口头答复 · 2026-02-03 · 第 15 届国会

教师复杂挑战下的班级规模政策

Policy on Optimal Class Sizes Given Increasingly Complex Challenges Faced by Teachers

AI 治理与监管AI 与教育AI 与医疗AI 与公共部门 争议度 3 · 实质辩论

议员质询教育部关于教师面临多样化学生需求及心理健康挑战下的最优班级规模政策。教育部长回应,班级规模依据学生学习需求调整,特殊教育和早期干预班级规模更小,同时增加辅导员和特教人员支持。核心争议在于如何平衡资源分配与教学质量,确保多样化需求学生获得足够支持。

关键要点

  • 班级规模因需而异
  • 特殊教育班规模更小
  • 辅导员数量持续增加
政府立场

根据学生需求调整班级规模,强化支持

质询立场

关注教师负担与学生多样需求

政策信号

持续优化班级规模与资源配置

"The Ministry of Education's approach for class sizes is guided by the learning needs of our students."

参与人员(5)

完整译文(中文)

Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02

11 陈艾丽莎女士问教育部长,鉴于近期发现教师在工作中面临日益复杂的挑战,包括支持具有多样化学习需求、心理健康问题和特殊教育需求的学生,教育部目前对最佳班级规模的立场是什么。

教育部长(李显龙先生):议长先生,感谢议员的提问。教育部(MOE)对班级规模的安排是以学生的学习需求为指导。对于需求较大的学生,会投入更多的教学资源,因此这类学生的班级规模较小,因为他们需要更多的支持和辅助。

让我举几个例子。

小学一年级和二年级的学生班级规模约为30人。为什么?因为他们刚开始接受教育,我们希望能够更好地支持他们的过渡。

过渡支持融合班(TRANSIT)班级规模更小,最多约10人。为什么?因为TRANSIT班帮助被识别为有社会和行为需求的小学一年级学生,在入学时培养基础的自我管理技能。事实上,最近我亲自参加了其中一个TRANSIT班,观察他们如何实施教学方法,包括教学法和社会情感学习。

另一个例子是学习支持计划,在约8至10人的抽出班中进行。为什么?因为这是我们学校为需要额外英语语言帮助的低年级学生提供的专业早期干预计划。

学校基础的阅读障碍矫正计划,在4至6人的小班中进行。为什么?因为对于这些特殊教育需求的学生,我们希望给予更好的支持,因为克服或管理阅读障碍等挑战,可以帮助他们获得其他学科的支持。

在全面学科分层(Full Subject-Based Banding)下,我们的中学生根据学习需求和学科性质,参加20至40人的不同学科班级。

此外,学校可根据需要并在资源允许的情况下,为班级配备两名班主任。

议长先生,班级规模并非我们支持多样化学习需求学生的唯一方式。学校还配备了学校辅导员,加强学生的社会情感技能,以及特殊教育需求官员,为需要帮助的学生提供学习和行为支持。过去十年,我们将受训的学校辅导员和特殊教育需求官员人数从约800人增加到1300人。我们将继续研究我们方法的有效性,包括班级规模,并准备在必要时调整策略,为学生创造有利的学习环境。

议长:陈艾丽莎女士。

陈艾丽莎女士(碧山-大巴窑):议长先生,感谢部长的回应。得知教育部已经在这方面采取了良好措施,令人欣慰。我想问部长,您是否同意,在人工智能(AI)颠覆内容学习、家庭规模缩小的世界里,孩子们学习机器无法教授的软技能、培养只有人类才能培育的情感和心理力量更为重要?鉴于人类指导和软技能学习难以通过技术大规模实现,教育部是否会重新审视班级规模?

李显龙先生:感谢议员认识到社会情感技能和能力的重要性,这不仅是现在,也是未来,比如人工智能带来机遇、不确定性和颠覆的未来。事实上,在我们的人工智能教育框架中,我们希望教导孩子什么是人工智能,如何使用人工智能,如何与人工智能一起学习,更重要的是,如何超越人工智能学习。

因此,通过最近加强的21世纪能力框架,我们寻求通过学科教学、课外活动(CCA)、品格与公民教育(CCE)及学校其他支持形式,支持并强化孩子们学习这些重要价值观和技能。这意味着教学不仅是学科知识的传授,更是对孩子的全面教育,通过CCA等活动赋予他们21世纪能力和社会情感学习。

基于此,我们持续探索如何更好地支持孩子们,通过为需求更大的学生投入更多资源,确保他们获得更全面的支持——不仅是教学支持,还有特殊教育需求官员和辅导支持。

议长:林占士副教授。

林占士副教授(盛港):议长先生,认知科学的最新研究表明,学习的生物学机制使人类在与他人互动时更能保留信息和理解内容。我理解部长所说,学习技术特别是人工智能的发展,现可提供个性化教育。但基于这些研究,个性化教育似乎不能完全替代人与人之间的互动。

因此,我想知道教育部是否会考虑除单纯减少班级规模外的其他方案,比如增加课堂内的辅助教师或助教?如果会,部长能否分享教育部为何缩减辅助教育人员参与教学的决定?

