility use and sustainability goals. Students are briefed on the constraints, the budget, the logistics and their input carries formal weight. Rotation between different groups of students, distributes the developmental benefit broadly rather than concentrating it among a narrow student cohort.
The third is a National Discovery Endowment. Researcher Erik Erikson, in "Identity, Youth and Crisis", identified the age 15 to 25 as the critical psychosocial window for identity formation. Subsequent neuroscientific research also confirms that adolescence represents a period of heightened neuroplasticity, specifically in areas in governing self-concept, risk evaluation and social cognition. These are the baselines of identity development.
We should do more to invest before the age of 25. After this window, neuroplasticity would have largely closed for the most consequential function. The Discovery Endowment Credits will give for Singaporeans aged 15 to 25 more opportunities to discover themselves, a sense of awareness, self-management and develop maturity that is essential for long-term development. These credits can be used for non-academic self-directed exploration, regional internships, acquire niche skills, independent project materials, or even get social enterprise grants.
A tiered credit structure can be considered to help disadvantaged households address the documented reality where exploratory experiences are distributed unequally across income brackets. In the long term, this will potentially reduce the fiscal drag caused by mid-career burnout and career mismatch and its effects on absenteeism, healthcare utilisation and loss in productivity.
These three interventions share a single logic. Singapore's next phase of development requires citizens who can operate across the full cognitive and affective spectrum, who can think divergently as well as convergently, lead with empathy as well as analyse and navigate uncertainty with both intellectual rigour and emotional resilience.
I will end with this. In 1959, the British physicist and novelist CP Snow delivered a lecture at Cambridge, which was later published as "The Two Cultures". His observation was simple. That intellectual life had split into two mutually uncomprehending groups: the scientists and the humanists, who had largely stopped understanding or respecting what the other did. Between them sat a gulf of mutual contempt that was quietly crippling society's capacity to solve its most serious national problems.
What Snow identified at the civilisation level, we can observe in our daily classrooms, boardrooms, teams, community and everyday life today. The analytically formidable student who cannot read a room and the relationally gifted student whom our assessment architecture cannot see. Two intelligences sitting side by side, but neither recognising the other as intelligence at all. They will naturally yield to the consensus of their group and disregard the richer connective and effective diversity of others.
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Stone's warning was that societies which allow this bifurcation to harden do not merely lose cultural richness. They lose problem solving capacity and capability. The challenges that matter most requires both cognitive and effective domains in genuine integration. That is true in 1959, it is truer today. We must continue to sharpen ourselves, respect capabilities of our connective and affective diversity, and make better decisions for Singapore and Singaporeans.
Broadening of Education Paths
Ms Hany Soh (Marsiling-Yew Tee) : Chairman, as Deputy Chairperson of the Education GPC, my colleagues and I remain fully committed to ensuring Singaporeans have access to education at every stage of life, including pathways beyond the conventional routes we have long accepted.
As our nation intensifies efforts in AI education and promotes lifelong learning, we must ensure the right infrastructure supports every keen learner, regardless of their starting point. This is about building futures, not just acquiring knowledge.
From feedback in my constituency in Woodgrove, during every ITE and Polytechnic application period, many qualified residents are disappointed when their preferred courses are oversubscribed, even when their results actually meet the cut-off. Can the Ministry share the current occupancy or utilisation rates for our ITEs, polytechnics, as well as their part-time courses? What plans exist to increase openings for working adults balancing careers and family as well? I urge a comprehensive review of capacity to ensure no qualified student is left on the sidelines.
As one of the Members of Parliament for Marsiling-Yew Tee Group Representation Constituency (GRC), I have previously raised in this House the proposal for a new ITE in the North. This could double as a dedicated lifelong training centre to serve the growing population in the region. It could partner closely with Republic Polytechnic for a seamless "through-train" programme, allowing smooth progression from foundational to advanced skills. It could also collaborate with corporates in the nearby JTC industrial areas, enabling learners to apply skills directly on the job, secure employment upon graduation, or return easily for upskilling. Such a facility would enhance access to practical, skills-based education, bridge gaps, and foster a stronger culture of continuous growth.
