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The secret of Singapore’s success
Apr 13,2015 - Last updated at Apr 13,2015
Lee Kuan Yew’s achievements have been the subject of much global discussion since his recent death. But one aspect of his success has been little mentioned: the investments that he, and his successors, made in education.
His strategy, he would often remark, was “to develop Singapore’s only available natural resource, its people”.
Today, Singapore routinely ranks among the top performers in educational attainment, as measured by the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).
Moreover, though a city-state of just 5 million people, Singapore boasts two universities among the top 75 in the latest Times Higher Education World University Rankings, the same number as China, Japan and Germany.
How did that happen?
What did Lee Kuan Yew and Singapore do right?
For starters, it should be emphasised that Singapore’s education system was not designed de novo by Lee Kuan Yew and his colleagues.
Rather, it was built on the very solid foundations inherited from Singapore’s British colonial past.
In contrast to many of his contemporaries among post-colonial leaders, Lee Kuan Yew was not afraid to embrace whatever elements from that past that would prove useful to the nation-building enterprise.
Nowhere is this approach more evident than in education.
Many of the country’s premier educational institutions — for example, the National University of Singapore (founded in 1905), Raffles Institution (founded in 1823), and the Anglo-Chinese School (founded in 1886) — significantly predate independence in 1963.
Moreover, the curriculum for secondary education is modelled on the British O Level and A Level qualifications (with some adaptation to account for the generally higher average attainment levels of students in Singapore).
And though infrastructure is by no means neglected, the primary focus of educational investment is students and teachers.
A national system of generous scholarships enables the best students to avail themselves of an education at some of the world’s premier universities, even as Singapore develops its own world-class institutions.
Moreover, with starting salaries above the national median, the teaching profession attracts, develops and retains some of the best graduates.
Moreover, Singapore’s education system is unabashedly meritocratic (some might say elitist) in its focus on identifying and developing the very best talent and, equally important, directing it towards public service.
Government scholarship recipients are obliged to serve in the public sector for a minimum of two years for every one year of study.
The same meritocratic approach governs the development and promotion of teachers.
Top-performing teachers are given leadership responsibilities without excessive regard to tenure, and there is a revolving door between the education ministry, classrooms and school administration.
Educators are frequently seconded to carry out policy work. Many subsequently choose to return to the classroom.
The elitist tendency in Singapore’s education system is tempered by the fact that quality education is available for all levels of academic aptitude.
Singapore is rightly proud of its elite secondary and tertiary academic institutions, but one could argue that the hidden gems of the system are the hundreds of neighbourhood schools, institutes for technical education, and polytechnics that provide high-quality education for all.
Singapore’s education system is relentlessly forward looking.
From adopting bilingualism with English (in addition to the mother tongue of Mandarin, Malay or Tamil), to its focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), Singapore anticipated many of the key education strategies being adopted by today’s policy makers.
The choice of English was driven by history and a multiethnic society’s need for a common language.
But it was also a prescient recognition of English’s rapid emergence as the lingua franca of global commerce and science, and that once entrenched it was likely to remain so for decades, if not centuries, to come.
In this regard, too, Lee Kuan Yew distinguished himself from other post-colonial leaders of his generation.
Rather than pandering to narrow nationalist sentiment and opting for the majority language and culture, he and his colleagues chose to adopt a global language for a global city.
Finally, Singapore’s education system evolves with the times and in light of new evidence.
In the 1990s, Singapore’s policy makers, concerned that their approach to education might be somewhat regimented and overly focused on STEM, began to provide avenues for excellence in the humanities, arts and sport.
That rebalancing is still going on, with a new emphasis on identifying ways to foster creativity and entrepreneurship.
For Singapore’s founding father, education went beyond formal schooling. As he put it in a speech in 1977: “My definition of an educated man is a man who never stops learning and wants to learn.”
Indeed, Singapore’s world-class education system will be one of Lee Kuan Yew’s most enduring legacies.
It was fitting that his state funeral took place at the National University of Singapore.
The writer, former executive vice-dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, is chief executive officer of the World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE), an initiative of the Qatar Foundation. ©Project Syndicate, 2015. www.project-syndicate.org