Let Singaporeans pursue higher education here
What ST Readers Said About Last Week's Issue
BY
SANDRA DAVIE
LAST Saturday's Insight article
headlined ''Are precious local talents being shut out of NUS and
NTU?" drew an outpouring of e-mail responses from readers --
93 at the last count.
The report highlighted a growing trend in which many students
who failed to enter the National University of Singapore and
Nanyang Technological University excelled academically
overseas. It asked why they were not given the same
opportunities to study here.
Many readers argued that Singaporeans should be allowed to
develop to their fullest potential here instead of being forced to
study overseas.
Not only did this entail an enormous cost to their families, they
said, but it also meant a loss of the university tuition subsidy
which students enjoyed on local campuses.
A recurring question in their e-mail was: If well-known overseas
universities can adopt entry criteria which take a wider view of
Singaporeans' potential, why are NUS and NTU still basing
entry on examination scores alone?
They added that it was ironical that overseas universities were
giving local students the chances denied to them by their own
universities.
In a typical comment, Mr Lim Zhi-young, who was rejected by
NUS but accepted by Australian and New Zealand universities,
asked: "A reputable university is prepared to offer me conditional
entry, why not NUS?"
Polytechnic graduate Lim Mei Yean said that although she
passed with a merit diploma, NUS and NTU rejected her
application and she was compelled to pursue a degree through
distance learning.
Many writers also took issue with the local universities for
maintaining that polytechnic graduates have the same chances
as A-level holders in gaining admission.
"Let the figures speak for themselves," polytechnic graduate
Duane Ong said, noting that only 800 out of the 17,000 students
who graduate from the four polytechnics every year are admitted
annually, compared to the 9,200 A-level holders.
Several said that if they were forced to go overseas because of the
perceived lack of support from their home country, they would
feel less attached and rooted to Singapore and would thus be less
inclined to return.
If nothing is done to redress the situation, then, as Mr H. Lim
put it, "you will just have a whole lot of disillusioned, frustrated
Singaporeans like me who will probably head overseas and never
come back.
"Why should I come back when my own country denies me the
opportunity of a university education?"
Several readers also suggested that NUS and NTU relook their
admission criteria and make them more transparent for
polytechnic graduates and mature students.
Go the way of the overseas universities which look at a broad
range of indicators -- including personal essays,
recommendations from teachers and employers and face-to-face
interviews, they said.
In the Insight report, the spokesmen for NUS and NTU said they
admit polytechnic graduates based on their O-level and
polytechnic grades and work experience.
NTU president Cham Tao Soon said that O-level results are
taken into account because there is no one standardised
examination for the polytechnics and the O levels are a common
denominator.
He added that he was prepared to take in more polytechnic grads
but could not lower standards just to admit more of them.
At least five readers urged the Government to allow the use of
CPF money for overseas and part-time degree courses, arguing
that an investment in education was better than investment in
property and shares.
To ensure that the money will not be spent on sub-standard
courses, Mr Allan Chong said the authorities could draw up a list
of approved universities.
To make up for the loss of the university subsidy which they
would have enjoyed if they studied in NUS and NTU, six readers
made a plea for overseas education to be subsidised.
Two university undergraduates, however, wrote in defence of the
present system, saying NUS and NTU's degrees are
well-recognised because of their strict standards.
NUS student Jacky Tan said: "It is not fair to those like me who
toiled hard through my A levels to make it to the local
universities only to have the standards diluted to admit more
poly graduates."
Another two readers cautioned against taking the shorter
polytechnic route to a university degree. They wondered if the
students could be trained adequately in one or two years in the
university.
Drawing from his experience in a research institute, Dr Goh
Phuay Yee said that those who took the JC route to the local
universities fared better in the workplace than those who took
the polytechnic route and went overseas.