Infrastructure alone is insufficient. We need holistic programmes to reach those who might otherwise fall through the cracks. I therefore call for deeper collaboration with initiatives such as the YMCA's Vocational and Soft Skills Programme, which equips out-of-school youth and youths-at-risk with job competencies and vocational skills to rebuild their confidence. Many of those young children feel lost due to negative peer influences or challenging family backgrounds. Normalising and expanding such programmes align closely with the Prime Minister's vision: every Singaporean, regardless of starting point, deserves a fair chance to pursue their aspirations and realise their full potential.
To make these pathways truly inclusive, education financing must keep pace. I urge for a review and broadening of the Central Provident Fund Education Loan Scheme and Tuition Fee Loan to cover a wider range of courses – vocational trades, the arts and innovative fields like AI and sustainability. More banks should also offer similar support. This is an investment in our people's talents, ensuring no dream is deferred due to financial barriers. In Mandarin, please.
( In Mandarin ) : [ Please refer to Vernacular Speech .] To support the implementation of the SkillsFuture initiative, the People's Association (PA) has been offering SkillsFuture@PA courses at various Community Clubs (CCs) since 2016. This programme has been in place for nearly 10 years now. I would like to ask: has the number of courses offered, as well as the number of participating CCs, been gradually increasing? Which age group makes up the majority of participants?
To encourage more Singaporeans to utilise their SkillsFuture training credits, I hope that SkillsFuture@PA programme can be further expanded. In addition to CCs, it could also extend to running courses at the Residents' Network Centres. This would provide greater convenience and companionship for seniors and those with mobility issues, motivating them to sign up and participate.
( In English ): Chairman, educating Singaporeans develops our only natural resource – our people. Broadening education paths is not a luxury. It is essential for Singapore's resilient future. By expanding capacity, building targeted facilities, partnering with industries and community programmes, and reforming finances, we can make lifelong learning the norm, not the exception. Let us commit to this today, for the sake of our youths, our workers, our nation.
ITE Pathways and Lifelong Learning
Dr Hamid Razak (West Coast-Jurong West) : Mr Chairman, Sir, Singapore has made strong progress in reshaping how we view skills, applied learning and multiple pathways to success. The ITE today is a launchpad for many young Singaporeans to build meaningful careers. The next phase, however, is not only access but progression across a lifetime. If lifelong learning is to work, progression must be legible. I think of one Singaporean I know, Mr Abu Bakar Siddiq, who started out in the Normal (Academic) stream, went on to ITE, polytechnic to pursue engineering, and then went to work, got sponsored for his degree and has now completed his masters. His story shows that your starting point does not determine the finishing line and that progress must be open.
Mr Chairman, Sir, the Work-Study Diploma is a strong model for the future of our learning. As we strengthen this pathway, I have three questions for the Minister. First, can the Minister share how MOE will make ITE progression routes to the Work-Study Diploma and beyond more visible to students and parents, including pathway maps by sector and stackable credentials with clear milestones and entry criteria?
Second, can the Minister update how MOE will give greater formal weight to workplace proven competencies with assessments that are rigorous and recognised across employers?
Third, will the Minister consider piloting a structured conditional university pathway for top performing ITE and work study learners anchored on sustained workplace achievement and continued upgrading without implying that university is the only outcome?
Mr Chairman, Sir, a future ready education system is not one that sorts students early, but one that keeps doors open throughout life. If every pathway can lead forward, more Singaporeans will keep going further.
Recognition of Adult Educators
Assoc Prof Terence Ho : I declare my interest as the senior executive of an educational institute that trains and certifies adult educators for SkillsFuture courses.
The lifelong learning ecosystem in Singapore has transformed over the past 11 years since the launch of the SkillsFuture movement. The efforts of SkillsFuture Singapore and its partners have made training and reskilling affordable, accessible and of high quality, catering to the diverse needs of learners.
