口頭答覆 · 2026-02-03 · 屆國會 15

SkillsFuture AI培訓參與率及支援

AI 治理與監管 AI 與就業 AI 與教育 AI 與國家安全 爭議度 2 · 溫和質詢

議員質詢SkillsFuture支援的AI相關培訓課程的參與率及是否設定PME群體的培訓目標。政府回應去年有約10.5萬人次參與,未設具體目標,但鼓勵終身學習並提供補貼。質詢方關注課程選擇困難及高階課程費用,建議最佳化課程推薦和增加針對PME的資金支援。政府表示將持續最佳化課程指引和與業界合作,推動個性化培訓方案。

關鍵要點

  • AI課程參與人數多
  • 無具體PME培訓目標
  • 將最佳化課程推薦
政府立場

鼓勵終身學習,持續最佳化支援

質詢立場

建議定製課程及增加資金支援

政策訊號

推動個性化AI培訓支援

“We are working with the industry to look to see how we develop the list of tasks and map them to the courses.”

參與人員 (4)

完整譯文(中文)

Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02

9號,黃志明先生問教育部長:(a) 由SkillsFuture支援的人工智慧相關技能培訓課程的參與率是多少?(b) 教育部是否對參加此類技能提升培訓的工人數量,尤其是專業人員、經理和執行人員,有設定目標?

教育部高階國務部長(賈尼爾·普圖切裡博士)(代表教育部長) :議長先生,SkillsFuture Singapore(SSG)支援的大約有1,600門人工智慧(AI)相關課程,去年有超過105,000人次報名,培訓名額達到137,000個。

人工智慧發展迅速,有潛力改變各行各業的工作方式。雖然我們沒有專門針對參加AI培訓的工人人數設定目標,但我們鼓勵所有新加坡人追求技能提升和終身學習,以保持競爭力,包括緊跟AI及其他領域的發展。政府將繼續通過大幅度的課程費用補貼以及SkillsFuture Credit抵消自付費用,支援新加坡人的技能提升之路。

議長先生 :黃先生。

黃志明先生(加冷) :謝謝議長先生。教育部和SSG在這方面確實做了非常好的工作,我們深表感謝。列出的約1,600門AI課程,即使有資助,費用仍從幾百到幾千新元不等。對於許多工人,包括專業人員、經理和執行人員(PMEs)來說,這麼多課程讓他們難以選擇,難以判斷應該參加哪些課程來裝備自己,做好AI準備。

所以,我有三個補充問題。我們如何更好地重新設計技能框架和課程,幫助PMEs做好AI準備?SkillsFuture是否考慮策劃一份針對PME需求的課程清單,從基礎的AI素養到更具體的AI深度技能,以適應他們的工作角色或新的可能性?最後,對於想參加更高階AI課程的PMEs,教育部或SSG是否考慮提供額外的定向資金支援?因為一些高階深度AI課程即使有補貼,費用仍達幾千新元。我們能否考慮定向支援,比如增加資金或提供職場支援的學習機會?

賈尼爾·普圖切裡博士 :先生,感謝黃先生的提問。對這三個問題的簡短回答是,我們將繼續審視如何指引、引導和策劃課程,鼓勵新加坡人參加這些課程,支援他們的終身學習,並讓他們能夠把握每一個發展機會。

我們正與業界合作,研究如何制定任務清單並將其對映到課程上——回應他的第一個問題。我們會持續推進。我們也在努力改進指引,包括網站、線上課程以及提供的諮詢服務,讓學習者清楚自己在發展AI技能的過程中應走的路徑。我們還將繼續審視通過各種補貼和資金安排支援新加坡人的方式。

議長先生 :普里塔姆·辛格先生。

普里塔姆·辛格先生(亞逸拉惹) :謝謝議長先生。只有一個補充問題。鑑於政府在這些課程上投入了大量公共補貼,政府是否計劃追蹤參加AI課程的個人和工人在職場上的部署情況?