李显龙先生:议员提出了很好的观点,感谢他支持通过辅助教育人员增强教学力量,特别是学校辅导员、特殊教育需求官员以及户外教育辅助人员。从现有方案转向专注于这些辅助教育职业,使我们能更专业地支持孩子们。

议员也完全正确,教育科技很重要。教育科技允许一定程度的个性化,例如新加坡学生学习空间(SLS)中的人工智能,能为孩子们在课堂内外提供额外的辅助和支持。但人类教学、人与人之间的互动是无可替代的,教师在课堂上不仅传授学科知识,还能示范价值观和社会情感技能,这对日常生活非常重要。在这方面,教育科技永远无法替代人类的温度。感谢议员的支持。

议长:许国贤副教授。

许国贤副教授(提名议员):谢谢议长,也感谢部长的回答。我有一个关于学校资源配置的问题。部长提到班级规模和师生比例取决于学校资源。请问是否有某种门槛或目标,帮助学校领导或教育部判断何时资源足够支持学生?

李显龙先生:确实,这是学校领导与教育部总部领导之间持续的对话。学校领导与教师紧密联系,教育部总部包括督学、区域主任、学校主任等,密切了解不同学校的具体需求,并据此分配资源。

当然,每所学校都有基础的教学、辅助资源和行政人员支持。但某些学校可能需要更多辅导员、学生福利官员或特殊教育需求官员。这些资源不仅基于学校,也基于学区,给予学校领导灵活申请更多资源的空间。

但归根结底,无论是班级规模还是其他资源,教育部的使命是:我们有资源,也必须在约束内运作,因为教育部的预算不是独立于其他部委和新加坡整体需求的。我们还要抓住新研究、新教学法、新的社会情感学习方法等机遇。如何在资源、约束和机遇之间优化,以实现孩子的全面发展,帮助教师和辅助教育人员管理工作量,有意义地工作,从而促进下一代的全面发展?

因此,我们将资源集中于需求更大的学生,无论是因为年龄(小学一、二年级),还是特殊教育需求(如阅读障碍),或其他挑战(如不同水平的学习)。全面学科分层确实需要更多资源,帮助某些学科需要更多支持的学生。

谈到班级规模,如果增加教师人数,我们必须考虑对其他重要社会部门的影响。我们还要确保教师职业保持标准和质量。如果增加教师授课班级数,则需重新调整教师日常工作内容。

一些国家教师授课班级更多,部分因工作量和资源限制。但在新加坡,如果这样做,可能需要三方面结合:一是增加招聘;二是增加教师授课班级数;三是重新调整教师的其他工作,如CCA、CCE、行政、备课、批改等。最后,当然是利用包括人工智能在内的技术工具,赋能教师做更多事情。

今天的课堂与我们时代大不相同。我们将继续推动进步和变革;我认为有三件事即将到来,将助力我们转型教育,使新加坡为充满不确定性但充满机遇和希望的未来做好准备。

第一,是我们最近宣布的教育对话,重新审视学术竞赛,即“军备竞赛”,聚焦深度学习而非通过高风险考试的学术追求。同样,我们将通过品格与公民教育(CCE)和课外活动(CCA)的审查,全面看待整体教育。这是一项重大工作。

第二,是我提到的人工智能教育框架。这不仅关乎教育科技和工具,更关乎如何在人工智能能做某些事情、做更多事情的时代重新构想教学,以及人们如何保持技术主导地位。这是我们关注的领域。

第三,是为来自有较大挑战家庭的儿童提供更全面的支持,如何更好地与周边社会服务整合。

这三项是众多正在进行和即将进行的审查之一,包括2024年重新构想教师职业工作组的建议,目前仍在应用和实施阶段,将促使我们重新审视未来的课堂及支持儿童的需求。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02

11 Ms Elysa Chen asked the Minister for Education what is the Ministry's current position on optimal class sizes given recent findings that teachers face increasing complexity in their roles, including supporting students with diverse learning needs, mental health challenges and special educational needs.