Adult educators are critical to the quality of CET, just as our school teachers ensure the quality of education in our schools. At the Budget debate last year, I recall the hon Member Mr Xie Yao Quan spoke about the importance of the professional development and recognition of adult educators. From April this year, adult educators who teach SkillsFuture-funded courses must be on the National Adult Educator Registry and renew their registration every two years by clocking minimum practice hours as well as taking up continuing professional development. This public registry will support the professional development of adult educators and boost confidence in our CET system.
Beyond setting minimum standards, we must also encourage and recognise excellence within the adult educator profession. The Institute for Adult Learning, where I am from, will be inducting more Adult Education Fellows, recognising them as leading educators in their respective fields who can inspire other adult educators and share their expertise with the professional community.
I believe we can do more. Just as the President’s Award for Teachers recognises outstanding teachers who inspire their students and peers through innovative teaching methods and a commitment to lifelong learning, would the Ministry consider a President’s Award for Adult Educators as well? This would put adult educators, as the custodians of lifelong learning, on par with the teaching profession in terms of recognition.
In this era of rapidly changing job and skills requirements, adult educators play a key role in motivating and inspiring adult learners to keep learning and acquiring new skills. Adult educators need to innovate in their teaching and facilitation methods, based on the latest research in adult learning, and using AI and new digital tools where appropriate. They have to be exemplars of adult learning themselves. I believe that as we rebalance our focus between pre-employment training and CET, it is timely to strengthen our recognition of adult educators.
The Chairman : Mr David Hoe. You can take your two cuts together, please.
Affiliation, Diverse Needs and Fairness
Mr David Hoe (Jurong East-Bukit Batok) : Thank you. Chairman, I want to speak about affiliation and the balance that MOE must strike between school identity, diverse learning needs and fairness. The mechanism of school affiliation and parents' alumni affiliation has been long part of our education landscape. They help to sustain school ethos, community, and also tradition. Many alumni continue to contribute meaningfully back to schools and this spirit should be preserved.
But in today's context, MOE should also assess whether affiliation now might have resulted in unintended consequences. Does it confer disproportionate advantage to some, weakened perception of fairness, meritocracy and social mixing? One practical issue is how large cut-off points gap linked to affiliation can translate into different academic readiness in a classroom, and this makes targeted teaching harder and increase preparation burden on teachers.
Let me illustrate this disparity. The cut-off point between an affiliated student and a non-affiliated Primary 6 can be very large. In my research, I found that for one popular school in 2025, non-affiliated cut-off point, the student from non-affiliated school was 10, and affiliated cut-off point is 20. A 10-point difference, not a 10-mark difference.
This is not an isolated case, because several schools have similar wide affiliation related cut-off points gaps. This matters, because in our current AL system, some bands cover a wide range of marks. For example, AL 6 spans between 45 marks and 64 marks, and AL 5, 65 to 74 marks. So, a one point cut-off point difference can represent a large spread in terms of academic readiness, what more a 10-point gap? This can significantly widen the range of learners' profile in the same subject classroom. This will in turn cause increased differentiation demands and make classroom and curriculum planning more complex, even as we move to have implemented our full subject-based banding (FSBB). While FSBB helps with subject level grouping, it cannot remove the wide difference in readiness within a subject class.
A second issue is what affiliation incentives to upstream. See, large affiliation advantages can fuel unhealthy primary school chasing earlier. A possible unintended consequence is families make primary school choice not really based on values, culture or programmes, but because they are trying to secure an easier affiliated school pathway for a good secondary school later. Over time, this can amplify inequalities, because the ability to move house, arrange childcare, mobilise alumni connection is not evenly distributed among the population. So, I would encourage MOE to consider whether the current school affiliation mechanism for entry to secondary school needs to be reviewed.
Well, I have some suggestions in this regard. Perhaps MOE can consider either capping the maximum difference between affiliated and non-affiliated cut-off points to two to three points, together with a review with the mark range within each of the AL bands to accurately reflect students' readiness, or maybe to remove affiliation cut-off points completely.