賈尼爾·普圖切裡博士 :當然,我們與經濟機構和業界密切合作,瞭解接受培訓的個人隨後如何被部署及運用其技能。

總體上我們有這方面的做法,但要說專門針對AI課程進行追蹤,可能有些困難。因為AI課程可能是入門級的,幫助某人維持當前崗位,提高生產力和效率,也可能是轉型課程,幫助他們轉向不同公司、不同崗位和不同職業路徑。

但我們會繼續研究,尋找方法確保我們提供的支援和培訓最符合個人學習者的期望,同時也能創造符合我們經濟環境的機會。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02

9 Mr Ng Chee Meng asked the Minister for Education (a) what is the take-up rate of AI-related skills training courses supported by SkillsFuture; and (b) whether the Ministry has targets on the number of workers, especially among professionals, managers and executives, who should go for such upskilling.

The Senior Minister of State for Education (Dr Janil Puthucheary) (for the Minister for Education) : Mr Speaker, there are around 1,600 artificial intelligence (AI)-related courses supported by SkillsFuture Singapore (SSG), with 137,000 training places taken up by more than 105,000 individuals last year.

AI has been advancing rapidly and has the potential to transform the way we work across industries and jobs. While we do not set targets specifically on the number of workers who go for AI training, we encourage all Singaporeans to pursue upskilling and lifelong learning to stay relevant, including by keeping abreast of AI and other developments. The Government will continue to support Singaporeans in their upskilling journey through substantial course fee subsidies as well as the SkillsFuture Credit to offset out-of-pocket costs.

Mr Speaker : Mr Ng.

Mr Ng Chee Meng (Jalan Kayu) : Thank you, Mr Speaker. There is indeed very good work done by the Ministry of Education and SSG in this area, and we are deeply appreciative. The 1,600 or so AI courses listed do cost a few hundred dollars to a few thousand dollars, even after funding. And for many workers, including professionals, managers and executives (PMEs), this myriad number of courses can be quite daunting for them to survey and find out what they should really be embarking on for equipping themselves to be AI-ready.

So, three supplementary questions. How can we better redesign our skills framework and courses to help our PMEs equip themselves to be AI-ready? Will SkillsFuture consider curating a list of courses tailored for PME needs, from foundational AI literacy to maybe more specific AI deep skills to tailor for their job roles or new possibilities? And lastly, for the PMEs who want to take higher level AI courses, would the Ministry or SSG consider additional targeted funding? Because some of these higher-level deep AI courses do cost a few thousand dollars after subsidy support. Can we consider targeted support, such as enhanced funding or even possibilities of workplace-supported learning?

Dr Janil Puthucheary : Sir, I thank Mr Ng for his questions. The short answer to all three is that we will continue to review how we signpost, direct and curate courses, and encourage Singaporeans to take up these courses to be able to support their lifelong learning and make every opportunity that they are aspiring to available to them.

We are working with the industry to look to see how we develop the list of tasks and map them to the courses – to address his first point. We will continue to do so. We are trying to improve our signposting, both in terms of the websites, the online offerings as well as the counselling that people get, so that there is a sense of where the journey should take them as they develop their AI skills. And we will continue to review how we support Singaporeans through the variety of subsidies and funding arrangements.

Mr Speaker : Mr Pritam Singh.

Mr Pritam Singh (Aljunied) : Thank you, Speaker. Just one supplementary question. Does the Government plan to track the deployment of individuals and workers at the workplace after their attendance of such AI courses, in view of the significant public subsidies that the Government expenses on these courses?

Dr Janil Puthucheary : Certainly, we work closely with the economic agencies and the industry to understand how individuals who go through training then subsequently are deployed and use their skills.

The overall approach is there, but to say that we do so specifically for AI, may be a little bit harder. Because an AI course can be something introductory which someone needs in order to remain in their current job role and increase their productivity and efficiency, all the way through to a transformative course where they are pivoting to a different company, a different job role and a different career path.

But we will continue to study this and find ways to make sure that the type of support that we provide, the training that is made available, is best suited to the aspirations of the individual learner but also makes possible opportunities within our landscape.