The Minister for Education (Mr Desmond Lee) : Mr Speaker, I thank the Member for her question. The Ministry of Education's (MOE's) approach for class sizes is guided by the learning needs of our students. More teaching resources are deployed for students with greater needs and hence, smaller class sizes for such students because they need more support and scaffolding.

Let me give you a few examples.

Primary 1 and 2 students learn in class sizes of around 30. Why? Because they have just started their educational journey and we want to be able to better support in that transition.

TRANsition Support for InTegration (TRANSIT) classes, conducted in even smaller class sizes of up to 10. Why? Because TRANSIT classes help our Primary 1 students who are identified with social and behavioural needs to develop foundational self-management skills when they start schools. In fact, recently, I sat in one of these TRANSIT classes to see how they carry out the approach, pedagogical as well as socio-emotional learning.

Another example is the Learning Support Programme, conducted in pull-out classes of around eight to 10. Why? Because this is a specialised early intervention programme in our schools for lower primary students who need additional help with the English language.

School-based Dyslexia Remediation Programme, conducted in classes of four to six students. Why? Because with these special education needs, we want to better support them, because overcoming some of these challenges or managing these challenges, like dyslexia, allows them to access support for many other subjects.

With Full Subject-Based Banding, our secondary school students attend different subject classes of between 20 and 40 students, depending on their learning needs and the nature of the subject.

Additionally, schools may deploy two form teachers for classes on a needs basis where school resourcing allows.

Sir, class sizes are not the only way we support students with diverse learning needs. Schools also have school counsellors to strengthen the social-emotional skills of our students and the special education needs officers to provide learning and behavioural support for our students who need it. We have grown the number of trained school counsellors and special education needs officers in schools from around 800 to 1,300 over the past decade. We will continue to study the effectiveness of our approach, including on class sizes and are prepared to adjust our strategies where necessary to create conducive learning environments for our students.

Mr Speaker : Ms Elysa Chen.

Ms Elysa Chen (Bishan-Toa Payoh) : Sir, I thank the Minister for his response. It is heartening to know that MOE is already taking good steps in this direction. I wanted to ask the Minister, does the Minister agree that in a world with artificial intelligence (AI) disrupting the learning of content in a nation of smaller family sizes, it is even more important that children learn the soft skills which no machine can teach, and develop emotional and psychological strengths which only humans can nurture? And given that human mentoring and the learning of soft skills cannot scale so easily with technology, will MOE relook class sizes?

Mr Desmond Lee : I thank the Member for recognising that social-emotional skills and competencies are important, not just now, but for a future, such as one where AI presents both opportunity, as well as uncertainty and disruption. Indeed, in our AI in education framework, we want to teach our children what is AI, how to use AI, how to learn with AI and most importantly, how to learn beyond AI.

And so, through the 21st Century Competencies Framework, which was recently enhanced, we seek to provide support and strengthen our children's learning of these important values and skills through a combination of weaving through academic subjects through co-curricular activities (CCA), Character and Citizenship Education (CCE) and other forms of support in school. And this means that teaching is not just academic teaching of subjects, but also more holistic teaching of a child and empowering them with 21st century competencies and social-emotional learning through activities like CCA.

So, with this in mind, we continue to see how best to support our children, and by putting more resources for students with greater needs, we ensure that they get more holistic support – not just through teaching support, but also support of Special Educational Needs Officers and counselling support.

Mr Speaker : Assoc Prof Jamus Lim.

Assoc Prof Jamus Jerome Lim (Sengkang) : Sir, there has been recent research in the cognitive sciences that suggest that the biology of learning is such that humans tend to retain information and understand best when they are interacting with another human. I understand, as the Minister has shared, that advances in learning technology, especially AI, now afford customised education. But based on this research, it seems like such customised education is not a justifiable substitute.

To this end, I wonder if the Ministry will therefore look at alternatives other than purely reducing class sizes, such as the possibility of increasing allied teachers or teaching assistants within the classroom? And if so, what the Minister has to share with regard to the decision by the Ministry to scale back on allied educators when it comes to teaching and learning?

Mr Desmond Lee : I think the Member makes a very good observation. I thank him for supporting the move to augment our teaching force with allied educators, particularly in the form of school counsellors, special educational needs officers, as well as the outdoor education allied educators. The shift from the existing scheme to one where we focus on these allied educator professions, enables us to specialise the support that we give to our children.