To be clear, the goal here is not to abolish school identity, but to ensure that identity does not come at a cost of public confidence in fairness or unintentionally weakening social mixing. This links to the Primary 1 admission as well, especially under Phase 2A, which gives priority to parents who are alumni of the school. MOE has to balance legitimate community ties with the principle that schools should remain inclusive.
To remain inclusive, I wonder could MOE consider more protected spaces for non-alumni students in oversubscribed schools so that primary school choice is not driven by structural advantage from networks or resources.
In/Externships and Learning Journeys
Chairman, I appreciate MOE's effort to broaden pathways and enable our students to make better career choices, such as having educational career counsellors in our schools. This is important because it helps our students and also our young adults to decide what to pursue.
However, I think more can be done with regard to this, so that we can see large and more meaningful change, especially for those who have fewer networks.
This cut is with regard to internship, externship, learning journeys and structured career exposure.
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Today, many of these opportunities exist, but access is uneven. For instance, a better resourced school, especially our independent secondary schools, often have stronger alumni networks, more established industry relationships, greater capacity to organise their visits, talks or attachment.
In a recent Clementi community run, I spoke to a student who shared with me that his school very soon, about in one week's time, they will have a sabbatical week for secondary four cohort. These students can choose from a range of different programmes to gain exposure beyond classroom. And he also shared with me his senior, Year Five, previously, just did an internship during school breaks.
You see, as a former educator, I understand his worldview, but I also know this is not true for most of our secondary schools in Singapore. For students from less resourced or disadvantaged background, such opportunities to discover their interest matters even more, because if you come from a family without strong professional networks, you cannot easily borrow career insights from your parents or friends or find informal internships through social connections, because what you can see is what you can imagine and what you can imagine shapes what you dare to pursue.
So, structured exposure if done well, becomes an equaliser, because it substitutes for who you know and it helps students to build confidence, aspirations and a clearer sense of fit. So, I urge MOE to consider these three moves.
First, to expand and better standardise access to career exposure across schools. This includes internship, externship, where feasible, but also shorter and more scalable formats, such as our learning journeys, workplace visits, shadowing days and structured career day with real job content. The aim is to ensure the experiences do not sit within some schools, but they are made available throughout our system, especially our non-IP schools and less resourced educational institution.
Second, MOE should also consider a better structuring these experiences in line with our priority sectors or industry, where Singapore is trying to build our capabilities. We can work with industry partners and school leaders to curate such experiences. Such experiences should not be one off but should be a sustained exposure that helps students to understand what the nature of the work is like, what kind of skills is required, what pathways exist.
Third, for such programmes, priority should be given to those who will gain the most. If we believe in equity, we must design a first access for students who have fewer resources or come from disadvantaged background. We should remove practical barriers in this regard. For example, it should be simpler sign-up, transportation support and if there is a need, for a small allowance, so that participation does not depend on the student's financial or family situation. And beyond SkillsFuture course, we should also scale this at adults as well for short learning journeys for adults. This will give our adults a more realistic view.
Building Resilience in Our Students
Dr Charlene Chen (Tampines) : Chairman, resilience should not depend on which school a child attends. While initiatives exist, implementation varies. In some schools, resilience skills, peer systems and early detection are embedded. In others, they depend heavily on local bandwidth and priorities. If resilience is foundational, certain elements must be guaranteed nationally. High-performing systems already do this.
Finland embeds well-being as a formal objective in its national curriculum. Denmark mandates a weekly class, Klassens Tid, dedicated to emotional dialogue and conflict resolution. Japan's Tokkatsu, part of its national curriculum, systematically develops social responsibility and emotional regulation. These are not optional add-ons, but structured expectations.
I therefore propose a National School Mental Well-Being Charter. The principle is clear: centralise standards and accountability, decentralise delivery and innovation.
