The Straits Times
22 August 2015
The makeover of the Primary School Leaving Examination (PSLE) is
still some time away, with the announcement to come next year at
the earliest, said Education Minister Heng Swee Keat.
Parents and pupils will be given enough time to respond and adjust
to the changes when they are implemented, he added.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had said two years ago in his
National Day Rally speech that the high- stakes exam would be
revamped, and the aggregate T-score done away with.
Instead of getting a score out of 300 points, pupils will get grade
bands - similar to how students get graded from A1 to F9 for the O
levels or A to E for the A levels. The grades will then be
converted to points to be used for admission into secondary
schools.
Mr Heng said the Ministry of Education (MOE) is already putting
diverse programmes in place in primary and secondary schools to
meet the needs of different children. For instance, each secondary
school has to develop two distinctive programmes by 2017 to cater
to students' interests.
"It is about choosing the school that has the programme, the
emphasis and the fit, rather than about that one school that you
must go to," he said.
Recent SkillsFuture initiatives - such as the Earn and Learn
programme for polytechnic and Institute of Technical Education
graduates as well as the introduction of modular courses at the
post-secondary level - also aim to send a message to parents and
students that the emphasis is on lifelong learning and helping
students enter their areas of interest, said Mr Heng.
"Some of us may take a longer pathway to reach our peak. Some of us
may take a shorter pathway, and some will take a path less
travelled and go do something completely different," he said.
"There are many good pathways and I don't need to cram at just the
PSLE level and say that I must get into that one school."
The MOE is still in the process of implementing programmes in
secondary schools - especially in neighbourhood schools - to create
differentiation, said Mr Heng.
These initiatives to create a more diverse secondary school
landscape, with different schools offering different niche areas,
will come before the PSLE revamp.
"Some parents believe that a certain school will help their child
succeed better... It will take some time for this mindset to
change," said Mr Heng, adding that the end goal is not just about
grades, but also about finding success in life.