The Member is also absolutely right that edtech is important. Edtech allows for some degree of customisation. Edtech, including AI in the Singapore Student Learning Space (SLS), for instance, allows our children to get extra scaffolding and support in class and outside the class; in school and outside the school. But there is no substitute for human-based teaching, for the human touch, for the teacher in the classroom to be able to coach a child, to be able to teach the class; not just subject matter, but also demonstrate values and social-emotional skills that are very important in day-to-day life. In that regard, edtech is never a substitute for the human touch, and I would like to thank the Member for being so supportive.

Mr Speaker : Assoc Prof Kenneth Goh.

Assoc Prof Kenneth Goh (Nominated Member) : Thank you, Speaker. And I thank the Minister for his responses to the questions. I have a question about the resourcing of schools. I think the Minister mentioned that the class size, the teacher-student ratio will be dependent on whether the school has resources. And my question is, is there some sort of a threshold or target that helps school leaders or MOE determine when there is enough resources to support their students in this regard?

Mr Desmond Lee : Indeed, this is a continuous conversation between our school leaders, who are in touch with the ground, in close contact with their teachers in the classroom, as well as their MOE headquarters (HQ) leadership – our superintendent, zonal directors, director of schools and the HQ in general – to better understand the specific needs of different schools and to be able to allocate resources accordingly.

Of course, there is baseline support in terms of teaching, allied resources and admin staff for each school. But there may be needs in particular schools that require us to deploy, say, more counsellors or more student welfare officers or more special educational needs officers. And some of these resources are not just school-based, but also cluster-based, giving flexibility to school leaders to be able to ask and get more resources.

But ultimately, whether it is class sizes or other forms of resources, basically, our mission in MOE is this: we have our resources; we also have to operate within constraints, because MOE does not operate our budget independently of other Ministries' needs and Singapore's needs, as well as the opportunities that are presented to us, such as new studies, new pedagogical methods, new methods to impart social-emotional learning. How do we optimise between our resources, operate within constraints and the opportunities we seize? How do we optimise between these three in order to achieve the goal of holistic development of our children and helping the most instrumental group – our teachers and our allied educators – to be able to manage their workload to work with meaning and impact, so that they can again help us to achieve holistic development of the next generation?

And so, it is this combination that makes us focus the resources that we have now on students with greater needs; whether because of their youth, Primary 1, Primary 2; or because they have special education needs, like dyslexia; or because they may have other challenges, for example, they learn at different levels. So, Full Subject-Based Banding does require more resources to help students who may need more support for certain subjects.

And to talk about class sizes, if we were to increase the number of teachers, then we need to operate within the constraint of the impact on other important sectors that serve society. We also need to make sure that in hiring many more teachers, our profession reminds us that we must uphold standards and quality of the whole profession. And if we were to increase the number of classes that teachers teach, then, in managing overall workload and impact, we will then have to recalibrate and reimagine what teachers do on a day-to-day basis.

In some countries teachers teach many more classes, partially because of workload and resourcing. But if in Singapore, if we were to do that, it would probably have to be a combination of three things: one, increasing recruitment; two, increasing the number of classes that teachers teach; and then, recalibrating the other things that teachers do – CCA, CCE, admin, class preparation, marking and so on. And lastly, of course, harnessing technology tools, including AI, to empower teacher to do so much more.

The classroom of today is very different from the classroom of our time. We can continue to see progress and changes; and I would say three things are on the horizon that will allow us to try to transform education to make Singapore ready for a very uncertain future, one that is still full of opportunity and hope.

One, would be the review that we announced recently, the education conversations that we hold across Singapore to allow us to relook at the academic race, the "arms race", so that we focus on deep learning and not academic pursuits through high stakes exams. And in the same vein, we look at holistic education through a review of CCE and CCA, so we see it in totality. That is a major exercise.

The other, of course, is the AI in education framework that I mentioned. And it is not just about edtech and tools, but how do we reimagine teaching in an era where AI can do certain things, do more things and how can people remain on top as masters of technology? So, these are the areas that we are looking at.

And, of course, more holistic support for children coming from families with greater challenges; how do we better support and integrate with the social services around us?

So, these are three of the many ongoing, as well as impending, reviews, including the 2024 Reimagining the Teaching Profession Taskforce recommendations that are still ongoing, in terms of application and implementation, that will require us to relook at how the classroom is like for the future and the kinds of needs that we will have to support our children.