First, a national baseline for resilience education: a minimum annual allocation within Character and Citizenship Education (CCE) for mental health literacy and coping skills; defined developmental competencies at key stages; central vetting of external providers.
Second, a standardised well-being framework. Denmark uses national digital well-being audits to systematically track student mood and welfare trends. Singapore can adopt a nationally validated annual instrument measuring belonging, coping confidence and psychological safety, used for internal improvement, not public ranking.
Third, clear support benchmarks. Finland's three-tiered support model ensures timely intervention for students who need more help. Our Charter should define timelines for counsellor access, minimum training and supervision standards for peer supporters, structured referral pathways.
Accreditation should be tiered and developmental, recognising capability-building rather than compliance. This is feasible. CCE exists. Surveys exist. Peer systems exist. Counsellors are deployed.
The Charter aligns these under clear national guardrails. International evidence shows resilience improves when it is embedded, measured and systematised. Without baseline guarantees, outcomes remain uneven. With structured standards, every student receives consistent support regardless of school.
The Power of Arts in Student Well-being
Ms Elysa Chen : Sir, in my Budget debate, I spoke about the power of the arts in promoting mental well-being. The Minister has outlined efforts to support disadvantaged students, nurture human-centric qualities in the age of AI and refresh the CCE curriculum. The arts are a natural complement.
In 2023, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra brought 200 students to a concert. Half had never attended one; a third lived in rental or smaller flats. Students reported a 13% improvement in well-being, a 17% rise in positive emotions and a 41% drop in negative emotions and a stronger social connection, all from a single concert!
If one shared arts experience can do this, imagine what sustained engagement could achieve for bullying prevention, socio-emotional development and social mixing. The arts also engage kinesthetic learners, foster creativity and strengthen problem-solving. This is not about adding to teachers' burdens but equipping them with trained partners.
I saw this firsthand at a Playback Theatre session by the Singapore Drama Educators Association, where audience members share real experiences of bullying and trained facilitators play them back through improvised performance. The practitioners proposed this as an avenue to address bullying by building empathy and supporting restorative approaches. They stand ready to partner schools.
I would like to ask the Minister: will MOE commission a study on how the arts affect student mental well-being? Second, will MOE partner arts practitioners to address bullying and build socio-emotional competencies in schools?
As Singaporean artist Tan Swie Hian said, "Art is not just a reflection of life; it is a catalyst for change". Our children are works of art themselves who can be powerful catalysts of change. By bringing the arts into education, we can help our students grow not just academically, but as empathetic, resilient and creative individuals.
Students with Special Education Needs (SEN)
Ms Denise Phua Lay Peng : Sir, on supporting students with Special Educational Needs (SEN) in our mainstream schools and in special education (SPED) schools, we have made real progress in the space. Big thanks to MOE, partner disability agencies and staff.
But the numbers being diagnosed and the demands are increasing and our support models must grow stronger.
First, on mainstream schools, from access to consistent quality. Over the past decade, MOE has strengthened in-school capabilities. SEN officers have increased from about 450 in 2017 to about 750 by 2024. Primary schools now run structured programmes, such as School-based Dyslexia Remediation, Circle of Friends peer support, and the TRANsition Support for InTegration (TRANSIT) initiative. These are serious investments. But two areas need attention in the mainstream schools setting.
First, inclusion quality remains uneven. Parents still report differences in early identification, teacher confidence and consistency of support across schools. We need a clearer national tiered framework that defines what every classroom teacher must be able to do, what school-based specialists provide and what requires multi-disciplinary intervention including for mental wellness. Support should not depend on which school a child happens to enter.
Second, life skills must be intentionally taught. For many SEN students in mainstream settings, academic access alone is not enough. Executive functioning, self-advocacy, emotional regulation, work habits and digital responsibility and so on must be systematically embedded, not treated as optional add-ons. These are foundational for lifelong learning and employability. Not including them bears negative consequences.
