口头答复 · 2025-11-04 · 第 15 届国会

PSLE学术严谨与AI技能平衡

Balancing Academic Rigour Required to Excel at PSLE With Skills to Thrive in AI-driven Economy

AI 经济与产业AI 与教育AI 与公共部门 争议度 3 · 实质辩论

议员质询PSLE是否侧重死记硬背,是否培养终身学习兴趣,以及与探究式、协作式学习的比较。教育部回应PSLE注重核心概念和批判思维,强调多元教学法和21世纪能力培养,且国际评比显示学生具备复杂问题解决能力。质询关注低收入及高需求学校的教学落实及国际经验借鉴,教育部强调教师培训中融入探究与协作技能。核心争议在于如何在学术严谨与创新能力培养间取得平衡。

关键要点

  • PSLE非死记硬背
  • 多元教学促进能力
  • 教师培训重探究协作
政府立场

强调多元教学与21世纪能力培养

质询立场

关注教学公平与国际经验借鉴

政策信号

推动探究协作教学融合

"PSLE does not emphasise rote learning or test-taking skills."

参与人员(3)

完整译文(中文)

Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02

9号议员Dennis Tan Lip Fong询问教育部长,教育部是否认为在PSLE中取得优异成绩所需的学术严谨性,例如死记硬背和应试能力,(i) 是否反映了我们的青少年在人工智能驱动的经济中茁壮成长所需的技能,(ii) 是否培养了终身学习的热爱,以及(iii) 与其他国际认可的小学课程中更常见的探究式和协作式学习方法相比如何。

教育高级国务部长(Dr Janil Puthucheary)(代表教育部长) :议长先生,小学离校考试(PSLE)作为学生掌握小学课程的一个有用的检查点。它旨在评估小学课程中的核心概念和技能,包括批判性思维能力和在不同情境中应用概念的能力。PSLE并不强调死记硬背或应试技巧。

为了让学生为未来做好准备,学校还设计了课外活动课程、应用学习课程、品格与公民教育课程以及领导力机会,以培养学生的21世纪能力。虽然并非所有这些能力,如协作技能和创新思维,都能通过单一考试来衡量,但它们是在学习课程的过程中培养的。我们的教师采用多种教学法,如探究式、协作式和体验式学习,以促进学生的学习。

我们感到欣慰的是,国际基准研究,如国际数学与科学趋势研究,发现我们的中小学生擅长推理,并能应用概念和技能来应对非常规情境和解决更复杂的问题。

议长先生:Dennis Tan议员。

Hougang区议员Dennis Tan Lip Fong :议长先生,我有两个补充问题要问高级国务部长。第一,教育部如何确保探究式和协作式学习方法不仅存在于课程中,而且在所有学校的课堂实践中得到有意义的整合,包括那些服务于低收入或高需求社区的学校?

我的第二个补充问题是,教育部最近是否对其他小学教育体系进行了比较研究,特别是那些成功平衡学术严谨性与创造力和协作的体系,并从这些体系中吸取了哪些经验教训?

Dr Janil Puthucheary :先生,感谢Dennis Tan议员的两个问题。确实,协作和探究式学习已整合到所有学校中。这些是我们教育工作者的核心技能。这是我们的专业人员在国立教育学院培训的一部分,无论是作为他们最初的实习课程,还是后来成为教育某些领域的专家。

这些是我们教育工作者的核心技能,他们定期将其整合到课程和教学大纲中;他们为每所学校的每个孩子提供机会去实践。

协作学习和探究式学习的具体表现会因学科不同而变化,比如数学课、语言课、社会研究课,也会因学生的自信心和成熟度不同而变化。小学早期的教学方式与后期会有很大不同。

因此,确保这种教学法可用、被使用并整合到我们的教学方法和所有教室中的核心技能是存在的,并且是教学职业的核心。

先生,您的第二个问题是关于其他体系的研究。简短回答是肯定的,我们的教育工作者定期且持续地研究其他教育体系。新加坡教育工作者之间,以及与本地区和国际上的同行之间,有一个非常活跃的实践社区。他们在实际和个人层面不断交流经验。此外,教育研究领域也有一个活跃的实践社区,我们的教育工作者和教育研究人员参与其中,也在交流经验。因此,我们一直在相互学习。