Next on special schools, expanding the capacity and reimagining their purpose. On the SPED side, much more support had been put in. Capacity will increase from 8,300 in 2024, to 10,000 places by 2030. Demand and complexity continue to rise.
First, manpower is the tightest bottleneck. If we build new schools without enlarging the workforce, we create a tug-of-war. SPED competes with mainstream. Mainstream competes with SPED. Both compete with the private sector.
We need a deliberate manpower strategy: expand sponsored training pipelines for SPED educators and allied professionals, scale structured mid-career conversion pathways, allow for foreign manpower to supplement the workforce, deploy regional multidisciplinary teams serving classes of schools, pace spread staff competitively, educators, speech pathologies, therapies and coaches. Retention is capacity.
Second, we must address the post-SPED cliff. Beyond expansion, we must ask: what should a SPED school of the future look like? It should adopt a lifelong learning model integrating academic foundations with work readiness and vocational exposure, life skills for independent and dignified living, social-emotional growth and community participation and AI tools that actively address the rapidly changing living and working landscape.
SPED schools must be launchpads for adulthood, not endpoints. No young person should thrive for years in our SPED schools to face then a drop into uncertainty. That cliff is for ours to level.
Curriculum Access for SEN Students
Prof Kenneth Poon (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, I would like to state my interest in this matter as a psychologist, special educator and also an academic with practice experience and research interest in the needs of students with SEN.
It was reported in the 2024 Disability Trends Report that there were, as of 2023, about 36,000 students with SEN in Singapore schools. Of these, about 80% or close to 29,000 attend mainstream schools, which represents a rise from the 27,000 in 2022. I would like to focus, today, on this group of students.
Like the hon Member Ms Denise Phua, I would like to applaud the Ministry's significant investments, over the past decade, in differentiated provision of support across the education system. This has enabled more students with SEN to access educational pathways suited to their profiles of needs.
Mainstream schools now provide students with SEN access to the national curriculum as well as with support in the form of teachers trained in SEN, SEN Officers, and from the multi-tiered system of support. Within this context, students with SEN not only benefit from the challenge from access to the national curriculum but they also have the opportunity to learn alongside their peers.
Students with SEN thrive in mainstream environments when necessary supports are in place. However, there are some students with SEN who are able to engage with aspects of the national curriculum, but whose consistent participation in classroom instruction depends on supports that are not always available within the school environment. These may take the form of additional services targeting areas like learning, executive functions social skills, as well as emotional and behavioral regulation.
When such support is not consistently available, the students' ability to participate in classroom instruction and progress within the national curriculum may become affected. This may impact, in the short term, engagement, learning and social interaction of such students. But it may also affect motivation and identity over time as well as potentially longer-term consequences on employability and participation within society.
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Access to such supports may depend on availability, cost and coordination across settings, which can be within hospitals, social service agencies or private providers. In such circumstances, the responsibility for sustaining access to learning may shift from institutional arrangements within schools to the capacity of individual families to coordinate supports across educational, healthcare and social service settings.
I had highlighted during my earlier Budget speech about the contribution of meaningful participation and having a voice in decision-making within a cohesive society. I would hence like to ask the Minister if the Government could share how classroom instruction is adapted for students who need supports that may not be consistently available within mainstream schools and how students with SEN and their families are involved in shaping the type of supports they receive in mainstream schools.
Sir, the question I seek to raise today is not whether we should invest in such provision of support for students with SEN. I believe we already have. It is about how continuity of meaningful participation in mainstream schools is sustained for students with SEN with support needs that are not consistently available within the school environment.
I look forward to the Minister's clarification on this matter.
Scale SEN Support in Mainstream Schools
Dr Charlene Chen : Chairman, as inclusion deepens in our mainstream schools, we must ensure that support arrives early enough and scales quickly enough to ease pressure in the classroom.
In Primary 1, teachers are not only teaching literacy and numeracy. They are helping children learn how to sit still, sustain attention, regulate impulses and transition between tasks. When several students in one class struggle with these foundational skills, the teacher spends much of the lesson managing behaviour. Instructional time shrinks. Strain builds for teachers and for students.
MOE already conducts systematic screening for literacy and numeracy at Primary 1 and SEN officers support teachers in identifying social-behavioural difficulties. Behavioural identification, however, is largely supported through observation and monitoring over time.
I propose that we strengthen this process by incorporating structured executive-function indicators into the existing Primary 1 screening framework. A short, cohort-wide baseline around 30 to 45 minutes could provide objective data on learning readiness skills such as attention regulation, working memory and impulse control.
This is not diagnostic. It does not label children. It strengthens early planning. It allows schools to identify early on which cohorts may require heavier classroom support before strain accumulates. Importantly, this information could be linked to calibrated manpower deployment.
Where a Primary 1 cohort shows higher-than-usual support needs, temporary para-educator or co-teaching support could be deployed earlier rather than after prolonged escalation. And where support density within a class is particularly high, flexibility in class composition or size should be considered. There is no single ideal class number. What matters is whether the structure of the class matches the needs within it.
When early intervention is effective, behavioural and learning gaps often narrow. Support intensity reduces as students mature and manpower can then be redeployed to incoming cohorts. In this way, we move from reactive escalation to early calibration. This approach lightens teacher workload, reduces cumulative strain across levels and ensures that children receive timely support during their most formative years.
If we detect early and deploy early, we support our teachers, strengthen student outcomes and give parents confidence that inclusion remains both compassionate and workable.
Reigniting Our Love for Mother Tongues
Ms Lee Hui Ying : Sir, in Mandarin, please.
( In Mandarin ) : [ Please refer to Vernacular Speech .] Bilingualism is central to Singapore's identity, yet gaps remain. Some students struggle with both English and their mother tongue and interest in mother tongue languages is waning.
I speak from personal experience as a former Language Elective Programme (Chinese) student. I am proud to enjoy my mother yongue. Our identity as bilingual Singaporeans is special. Bilingualism should not be a policy, it should be a skill students embrace with confidence and pride.
Yet mastering two languages is no easy feat. Too often, it is seen as an exam to pass and a source of stress rather than a living language. Has our current policy kept pace? How can we reignite interest? I ask whether MOE will provide greater support for parents to immerse young children at home and leverage digital platforms to make learning engaging. We need targeted support for weaker learners, stronger teacher training and curricula that make languages relevant and engaging.
Assessments should reward practical use, not just exam results. Only then can bilingualism become a lifelong skill, empowering our students and sustaining our cultural heritage.
Community Partnerships for Bilingualism
Dr Hamid Razak : Mr Chairman, Sir, bilingualism today cannot be sustained by schools alone. Languages weaken not when they are difficult to learn, but when they are no longer lived outside the classroom. If we want mother tongue proficiency to be sustained, we must continually enrich the language environment so that children here use and enjoy the language in everyday settings. This is why the next phase of bilingualism must be a whole-of-community effort.
First, we can consider catalytic micro grants for community-led bilingual initiatives – small, simple and outcome-focused – to support storytelling sessions, reading circles, drama and inter-generational activities.
Second, we should support regular community language spaces, for example, in libraries, community clubs or neighbourhood nodes, so that language use becomes a routine, not just an occasional festival.
Third, let us strengthen parent enablement with simple toolkits and nudges that help families use mother tongue at home in practical ways, at meals, during routines and in shared activities. Because bilingualism is not only taught in schools, it is sustained in communities.
Mr Chairman, Sir, a cut on bilingualism will not be complete without me speaking in my mother tongue. In Tamil, please.
( In Tamil ) : [ Please refer to Vernacular Speech .] Why do we refer to mother tongue as mother tongue? When we mention "mother", what we recall are love, support and nurturing. These beautiful feelings have to be refreshed in our hearts as we speak in our mother tongue. Therefore, we cannot teach mother tongue in schools alone. This is a joint community effort. Hence, let us come together and expound the motherliness of our mother tongue. Long live, mother tongues.