要回答您第二个问题的后半部分,可能需要我在供应委员会演讲中详细说明教学法、学习方法和师资发展等各个组成部分。但我向Tan议员和议会成员保证,我们的教育界并不认为我们已经解决了教育领域的所有问题和挑战。尽管有排名和外部评价,我们必须持续且定期确保我们在学校和课堂中所做的工作不仅满足系统的需求,也满足我们学生整体群体的需求,更重要的是满足教育者在学生学习和发展过程中手把手辅导的个别学生的需求。这是一个持续的过程。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02

9 Mr Dennis Tan Lip Fong asked the Minister for Education whether the Ministry considers that the academic rigour required to excel in the PSLE, such as rote memorisation and test-taking abilities (i) reflects the skills our youths need to thrive in the AI-driven economy, (ii) nurtures a lifelong love of learning and (iii) compares favourably with inquiry-based and collaborative learning approaches more common in other internationally recognised primary school curricula.

The Senior Minister of State for Education (Dr Janil Puthucheary) (for the Minister for Education) : Mr Speaker, the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) serves as a useful checkpoint on students' mastery of the primary school curriculum. It is designed to assess core concepts and skills in the primary school curriculum, including the ability to think critically and apply concepts in different contexts. PSLE does not emphasise rote learning or test-taking skills.

To prepare students for the future, schools also design co-curricular programmes, applied learning programmes, Character and Citizenship Education lessons and leadership opportunities to nurture students' 21st Century Competencies. While not all of these competencies, such as collaboration skills and inventive thinking, can be measured through a single exam, they are developed in the course of learning the curriculum. Our teachers use a range of pedagogies, such as inquiry-based, collaborative and experiential learning, to facilitate students' learning.

We are heartened that international benchmarking studies, like the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study, have found that our primary school students are adept in reasoning, and applying concepts and skills to navigate non-routine situations and solve more complex problems.

Mr Speaker : Mr Dennis Tan.

Mr Dennis Tan Lip Fong (Hougang) : Mr Speaker, I have two supplementary questions for the Senior Minister of State. One, how does the Ministry ensure that inquiry-based and collaborative learning approaches are not only present in the curriculum, but meaningfully integrated into classroom practice across all schools, including those serving lower-income or higher needs communities?

My second supplementary question, has the Ministry recently conducted comparative studies of other primary school education systems, particularly, any that have successfully balanced academic rigour with creativity and collaborations, and what lessons, if any, have been drawn from these systems?

Dr Janil Puthucheary : Sir, I thank Mr Dennis Tan for the two questions. Indeed, collaboration and inquiry-based learning is integrated into all of the schools. These are core skillsets for our educators. This is something that our professionals as part of their training in the National Institute of Education, whether they are doing it as part of their original practicum or they go on to become specialists in particular areas of education.

These are core skillsets for our educators and they integrate them into the curriculum, into the syllabus on a regular basis; and they do so for every school and they give every child the opportunity to do so.

What collaborative learning, inquiry-based learning looks like will change, depending on whether it is talking about a mathematics class, a language class, a social studies class, and it will also change depending on the level of confidence and maturity of the students. What happens in the early primary years is going to look quite different from the later primary years.

And so, the core skillset to ensure that this type of pedagogy is available, used and integrated into our teaching methodologies, into all our classrooms, is there and is something that is at the heart of the teaching profession.

Sir, his second question was about studies of other systems. The short answer is yes, our educators are regularly and consistently looking at other education systems. There is a very robust community of practice amongst the educators within Singapore, and with our region and internationally. They are constantly and consistently comparing notes on a practical level, on a personal level. And there is also a robust community of practice in education research, which our educators and our education researchers participate in, and they are also comparing notes. So, we are always learning from one another.

To answer the second part of his second question, I think, would take me a Committee of Supply speech – to identify all the different components of pedagogy, learning methodology and faculty development. But I would assure Mr Tan and Members of the House that our education fraternity does not assume that we have solved all the problems, all the challenges within the education space, notwithstanding the ranking and grading, and external view, we have to consistently and regularly make sure that what we do in our schools and in our classrooms meets the needs, not just of the system, not just our general population of students, but the individual students that the educators hand-hold through their learning and development journey. That is an ongoing process.